Discussing Creative Commons

Yesterday, when @robjdlc tweeted “People tagging in flickr! At long last!“, I didn’t realize that Flickr has gone all Facebook and lets you tag people in photos. I actually thought that he meant people were at long last starting to tag their photos, which I didn’t realize had been a problem. I responded with another problem and tweeted “@robjdlc Now how can we get them to license their photos?“.

I realize now why this didn’t entirely make sense at the time, but I did point Rob to a Discussion post on the Flickr: Bloomfield group where I encourage people to license their photos. Much like Creative Commons itself, I don’t think many people on Flickr use or even know about the Discussion feature, so I’m going to repost it here:

By default, photos added to Flickr are “All rights reserved”, which means that nobody can do anything with your work. Flickr encourages people to choose a Creative Commons license as an alternative to full copyright, which will still retain your rights to the work but allow others to use it if they give you proper credit. There are several different licenses to choose from, including some that don’t allow commercial uses of your work, and Flickr gives a good explanation of them all here.

The reason we encourage you to use Creative Commons is so that we (Bloomfield Development Corporation, a community nonprofit) can use your photos in the pages and blog posts on the Bloomfield Now website, and credit you when we do. Of course, this may help your work get published in other sources as well — my brother has had his Flickr photos published in Gothamist and Wikipedia.

If you’re interested in sharing your photos with the Bloomfield community, you can set a default license for your photostream. If you want to license your existing photos, you can batch license them here. It just takes a click.

FYI, I license all of my photos under the Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license, which means that anyone can use my photos for noncommercial purposes, including creating derivative works/remixes, as long as they give me credit.

If you want us to know that you have licensed your photos so we can use them on the site, just email me or respond to this topic.

Rob responded with some points of his own, so I know that at least one person read my post:

If only the general public could really get to understand the impacts of this sort of thing.

By loosening stranglehold on your content that “all rights reserved” implies, you allow for innovation. With photography for any sort of intellectual property, the moment you create it, under US law, it is by default copywritten by you. No paperwork needs to be filed, no words need to be said, its just an automatic license. Its great if whatever you’ve created you’d like no one else to do anything but look at. If, however, you’d like for your content to be shared with other folks who might like it, promoted, even remixed to create new things, if you don’t specify something other than copyright, all of the above acts are illegal.

So you can use creative commons, which as this point is serving up billions of licenses worldwide and has taken several precedents in court, to specify exactly who and how your content can be used.

I, much like Carman, use Attrib-NonCom-SA, so folks can share my work with whomever they want, as long as they dont sell it, and anything they make with it must be shared as well.

Just as much as Flickr was a remix of the idea of a photo sharing community, your ideas too can be used to create great new things, as long as you allow it to happen.

I mean this to be an informative post, but if any of my readers don’t use Creative Commons, I’d like to read why. Is it because you didn’t know about it, or is it because you’re a terrible person who never learned to share? Perhaps you’re a terrible person who shares too much, or perhaps you do respect Creative Commons and like to blog about social media assholes who don’t. Discuss.

Creating a Pic Workflow with John C. Simpson

One week ago, we launched JohnCSimpson.com as the home base for the beauty industry icon for whom the domain was named. We had previously redirected the domain to John’s MySpace page, where he still connects with clients, colleagues and fans, but he was fast outgrowing that outpost. John’s new site brings together his blog, press mentions, a budding FAQ of beauty tips called “What Would John Simpson Do”, and his photos.

JohnCSimpson.com

It is photos that I am going to focus on here. Not the photos themselves, nor the two ways we integrated John’s Flickr stream with his site, but the pic posting workflow: the laborious and unglamorous task of getting your photos online. This should prove useful to anyone who posts to both Flickr & Facebook.

In John’s case, we need to cross-post his pics to Flickr, Facebook and MySpace. You could do this by using a Flickr badge or any number of plugins instead of actually posting to Facebook Photos or MySpace Pics, and in the case of MySpace, this may not be a bad idea. But IMO, one of the best features of Facebook is the ability to tag photos.

When you “tag” someone in a Facebook photo, that friend gets an email alert, and who doesn’t know the thrill of getting the “[Your Friend] tagged a photo of you on Facebook” email? Most people are going to click that link to see what they look like in your photo, and there’s a good chance they’ll stick around to look at your other photos. This is social media.

Flickr2Facebook: Unofficial Flickr to Facebook Uploader

So we need to post the same photos to Flickr and Facebook, right? Sort of. Flickr is where you store your photos, but not necessarily where you showcase them. Some people move their pics directly from digital camera to Flickr, and you can choose to show only a subset of your photostream on your other sites. Also, a Flickr pro account lets you store your original photo, which is often too large for viewing on-screen. This would be overkill for Facebook, so you really only need to upload the medium size that Flickr shows by default.

We’ll semi-automate this process using Flickr2Facebook, a bookmarklet that you add to your browser. When you’re on the Flickr page of an image you want to upload to Facebook, you click the bookmarklet and then click this logo that appears over the image:

Flickr2Facebook

You may have to click “Login”, and then you can give the image a caption and add it to one of your Facebook albums. You can’t create an album here, so you’ll want to create it first in Facebook. By default, Flickr2Facebook uses your title as the caption, so you may not have to change a thing — I prefer to use my Flickr description for this, as it usually works better as a caption, so I just copy & paste it beforehand.

Once you click an album, you are taken there to approve the photo. If you’re uploading multiple photos, just go back to Flickr and repeat until all your photos have been uploaded, then approve them all at once. Now go tag your photos.

Any other recommendations you want to add to the process? Any questions?

Plugins: Flickr

Last week, @socialgumbo asked What are your favorite WP plugins and why? I tweeted that this would make a good blog post, which is something I’ve been thinking about since my WordPress session at PodCamp Pittsburgh 3. Developing WordPress sites for podcasts, businesses and now a personal blog has given me a chance to use a variety of plugins, and I do have a core set of plugins that I add to most WordPress sites that I set up.

However, I’m constantly learning about new plugins, including a few that I’m currently testing. Instead of writing a post that will be incomplete by tomorrow, I created a Plugins category to house these posts. I’ll post about individual plugins or groups of related plugins, and add them to this category. Today I’m posting about two plugins that make it easier to add Flickr photos to posts, starting with one of those new ones that I’m testing.

Photo Dropper

I’m testing the Photo Dropper plugin, a Flickr plugin that searches for Creative Commons licensed photos – images that are licensed for shared use – and lets you drop them into your posts – right from your dashboard with just 1 click. Flickr itself has an advanced search and configurable “Blog This” feature, but Photo Dropper claims to do this from within my WordPress editor, which should be a productivity boost.

In the settings for Photo Dropper, I can check a box to search only photos that are licensed to be used commercially. Since this is not a commercial blog, I’m going to uncheck that. I’ll change the images per page from 5 to 50, leave the box to sort photos by “most interesting” unchecked, and save my settings. Now I’ll search for a photo tagged “PCPGH3” and drop it into this post:

The Panel
Creative Commons License photo credit: davefishernc

Not bad. Photo Dropper loaded quickly even with 50 thumbnails per page, and let me choose from small, medium and large sizes of the photos. The photo and caption you see above is what the plugin posted without any edits, although I would normally customize it like this:

The Panel
The Panel

Flickr Draft Post

Flickr’s built-in “Blog This” feature allows me to customize a template that comes close to my customizations, but I still have to tweak some code to get exactly what I want, especially for images that have no description or lack a descriptive title. But I wouldn’t consider using Blog This without the the Flickr Draft Post plugin, which saves the post as a draft post instead of publishing directly from Flickr, giving me the opportunity to make those edits.

Considering that Blog This is currently not working for this blog (I’m using WordPress version 2.7-beta1 at the time of this posting), I will not use it here, but will continue to use it with Flickr Draft Post on the Shopping Bloomfield blog, which is currently running WordPress version 2.6.3. For reference, this is how I customize my post template:

<p>
<a href="{photo_url}" title="{photo_title}" target="_blank"><img src="{photo_src}" border="0" alt="{photo_desc}" title="{photo_title}" /></a><br />
<small><span class="caption">{photo_title}</span><br />
<span class="byline">Originally uploaded by <a href="{uploader_profile}" target="_blank">{uploader_name}</a></span></small>
</p>

So which method is best?

Photo Dropper is the easiest method I’ve found for inserting Flickr images directly into the WordPress editor, and if a later version allows customization of the post template, it will be close to perfect. If you’re not particular about markup, this plugin is for you.

If you do want to customize your markup, I recommend using Blog This with the Flickr Draft Post plugin. Once you set up your Flickr account with your blog info and customized layout, the time you’ll save editing markup will make up for having to cut and paste the code from a draft post.

Of course, this may all change tomorrow.