Why is Flickr afraid of Zooomr?
Marshall Kirkpatrick
175 comments »
Flickr says that users own the the images and tags we enter into their system. Apparently that doesn’t mean they have to make it easy for us to take what we own elsewhere.
When Kristopher Tate, the founder of the feature-rich startup photosharing site Zooomr (see prior coverage), asked Flickr earlier this month for access to their Commercial API, Flickr’s response by email was that “we choose not to support use of the API for sites that are a straight alternative to Flickr.” Flickr founder Stewart Butterfield posted to a Flickr forum on Wednesday saying that when it comes to direct competitors like Zooomr, “why should we burn bandwidth and CPU cycles sending stuff directly to their servers?”
What’s at issue is the ability for innovative companies to build server-to-server import interfaces that make it far easier for non-technical users to try out a new service and take what they own with them. There are a number of third party tools available for Flickr users to download all their data to their computers. That data can then be uploaded into another system. Competitor Zooomr wants to make transitions like that easy to do, and Flickr apparently doesn’t want them to.
Tate from Zooomr says that the exports are a cost of doing business, that Web 2.0 is where “the roach motel stops” and that Zooomr will always make it easy for their customers to take their data elsewhere. That’s easy to say when you’re the underdog, but the issue does lead to some questions about data portability and web services. Day one of the post-Gates era seems like a good time to consider such questions.
Update: Comments below refer to the policy that Flickr says it is most likely to shift to. See this post in the Flickr forums for more details. Flickr founder Butterfield in particular says he’s had a change of heart.


What Stewart is saying makes perfect sense. I do not think this has anything to do with Flickr being afraid of Zoomr or anyone else. I do not see Riya sharing their pictures with Zoomr either!!
I agree with Matan. Zooomr is really almost a clone of Flickr with some added features - why would Flickr want to drive more traffic to them?
I’m out to say that if a direct competitor wants an API key, I’m happy to do it if they give me an equal-rights API in return.
Mike,
I think Flickr is going to be changing their position on this. This note from Stewart in a thread at Flickr Central today:
“Re API keys for direct competitors: this is something that we’ve never had any set policy on and this thread has sparked a lot of internal debate on the team: some people felt that it was unreasonable, some people felt like it didn’t matter since Flickr should win on the basis of being the best thing out there.
I actually had a change of heart and was convinced by Eric’s position that we definitely should approve requests from direct competitors as long as they do the same. That means (a) that they need to have a full and complete API and (b) be willing to give us access.
The reasoning here is partly just that “fair’s fair’ and more subtly, like a GPL license, it enforces user freedom down the chain. I think we’ll take this approach (still discussing it internally).”
http://www.flickr.com/groups/c.....165399644/
I’m not a huge fan of Flickr but I would agree with Stewart’s position in this instance.
Why should they deal with the load associated with a user deciding to move their data to a different service? If I want to use Zooomr or another service, it’s up to me to re-upload, not use Flickr’s cycles to do it. I am going to check into Zooomr tho
While I can understand Flickr’s reluctance to provide their API key to competitors, it not only seems like a perfect application of the API, but it’d also be in the interests of the consumer. I’m also a Mac user and I can’t imagine as many people would switch to Mac OS X if they couldn’t transfer their data from their Windows PC. For end-users’ sake, I’d love to see users be able to transfer any data to anywhere. I think this should also serve as a warning to consumers against using services that aren’t easy to switch from.
@kristopher:
I don’t get it… I just startet to play around with tabblo, another photo-site (I posted about it here: http://nonsmokingarea.com/blog/?p=80 ). they offer a feature wich allows you to import your flickr-images, using the public flickr-APIs (I guess). I think zoomr could build something similar…
really like tabblo, btw
Michael, That’s exactly my point. Tabblo gets special attention? These are not Flickr’s photos, these could be your photos. Why go to a service that will lock them in?
@kristopher:
I agree, users _should_ have full control over their data…on the other hand, honestly, I did never really read flickr’s terms of agreement, they probably don’t promise you having the ability to export your data in any way…
I’m not sure if I understand ur post 100%… do you say that tabblo gets ’special attention’, i.e. better API-access than zoomr? if so, that’s a shame…
I think that if Flickr doesn’t want you to use their API then so be it. It’s not that they don’t want competition, it’s that they don’t care to waste a ton of bandwidth that goes directly to helping competition. Ads are not being served, they are not receiving hits, why would they care to allow you to have this in the first place?
In the long run, keeping the API open should pay dividends, as it just means Flickr has that advantage over other services that don’t let you export easily. It’s just another reason to sign up with flickr rather then another site. Online, you need to offer as many reasons as possible.
With regards to Flickr wasting bandwidth to support a competitor, perhaps they could charge a small fee for commerical API keys, and use this money to cover their bandwitdth costs.
It’s far more than just wasting bandwidth and processor usage.
This is the bi-product of walking a tightrope between running a business and building a community. Of course the framers of a community want to support their users in any way they can, and giving people the freedom to move in and out of different communities is a serious concern. However if you’re in it for the scratch, then I don’t believe you can justify the resources to make it easier for your customers to walk across the street and buy the other cat’s lemonade.While I can agree with Stewart’s changing position,I actually had a change of heart and was convinced by Eric’s position that we definitely should approve requests from direct competitors as long as they do the same. That means (a) that they need to have a full and complete API and (b) be willing to give us access.ultimately you’ve got to come down on the community side or the business side. If you can craft a business model that doesn’t directly depend on the number of users you’ve got, then you’re in like Flynnt. But seeing how that’s a tough genome to map, even if you build a civil relationship with the cat across the street, at the end of the day either he’s selling lemonade or you are.
You people are missing the point. Easy export is a Flickr feature issue. Stewart Butterfield chooses to make his product less usable so that he doesn’t lose business. (the bandwidth issue when raised is almost always a laughable pretext) That’s fine by him but I wouldn’t be bragging about it on message boards.
My Opinion: Flickr will have more users and more usage over time if people know that they are not trying to silo their picture data. Flickr should stay open and let people export pictures from the service using an API. And the reason they should do it is because it will help them grow.
Do they currently allow, through the API, to upload images into an account?
kris: you’ve tried to piggyback off flickr’s success quite enough. let it go.
Agree with doomr. Stop whining Kris.
Doomr, I don’t see Flickr as a competitor — I’m going after something that Flickr could only imagine. You’ll see more if it come to life in Zooomr 2.
-Kristopher
Using Flickr is not so much about the photos as it is about the community (groups/comments/favourites/contacts). It’s not like Flickr users don’t have their images on a harddrive somewhere, unless they didn’t learn the lesson of one of the earliest photo sharing sites, “Photopoint”. Back in 2001, Photopoint got tremendous flack when they shut down (due to financial troubles) and users who claimed they didn’t have any backups of their own photos were left stranded.
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-277127.html
Users should have a quick and easy way of exporting all data about their own photos.
Damon hasz the great point. We have an API at golfnow and there is an upcharge for each round sold.
Chmod -o
It’s interesting to watch where the line will be drawn between the ideals and the commercial reality of Web 2.0.
I don’t know the specifics but couldn’t Flickr restrict the API to just the image data and keep the juicy goodness of the meta-data secret from competitors?
@Kristopher:
I think you might have been a little hasty. The old “I don’t see them as a competitor” line is being trot out too often nowadays. Are you telling me that if a person goes and uploads pictures on flickr, that they might also upload those same pics onto zooomr? Or, alternatively, will people only upload certain pictures to flickr, and certain different pictures to zooomr, meaning you two aren’t competing for the same photos? I don’t think I believe either of these scenarios. Instead, I think people who haven’t already made their mind up will evaluate one, the other, or both services then decide on just one, uploading all pictures to that site. Seems like competition to me, though I’m interested to see what’s coming up with zooomr 2.
I simply don’t understand how one can say “I don’t see them as a competitor” when you have placed yourself as exactly that by mimicking their domain name.
Zach, Let me better rephrase what I’m trying to get at.
Even-though we’re sharing photos, there are many things that Zooomr will be doing differently than Flickr — Allow me to say that Flickr is really cool, and has its place — and that I like Yahoo very much as a company. But, where Flickr falls-off and Zooomr begins is advanced metadata management. Zooomr 2 will allow users to get a lot of of the information they enter. Flickr only sorts by relevance and time — Zooomr does relevance, time, and space — among others, as well.
In any case, I think it’s about time that these huge companies and their properties on the Web open-up their users’ data (remember, this would be a different argument if the data was owned by Yahoo/Flickr).
In an age of RSS, SOAP, XMLRPC, and OPML, ‘Roach Motel’ is so Web 1.0
-Kristopher
How come people are only attacking Flickr here? What about the website that claims to be the largest photo-sharing website on the planet–Facebook (they claim this in their media kit.) Facebook never takes any heat but doesn’t even let you export your .csv or contacts through an API. What about Riya? Not to mention the snapfish, ofotos, etc… I think user-data portability is a huge issue, but let’s open this up to the whole web.
I want to see Flickr be the leader in this space (I don’t want to have to move all of my pics), but if someone else can out-innovate you and do it faster, they should win.
Why would anyone want to take their pictures off of Filckr? Oh yeah, there is the Second Life “Not in Public Site Areas” aka NIPSA thing. This is reminding me of when everyone dumped Friendster for MySpace because Friendster kept deleting faksters. Hey Stewart, take a look at 37S’s Getting Real, page 166. “Look at Flickr. It began as a multiplayer online game Called The Game Neverending. Its creators soon realized that photo-sharing aspect of the game was more plausible…” You were willing to change your course then, but now you are ignoring the need to change? What gives? You can keep users from leaving by letting users post Second Life screenshots and letting sites like Zooomr use your API. This is not very web 2.0 of you. At this rate you will be the next Friendster. So cool at the beginning, but lost value when it’s maven users were scolded for not being able to do what they wanted to.
@Richard Harrison
Why would you want to do it that way? All that is going to do is punish the user, and for what? Just because Flickr and Zooomr are competitors?
why the fuck are you covering this zoomr shit? noone else cares, just because the kid is a kid you are covering this.
it will die when the kid has to go to CLASS. Let’s move on and cover a REAL STARTUP, MIKE.
“Doomr, I don’t see Flickr as a competitor”
My bad. I guess it was your copying flickr’s name, website, and business model that confused me.
“You’ll see more if it come to life in Zooomr 2.”
No, I won’t.
A few interesting tidbits regarding Zooomr:
1 - Frontpage looks exactly like Flickr
2 - ‘All sizes’ section of photo zooming looks exactly like Flickr
3 - “Photo Information” looks exactly like Flickr
4 - Company naming style is exactly like Flickr
5 - URL architecture similiar to Flickr (not major tho)
One bug I noticed while looking around:
1 - URL posted in Trackbacks need to be unhtmlentities’d (if you know what that means) - http://beta.zooomr.com/photos/kris_tate/1722
Kristopher Tate
June 16th, 2006 at 3:39 pm
I’m out to say that if a direct competitor wants an API key, I’m happy to do it if they give me an equal-rights API in return
Reply :
Flickr is the first photo sharing and zooomr is the new comer ( a copy cat ) . If You were Steve you will do the same because you are a NEW COMER and you want people to see zooomr.
For example :
Lets say you are the founder of flickr ( as the most famous photo sharing website ) , I am pretty sure you would not want to do what Steve would not do, because you basically want to ” steal ” flickr’s customers.
Your comment is totally unacceptable
Web 2.0 services like Flickr are a stop-gap. The only long-term, viable solution is for every user to have their own brainless-to-use web server running their own Myspace/Flickr/Calendar/etc. services over their broadband connections, with P2P mirroring among friends’ PCs to alleviate connectivity, popularity, and backup issues.
I take Flickr’s side on this issue. Regarding the argument which Mike and Tate bring out regarding Flickr locking out user’s photos, it is not true.
Flickr ofcourse lets individual users to download their photos using their own personal API key. They’re just refusing a commercial API key to Zoomr to do it for you. So technically if a user thinks Zoomr is awesome, he can always install a third-party tool to download all his Flickr photos and upload them into Zoomr.
I think any sane CEO with good market share would refuse to do what Tate wants.
@Tate
Regarding Tate’s equal-rights API deal, dude are you even in an equal position to bargain with Flickr?
This is real Web2.0 as defined by O’Reilly in his submarine patent and takedown of any competing conferences.
1) promote open use
2) use this to gain community content
3) stab users in back
4) asshat…er profit
I think Flicker are this years first contender for the O’Reilly Web2.0 assho of the year award.
Don’t worry Tim you’ll always be the original web2.0 assho
Flickr is totally awesome.
Zoomr is not there yet.
It seems a bit unfriendly this move - can’t they just ask for the bandwith money / cpu electricity costs.
As usual though it is the community member that loses out.
Its one thing to ask Flickr to waste cycles implementing something from scratch but it sounds like they already had this functionality.
There are ways to get around this stuff. Just be a real man and scrape the html :)…
The question is whether they will block your IPs. Delicious is horrible at this. I wanted to use some of their data set to tune an algorithm I was writing and they blocked me after one week.
Their response was essentially that unless I was giving them money or making them benefit in some how that they wouldn’t give me access.
Unfortunately this didn’t even all experimentation as I had NO idea whether my idea would work.
I guess Joshua can’t write scalable code so my crawler was hurting his precious RSS feed
Kevin
If I were Flickr, I’d give them access to the API… and charge ‘em $5.00 (or something) for every account they import. That would put competitors in a position where they must be committed to acquiring the customer, rather than simply leeching from someone else’s work.
Either way, this issue has nothing to do with “silos” or “walled gardens”. If I can back up my Flickr data to my desktop, they owe me absolutely nothing more. Or put another way:
When I moved my furniture into my rental home, the owner never suggested for a moment that he was taking ownership of my stuff. I’m free to move it in or out as I please. But acknowledging my ownership and paying my expenses when I decide to move elsewhere are very different things.
I’ve got a startup blog called WebCrunchr.com, and I’m going to write about all the latest Web 2.0 startups. I’m going to have reviews, screenshots and a podcast which I’m planning to call ‘TalkCrunchr’. Don’t worry Mike ’cause I don’t see us as competitors. Let me know if you’d like to cover the launch.
/sarcasm
Seriously though, people don’t realize how much balls completely opening up the Flickr data would take, and how much of a massive impact that would have on “Web 2.0″. Flickr has set the standard with so many things, and I believe that this would be their most important and most progressive accomplishment to date.
PS. Opening up Flickr data would also be a great additional product differentiator from the Yahoo Photos offering.
I am with Flickr on this. Those who stand on the sidelines, and don’t have to build a business model themselves are too quick jump in with idealistic notions about community. Building a community is about allowing users to control their content in a way that allows them to share and distribute it, not necessarily to move it wholesale from provider to provider.
As a customer of Flickr, I have never had the expectation that they would provide a service for me to move all my photos to a competitor. As a business person and a consumer that is beyond what I would expect.
i really really doubt flickr care.
this is what i got from Zooomr.com:
KeyError Python 2.4.2: /usr/bin/python2.4
Fri Jun 16 20:45:28 2006
A problem occurred in a Python script. Here is the sequence of function calls leading up to the error, in the order they occurred.
/var/www/beta.zooomr.com/cgi-bin/flup/server/fcgi_base.py in run(self=)
558 “”"Runs the handler, flushes the streams, and ends the request.”"”
559 try:
560 protocolStatus, appStatus = self.server.handler(self)
561 except:
562 traceback.print_exc(file=self.stderr)
protocolStatus undefined, appStatus undefined, self = , self.server = , self.server.handler = >
/var/www/beta.zooomr.com/cgi-bin/flup/server/fcgi_base.py in handler(self=, req=)
1098 self._appLock.acquire()
1099 try:
1100 result = self.application(environ, start_response)
1101 try:
1102 for data in result:
result = None, self = , self.application = , environ = {’DOCUMENT_ROOT’: ‘/var/www/beta.zooomr.com’, ‘GATEWAY_INTERFACE’: ‘CGI/1.1′, ‘HTTP_ACCEPT’: ‘*/*’, ‘HTTP_ACCEPT_ENCODING’: ‘gzip, deflate’, ‘HTTP_ACCEPT_LANGUAGE’: ‘en-gb’, ‘HTTP_CONNECTION’: ‘Keep-Alive’, ‘HTTP_COOKIE’: ‘jonsid=53e7a4324564545645669c3893c3′, ‘HTTP_HOST’: ‘beta.zooomr.com’, ‘HTTP_REFERER’: ‘http://www.techcrunchr.com/2006/06/16/why-is-flickr-afraid-of-zoomr/’, ‘HTTP_USER_AGENT’: ‘Mozilla/4.0 (compatible; GiffoBrowser9000)’, …}, start_response =
your comment ” Afraid ” is not a very suitable word
are you taking zooomr side ?
Mike, excuse me, but … this is horseshit. First, you selectively quote, second you obviously talked to Kris from Zooomr before posted but didn’t contact us, third we’re not a silo — there are already several tools which allow you to backup everything from Flickr and we’re fine with that — fourth, this was part of an ongoing discussion: the policy we’re most likely to adopt (posted before this post went up) was that we’d grant a commercial API key to competitors who had complete published APIs of their own and were willing to reciprocally grant us access to build an import tool (I doubt we’d ever do this, but that’s really the point).
Finally, “Flickr should stay open and let people export pictures from the service using an API.”: We do. And have since the beginning. “Zooomr will always make it easy for their customers to take their data elsewhere.” OK … starting when?
When Zooomr has a complete and published API and is willing to give us access, we’d be happy to talk again.
Oops - just realized that the original post didn’t come from Mike (but from one Marshall Kirkpatrick). My apologies. But, it’s still horseshit …
I’m seeing some interesting erros on the zooomr site. Did techcrunch traffic kill it?
Not a great way to launch a site…
>>>>>>>>>
wait a second –the site is back up again.
Kristopher likes Yahoo as a company? What on earth? I can’t see how anyone can stand anything that Yahoo do. Honestly, the moment they buy up something I’m interested in I begin to move away instinctively…Major minus geek cred.
I’m with Flickr on this issue, although in saying that I don’t use Flickr because their terms of use put me off (yes I actually read them, shock horror
). That and they’re yahoo.
And to those crying about copying of ideas, please kindly get over it. Yes, it’s somewhat annoying, but it’s life. Sure it’s bad in a lot of cases (such as myspace/bebo/bingbox/100 identical clones) but it can also be good. For example: in NZ trademe (www.trademe.co.nz) has taken the ideas behind ebay and improved upon it, realising a better product and making the internet a better place for the users. Also digg to a certain extent, taking the idea of slashdot and adding a touch of prettyness and a touch less elitism, creating a place that is better overall imo.
People vouching for Zooomr:
Do you understand how business works, at all?
Good gosh.
Flickr spent time, money, effort, energy, venture capital, etc., etc., etc. Now, you people expect them to hand out their data? To a competitor, no less? (!!)
What do they get in return?
The moral satisfaction of “doing good?”
Is that more important than risking the careers of your people, killing the application, and screwing investors of their millions?
Amazing.
You people are really something. Good luck trying to run a business. You won’t have cash. Oh, but make sure you have those PayPal Donate buttons somewhere!
Good gosh. TechCrunch commentary is an absolute joke.
I’m on flickr’s side on this one.
Zooomr lovers are living in cuckoo land
1. I don’t understand why Zooomr can’t use the APIs available right now to transfer photographs. I know several services that allow downloads from flickr. Shouldn’t that be enough? There is a wordpress plugin called “Flickr Photo Album” that gets the pictures with all the metadata including notes.
2. Zooomr is not a copy cat. Just because it is a similar service doesn’t make it a copy cat. Are google, yahoo, and msn copycats because they provide search capabilities? Zooomr is just an alternative, and not a copy.
3. Zooomr also has a great features package. Apart from the Gamma release of Flickr, I haven’t seen any changes. Their features have stayed stagnant for a while, and all they have updates is the organization. This is while Zooomr has been adding addons. There are so many things that I would want on Flickr like trackbacks, geo-tagging, and a fully featured photo management and upload tool like Picasa2.
4. Do you really see a mass exodus of paying customers going to Zooomr? I have payed the subscription fee, and don’t see myself wasting it. If Zooomr turns out to be a better option at the end of my subscription, then I’ll switch. But Flickr is still the top option for me because of its powerful community, and external support.
If you use the API for your website, smaller projects, even commercial ones, you still forward visitors to the original flickr pages. And even if they don’t subscribe and pay for the service they make up the audience flickr users like.
Gosh! If you owned your own company, would you provide access to strangers? Would you give away your sweets for a competitor’s customers? Flickr isn’t some kind of open source software, so why should they give away their service for free?
I think Flickr has an amazing policy on API access. And that’s a part of their success.
Settle down with the abuse on this comment, not entirely sure why there is need for swearing – it’s a tad unfounded. Firstly, yes Flickr is a great photo site - so is Zoomr. The criticism that is being directed to Zoomr is a little too harsh. Yes, they are a photo sharing site; yes they have features similar to Flickr. Look at every site that Mike Covers, i.e. “my space” and “tag world” - just about every dating on the net has the same features, “Net Space” and “Digg” and “Delicious” - they all pull features of each other.
Having a go at Kris is like having a go at every site that is similar. They all leach ideas off each other and this fantastic for the end user because it drives competition wedges between them and produces a more viable and streamlined end user experience.
If flickr doesn’t want to release there API or even if they do, it’s entirely there choice. Quite frankly, if there major concern is the “bandwidth costs” then I hardly think releasing an API is half of their problems – I would be inclined to suggest that funding is. Oh wait that’s right – THEY ARE OWNED BY YAHOO - whose market capitalisation last time I checked was around 42.77 Billion.
Being transparent and ensuring that collaboration on the internet is what make Web Companies grow – regardless of the size. Google is a perfect example and one that harbours its “open-source” stance as all important one. Zooomr has some great features that Flickr is lagging – lets see what is coming up on Flickr – probably geotagging and some of Zooomr features – will this mean that all the abuse on this comment string will turn around on Flickr – probably not.
In my opinion, Zoomr deserves some attention – it was written by a clearly young and very talented coder. But regardless of skill, it is still a fantastic website that is growing. When flickr was first born, http://web.archive.org/web/200.....lickr.com/, it was also extremely “unappealing” and “unstable”. User criticise Zooomr for being unstable because they demand that websites are perfect on launch and provide them everything they need. The internet has grown by releasing websites and relying on user feedback to help find bugs – so instead of criticising Zooomr, or indeed Flickr, report bugs that you find as it makes it better off for everyone.
Finally – since I do not live in the United States – I would like to remind you that “Flickr” has been hugely successful in the US correct, but there are another 6.2 Billion people on the planet that do not live in the US and a large proportion of these people do not know English – so don’t think that Flickr is “all mighty” because it is not. When Google introduces their unlimited photo sharing app supporting all languages, watch the popularity of it grow because “English” is not essential.
While this response may appear “Zooomr” biased, it is not, as I have no interests in either company – I just feel that branding a site as “a clone” or “a copy” is undeserved. This is solely based on the fact that some of the best sites on the net come from “cloning” features of others.
Cheers
If there were API sharing from both companies I don’t see a problem.
Doubt Zooomr will be around long enough to even justify the time spent on the Flickr side setting this up, and that is without taking into consideration how stupid it would be if Flickr did it.
No idea why time was wasted creating Zooomr
This debate sounds alot like the issues surrounding the ability (or inability thereof) to import/export (1) playlist data from music subscription services (2) portfolio data from finance sites (3) OPML data from certain RSS readers (4) your stored emails from free email services … the list goes on and on.
I find it hard to believe a service chooses openness as a gift to the customer, but am elated to hear people suggest otherwise. We usually think openness is a benevolent, non-competitive choice directed towards a more consumer-friendly market. I reckon other more competitive aspects are at work.
Openness (like open APIs) raises the cost of entry into a market. Just like the Googleplex raises the cost of entry into the search market, by setting a high bar for basic service features of a search engine. Essentially, every new player has to face the very realistic cost. In the case of open APIs for photo sites, this open cost of business is “churn.” Only certain firms will be able to survive given the cost repeatedly losing and re-acquiring customers.
The customer may be better off, but the market has fewer players. In time, the customer may not be better off at all. oi
This is not a battle between Flickr and Zooomr — at this point, we do some things differently and a lot the same, but you’ll see Zooomr break away with Zooomr 2, where we have many things done differently — This is not a battle.
Instead, this is a rights kind of argument that starts here and goes WAY beyond Flickr.
More and more, bigger websites are closing their USERS’ data up — The point I’d like to raise is that if the “next big thing” comes along (Zooomr or otherwise), wouldn’t you want to be able to move YOUR data from one place to another without having to download it and re-upload — spending sometimes hours doing it?
In many cases, throughout the Web, many users run into this problem everyday — and this problem is not something that cannot be solved. All Flickr does is have to give me a key to a system that has been working for years — I would give them a key from Zooomr of equal rights, and then we would be free to move data between Flickr and Zooomr — Doesn’t that sound FAIR? Both for the users and for the companies behind our users?
In regard to liking Yahoo as a company, it is true; I like ‘em! That doesn’t mean that I don’t want to make something better than what they already have — I build Zooomr because Flickr just wasn’t good enough for my tastes, and what you’re seeing in all of this is that Zooomr is coming up to terms with Flickr. We’re becoming a more world-class citizen and that won’t stop. We’ve got major investors now into Zooomr, lawyers, executives — all of that; The only thing that has not changed is that I am STILL the lead and ONLY developer of Zooomr.
And while I might be able to put a lot out there, in Zooomr 2, there are many acute systems and innovations that I want to get right the first time so that people can understand the influence it will have on how we interact with photos.
Lastly, @Stewart: Thanks for taking the time to talk about these subjects; but I IMPLORE you to understand that your users’ data is NOT horse shit. I believe again from a business standpoint that Flickr would not be so inclined to open-up your API, but that’s why there are compromises. To me, my users always come first — ALWAYS. That’s why I’m willing to stick my neck out and say, “What’s up guys?” If you care about your users (and you’ve said a million times that you do) then let’s sit down properly and go over this thing. I believe that Flickr’s Kakul has my email address if you would like to further contact me.
Very lastly, the world is not as static as some might think. Data is a very powerful thing. It is to my humble opinion that most do not know how powerful their own information can become to the right people. I think that being able to, as a user, transfer my information back and forth from services such as Zooomr to Flickr and back is an important necessity as we’re going forward as a community on the Web. It’s one of those things that if they don’t get addressed now, might become even more substantial later.
Think about it,
Kristopher Tate
cto & founder — bluebridge tech / zooomr
I believe this is not going to be the last time that data sharing issues comes up. Web 2.0 states there should be openness in both APIs and data, but this proves cause problems on the business end of things. If there could be a common way for competing services, that was accepted, to share data, at least there would be some sharing going on.
To give this idea some more support, I’ll just say that I am aiming to do the same thing on the service I am building. In fact, that is in some ways the basis of the system.
I hope things work out, Kris.
-Cody Mays
some excellent comments!!
Steve’s struck me funny!! in like Flint!! - luvv James Coburn!!**********
;))
i recently had a sad experience on Flickr where a near & dear friend cancelled her account on Flickr. She had been on there over a year & had posted some amazing beautiful photos of Vancouver Island as well as her trip to Australia. Sadly she had a Stalking incident outside of Flickr which carried over Online. She had the RCMP involved & everything. Her account, rich history, all her beautiful comments from her & her super nice friends are Gone! It’s a sad sad thing!
Not only is it the beautiful Photos & all your Tags built up over a Year but also your wonderful Social Interactions on Flickr that make it thee Shining Light in the Web2.0 Universe!!
I know personally i’ve put a poop load of work into Flickr over the past year & would completely Freak if i lost it! I’ve had a coupla run ins with their Kangaroo Court over the past year (basically fer having to tell a coupla peeple to take a flying hike at a rolling donut ;))
atanyrate it’s been a helluva Fun Ride & i hope it contuinues!!
;))
U also brought up an interesting point about Bill Gates finally exiting - thank God!!
it’s really Web2.0 companies like Flickr who have provided us the lowly consumers / endusers with Easy to Use, Enjoyable, Fun, Flexible & a Joy to Participate in that have Finally Freed us from the Shackles and Tyranny & sad Monopolistic Legacy that is Microsoft!! - good riddance*
;))
Rock On Flickr, Zoomr, Tabblo, & every other Web2.0 Innovative Company!!
Cheers! Billy Warhol ;))
If you’ve got your own hosting, just install Gallery 2 and do whatever you want with your own photos.
Gallery 2 is basically a photo-sharing CMS system based on php and MySQL. I’ve been using it for over a year, no restrictions, no problems. Why mess with any of these services when you can host it yourself?
..and no, I don’t work for them or anything…just a happy user. It’s true that you miss out on the social aspect of linking, etc., but since the source is open, someone is bound to make a plugin for that. I haven’t missed it though, TBH.
Technocrat, most people don’t. I have hosting on several places but don’t use it because it is too time consuming. Flickr is easier to use, better to look at, and a lot better feature-wise.
Flickr rocks! I’ve been using them for my photos for over a year, and I have always been happy with the service, the community, and their extensive API. Many of my friends have joined and they like it too. Flickr is the innovator here, and it sounds like they are developing a very reasonable policy on competitor usage of their API.
For the record, we’ve never gotten any “special” treatment from Flickr. I find that one of the most amazing things about working with them has been that we’ve got a full two-way integration going and we’ve never 1. sent an army of biz dev guys there, 2. signed reams of NDAs and other bogus documents or 3. had “kickoff meetings” where all the peacocks ruffle their feathers for 6 hours before getting down to planning the planning.
In other words, without knowning anyone there we’ve had a really easy and good time working with what has been a rich and powerful API for integration.
Antonio
The origiinal post is now updated to refer to policy Flickr says it is most likely to shift to.
Based on Stewart’s words, I have begun to work on a complete and documented API for Flickr, other direct and indirect competitors, and individuals alike in the hopes that upon its immediate completion, Flickr and Zooomr can begin a relationship that gives users the ability to move their data wherever they might deem fit.
-Kristopher
The economics behind these policies is suspect.
A web service is typically operated at a loss and adopts an exit strategy to justify the effort. When that service fails or is merged into a bigger entity then the users of the service are really impacted.
So, the rights of the entrepreneur to have some basic controls over their contribution to users is an important concept to protect. Maligning Fickr, which seems to have a perfectly fair policy for users to manage and protect their data is harsh, IMHO.
This same standard, the ability to freely download your own content, is not being applied as a criteria to a lot of other content based sites.
As a simple example of the editorial fairness at Techcrunch, seek the reviews of “Share Your Opml” and then go there and see what the Top feed is and then try to download anyones OPML. They don’t share. They harvest. Where’s the outrage with that site.
I’m sure there are dozens that can’t compete with Flickr using this new standard for openness… I think we need to remember the costs of entry and maintaining and service without charging for everything. It’s a bit of a magic act… See PubSub as a potential “canary in the coalmine”.
Oy.
Marshall, this is some pretty shoddy journalism, though I realize that TechCrunch is a review site and is not mandated to maintain any semblance of journalistic integrity. However, posting such polarizing posts like this reduces your credibility and I’m surprised that Mike would encourage that kind of behavior. I guess I expected more even-handedness on this kind of issue (then again, there was that whole “RIP Ning” post, so kind of thing isn’t new for TC).
I’ve met Kris and I’m friends with Stewart. When I was 17 or 18, I was taking on the world too, and writing things that bemoaned the unfairness of the incumbents and all that. At 25, I still delve into that kind of thing from time to time. It’s in my nature, as they say.
However, in this case, I think Kris is just stirring up controversy and you’re giving him a platform on which to cut down Flickr (as you’ve done before).
There are a couple issues here that this can be boiled down to:
* If you offer an API to a community product (i.e. one that the content is created by its members), must you give everyone equal access? And in corporate deals, can you restrict access to direct competitors?
* When user data is at stake, how much effort should you take to ensure open access to that data by the creator/owner? How much should you protect it from abuse or unintended consequences (see FOAF leading to exposing people’s contact info)?
* If your competitor wants unrestricted use of your API, in the spirit of the GPL, as Stewart pointed out, shouldn’t that competitor similarly offer the open, unrestricted use of their API?
* Lastly, Web 2.0 proponents et al may espouse the ideals of free, open and unrestricted sharing, regardless of whether the cannibalization of resources might ultimately lead to an impairment of the leeched services.
So let’s say, for the sake of this argument, that Kris pulls off what he’s proposed, and Zooomr 2 is this amazing, mind-blowing application (just like Flock was before it launched, remember?) and all of a sudden, everyone at Flickr vacates and moves their data and images etc over to Zooomr. I’m not sure, but I don’t think that you have any idea the size of the work or cost that Flickr has undertaken to continue to scale its system and service. An interface is not a business model — you actually have to provide a good service. Not to get preachy, but if you’re going to publicly call out Stewart or the Flickr team (who I personally respect deeply), I would hope that you get your facts straight first and exhaust every opportunity to find a diplomatic solution or compromise before launching an attack in the open media.
As the conversation has continued in Flickr’s forums and internally, it seems that a decision has not been made and in fact, Flickr is not afraid of Zooomr, they’re just mature enough to not be provoked into open warfare.
Is this for serious?
@Kristopher - Stewart didn’t say Flickr users data is horse shit, he said this story is horseshit…and it is. It’s terribly one-sided (even with the revisions, it is terribly hyperbolized and sensationalized - just look at the title). It assumes that anyone gives a crap.
Man, it was a cute story when it launched and it was about this ‘kid’ who, barely old enough to shave, and definitely not old enough to vote, copied the look of Flickr and some of its functionality while holding down a full time job and going to school. It was a great story for the rest of us to go back to our engineering teams and say, “Hey, if this kid can do all of this, why can’t you get through that bug list?”
And that was the angle. Part of the struggle of launching a new site is to come up with new ideas and design and user experiences. Kristopher could design Zooomr quickly because the model/ideas/design/ui, etc. was already there. It was a matter of coding it to work. He’s obviously good and quick. Perhaps Yahoo should hire him.
But for Zooomr to actually be thought of as a site that does anything revolutionary, like, break us free from “Roach Hotels”? Ha. That is too convenient of an argument (in Kristopher’s favor) to seem pure. Let’s concentrate on breaking down the doors of true roach hotels (Telco’s, the music industry, MySpace, Google, etc.) instead.
This is total horseshit.
For people who are questioning mobility of data for services like this, do you not see del.icio.us having an api that allows users to move their bookmarks to direct competitors like blinklist, magnolia and other such social bookmarking startups?
I think competition like this gives an added incentive to companies and services to improve themselves.
I’m glad flickr has rethought their original stance..
@Tara: Respectfully, outside of Flickr and Zooomr, this is a big issue and as someone who fights for users’ rights, I cannot believe that you wouldn’t see the ‘big picture’ in all of this.
Talking about UI, etc., humbly speaking, Zooomr is pioneering many new ways to look at photos that makes Flickr look web 1.0 (1.5?). Zooomr is not only localized in over 15 languages, but the entire site is built to express itself universally. Flickr is a lot of fun if your primary language happens to be English, but for the rest of the world, it’s hard to understand Flickr’s cues and other half American, half British style.
Lastly, if someone like myself is going to “compete” in this space, there are certain bars that I have to bring my service up to and others that I have to totally innovate through. Flickr is a big app, Yahoo Photos is a big app, oFoto is a big app, etc. There are lots of neat things from all of these that collectively, a user will expect from a newcomer such as Zooomr. I’m sure you had your share of things that you felt Riya had to do when you spent time there.
Zooomr is in a stage now where it’s almost caught-up to Flickr and others, and when Zooomr 2 rolls-out, we’ll be in a new space entirely. Flickr is becoming old school — and Zooomr is not just the first one to prove this. I’d bet there are many new apps coming along as I am writing this right now, including 23hq and Zoto!
The point still stands: What does Flickr have to be afraid of Zooomr, anyway? If Zooomr sucks like Flickr fanatics claim, then what’s the problem?
Naturally, I don’t think that Zooomr sucks, and if it did, I don’t think that we would be having this dialog right now.
-Kristopher
I already moved my bookmark from del.icio.us to blinklist.com, and it was really handy for me.
I think that web2.0 service providers must open their APIs to everyone, including competitors, but on the other hand they have to innovate and increase the number of their functionalities to stay at the top.
Good luck to everybody2.0 in that race.
Thank you all.
Here’s a thought:
Since Zooomr’s all for opening up, why not open their code files?
They’re all for improving applications for users, aren’t they?