Case Studies/Flickr

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[www.flickr.com Go to URL]
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unspecified
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Image, MovingImage
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photo, folksonomy, technical details
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Flickr is a popular photo- and video-sharing site that has enabled Creative Commons licenses.

Making my photos available on flickr using a CC-license has made wonderful things happen. My photos have been used in classrooms, in books and on blogs. They have been used to illustrate articles in Wikipedia or help charities’ fund-raising campaigns. — Lars Plougmann, http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/8157, http://www.flickr.com/people/criminalintent/

Overview

Launched in 2004 and later acquired by Yahoo, Flickr is an image and video hosting website that allows users to post, share, and comment on each other's content. These photos are organized by user-submitted tags, which generate emergent folksonomies of thematically linked photos. Users can also create photo pools, which allow others to submit images into publicly available repositories. Notably, the site also allows for Creative Commons licensing support in its service, allowing creators to share certain rights for usage of their photos with others. As of late 2009, the site hosts over four billion images.

According to a Flickr staff member in mid-2009, the site had acquired 32+ million registered users. Data on how this user base is distributed worldwide remains unclear. However, Flickr has been notably used by activists to compile and publicize events. Clay Shirky's Here Comes Everybody details the role played by Flickr in circulating photos of political protests in Belarus (p. 167). Similarly, Flickr users organized onsite protests against Microsoft's attempted buyout of Yahoo in 2008.

License Usage

Users can choose to release their work under any of the available Creative Commons licenses. As of August 2010, Flickr hosted over 157 million CC licensed images and videos. In March 2010, Creative Commons summarized the growth of CC licensed photos on Flickr over the years.

Flickr has also published its shapefile dataset online, waiving all copyright restrictions via the CC0 public domain waiver. A shapefile is a file containing shapes mathematically generated by thousands of Flickr geotagged photos of particular neighborhoods, countries, and continents. Shapefile data has been used to reverse-engineer maps with user generated longitude and latitude coordinates that are then demarcated by Where-On-Earth IDs, "unique numeric identifiers that correspond to the hierarchy of places where a photo was taken: the neighbourhood, the town, the county, and so on up to the continent."

Motivations

Jon Phillips, who worked closely with Flickr on CC integration, commented that open licensing was useful in "providing an interface with the rest of the world and the blogosphere without having to ask permission. It provided, in short, a clear path to usage."

When Flickr first integrated CC licensing, they wrote that "As individuals and as a company we wholeheartedly support and endorse the Creative Commons’ mission and hope to help contribute to the preservation and enhancement of creative freedom and personal expression."

On releasing its shapefile dataset via the CC0 public domain waiver, Flickr gives the following reasons:

  • We want people (developers, researchers and anyone else who wants to play) to find new and interesting ways to use the shapefiles and we recognize that, in many cases, this means having access to the entire dataset.
  • We want people to feel both comfortable and confident using this data in their projects and so we opted for a public domain license so no one would have to spend their time wondering about the issue of licensing. We also think the work that the Creative Commons crew is doing is valuable and important and so we chose to release the shapefiles under the CC0 waiver as a show of support.
  • We want people to create their own shapefiles and to share them so that other people (including us!) can find interesting ways to use them. We’re pretty sure there’s something to this “shapefile stuff” even if we can’t always put our finger on it so if publishing the dataset will encourage others to do the same then we’re happy to do so.

Technical Details

Flickr has implemented 1) a license chooser, 2) the license mark on pages for CC licensed objects, 3) CC REL metadata, and 4) searching for CC licensed videos.

For a basic guide, see how to publish on Flickr.

License chooser

There are many ways to CC license your content in Flickr. The three main ways are 1) setting a default license for your account to apply the license to all new uploads, 2) batch-licensing all your previous uploads, or 3) selectively licensing some of your photos.

Setting a default license

To set a default CC license for your content, follow these directions:

1. Go to Your account and click on the Privacy and Permissions tab.

Flickr1.png

2. Scroll down to the Defaults for new uploads section and look for the following line (you may not already have a default license, but the example below does):

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3. Click Edit and you will be taken to a license chooser to select a new default license for new uploads.

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On that page you also have the option to Batch edit the license for all of your previous uploads. So you could, for example, CC license all of your previously uploaded photos before you had set a default license.

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License mark

Metadata

CC search

Media

Creative Commons licensed photos

Some collections from Creative Commmons affiliates give a good sense of the type of material collected: