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Facebook vs Google+ (My Take)

Ok, so I’ve had both for a while now. When Google+ first hit the scene I really liked how it integrated my photos and other Google related assets into my Google+ space. I liked the design and I especially liked how I wasn’t being bombarded with inane Game requests (read: social profiling) that was becoming all to frequent on FB --until I my wife showed me how to turn those off ;) I was also grateful to not have to deal with the shotgun ads approach of FB where as a married man I had to put up with the plethora of Dating site ads even though my profile status was set to married. That being said FB seems to be working on this by letting you turn certain adverts or advertisers off--good on ya FB.

But at the time Google+ looked like it was going to be a real contender to replacing my Facebook with its killer feature “circles” --assuming I could get all my friends to move there of course. I guess that’s when you find out who your friends really are :-/

But then FB introduced their new Timeline feature and at first I thought --Whatever?! But then I rolled over to it and discovered it was really cool--sorry no more valley girl, I promise. But, for me it gave FB a whole new lease in life. I liked the expanded profile section which has the potential to start replacing my LinkedIn content as well as how it merged into my timeline. I also liked how FB introduced Covers allowing me to personalise my FB home page--just enough to express a little of “Moi” without breaking the familiar flow of the FB UI for myself and other users. These guys and gals are really smart.

And to be honest this is where I think that on the social networking side of things Google is pushing it up hill. Google started as an Apps platform and is trying to build social networking into it. FB on the other hand started as a social networking platform and is now starting to build apps around it. The point is that it is much easier to get punters to leave their apps provider than to leave all of their friends. FB has a captive market. People are on FB because that’s where their friends are. Now that FB has instagram and all our photos are merging into our FB Timeline i.e. we don’t have to work to get our friends to see them because again, FB is where our friends and family already are.

Blogs will become the purvey of serious and wannabe writers (that’s me) with most being content with their FB Timeline as being their blog.

I see the instagram purchase as impacting both Picasa and Tumblr where punters will again decide that getting in their friends faces is much easier at FB. Mind you that can end up being both a blessing and a curse--only time will tell.

Don’t Buy In to the Model Release Myth

Shared by Wildframe

all well and good if you live in a country that actually has a bill of rights …ohhh for a revolution [...sighs wistfully]

The myth I’m writing about today has undoubtedly caused thousands of excellent, award-winning photos never to be taken. It’s the myth of the model release for editorial use.

Photography columnists, unaware of their First Amendment rights, have been fanning the fires of this issue for years. A wall of mythology has built up around the subject, and I’ll make the first move to break it down for you:

No, editorial stock photographers: you do not need model releases.

To Inform and to Educate

About two million dollars a day are spent in the publishing of editorial stock photography, where the essential use is to inform and to educate.

Photo buyers in this arena rarely require a model release, unless the photo is so sensitive that it might compromise a person in some way. These are rare cases involving highly charged subjects, such as drug abuse or certain medical issues.

A good rule of thumb would be to ask yourself, “Would a newspaper photographer ask for a model release in this situation?”

Whatever the answer, take the picture anyway. The photo editor will be the one to determine if the image can be used.

Wearing Two Hats

You might now be asking, “So why was I under the impression that model releases are always required?”

Part of the reason is that most teaching and training for working photographers in the United States is slanted to commercial photography, where you do need a model release.

As stock photography has grown and become more prevalent, commercial photographers have expanded into media photography, and brought with them the assumption that a model release is always required.

Some editorial stock photographers like to get model releases so they have the flexibility to use their photos for commercial purposes, such as advertisements or endorsements.

As my friend Jim Cook, creator of METAMachine, says, “My accountant loves me for getting model releases; so does my wife.”

Some photographers can wear two hats, commercial and editorial. Try it. You might be built for it.

Personally, I’m not. I stick to the editorial side of selling stock.

A Powerful Ally

You — as an editorial stock photographer operating a business in a free society — have a powerful ally on your side. It’s the First Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.

The First Amendment, in effect, says you can take photographs in public (no model releases needed) as long as you are not breaking any local laws, such as trespassing.

It would be a bureaucrat’s dream for officials to be able to say, “You can’t photograph in my school, my police precinct, my park.” In reality, these people (school principals, police officers, etc.) work for you. They are your civil servants. Your taxes pay for their buildings, equipment, and salaries.

As long as you are not interrupting their normal course of duties, you can photograph them.

Deep Pockets

From time to time, there are lawsuits challenging the rights of photographers. But if you examine each case, the plaintiff almost always goes after the publisher with deep pockets, not the photographer. And the plaintiff rarely wins.

Large publishing houses, which spend $50,000 to $150,000 per month for photography, are vigilant about protecting their First Amendment rights, and in so doing, they protect your First Amendment Rights.

So go out and photograph freely in public. You’ll be in the good company of Margaret Bourke-White, Henri Cartier-Bresson, Dorothea Lange, Arthur Rothstein, and others. And the world will be a better informed and educated place for your efforts.

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No more boring pictures of world-famous places: Tips for better vacation photos – The Canadian Press

Shared by Wildframe

Makes me think I want to go travelling again so much. Maybe we won last nights lotto … Stay tuned ;)


The Canadian Press
No more boring pictures of world-famous places: Tips for better vacation photos
The Canadian Press
Reading the manual on the plane is not enough, says Eliot Cohen, a Washington, DC-based photographer who teaches digital photography classes.

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