The venerable photo-sharing website will for the first time since 2005 be run by a photography-focused company. Here's what'll change and what won't. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to 2024 ...
With photo-sharing sites and storage giants like Facebook, Instagram, Dropbox and Amazon, the once-dominant Flickr has lost its place. So what is Flickr now? Its chief says we'll know in about a year.
Flickr announced in November it would be changing its generous photo storage allotment for free users, restricting them to a 1,000-photo limit, and threatening to delete excess photos unless you ...
Flickr today is rolling out a revamped version of its website, software applications for desktop and mobile, as well as its search service, in what’s perhaps the biggest update since the company’s ...
This week, Flickr reintroduced something that now feels novel in a world replete with free (or very cheap) unlimited photo storage: Flickr Pro, a $49.99 per year upgrade that grants its enlistees ...
Flickr's latest app is its best yet, but even that might not be enough to save it. I posted my first-ever selfie on Flickr on July 11, 2004. Taken with the rear camera of a Sony Ericsson T616, the ...
[Update, 11/8/2018: SmugMug updated its Creative Commons and non-profit policy on November 7. All media in free accounts that had a Creative Commons or public-domain declaration of any kind applied ...
Flickr is continuing to nudge users toward paid accounts under SmugMug's ownership. The photo host has told users they'll soon need Pro accounts to share "restricted and moderate" content. The company ...
SAN FRANCISCO — Flickr has been snapped up by Silicon Valley photo-sharing and storage company SmugMug, USA TODAY has learned. SmugMug CEO Don MacAskill told USA TODAY he's committed to breathing new ...
To get people interested in Flickr again, Yahoo is letting its terabytes do the talking. The photo service, which Yahoo acquired in 2005, is now offering a whopping one terabyte of free storage, with ...
Smart as they are, computers are still as blind as a bat. It’s why search engines index the web using text and why you still have to fill out those annoying captchas. But with advances in machine ...
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