A few weeks ago I discovered a great site called photographyVoter.com, founded by Paul O’Connor. The site is similar to Digg.com, but is squarely focused around photography. For a little more background check out Interview with Paul O’Connor. In case you missed it check out my last recommended photography resource: “Photographer Rights & Education“
Last week on the “Epic Edits Weblog” Brian Auer posted a list of blogs, relating to the topic of photography, as supplied by his readers. There are a lot of great sites in this list and I thought those reading my blog might find them interesting. Enjoy! BLOGS ABOUT PHOTOGRAPHY Photowalking.org by Trevor Carpenter A central place for photowalkers and fans of photowalking TrevorCarpenter.com by Trevor Carpe
I’m not sure how this slipped by me, but Wired published a very interesting development in March “Adobe Tackles Photo Forgeries“. It’ll be interesting to see how this is used in the future to detect altered photojournalism photos. As we’ve seen repeatedly particularly with the high profile case of Allan Dietrich, previously noted in my post “Ethics of Photography: Career Suicide by
Thanks to Trevor Carpenter’s blog post “Get paid! No one takes advantage of me.” which references my article “The Dark Side of Flickr: Photo Phishing By Corporate America” I remembered a great resource for photographers to reference: EditorialPhoto.com This site is a critical resource for photographer who often are wondering about copyright information, pricing, contracts (particularly t
PDN just released an article in their latest online and print edition titled “Your Friend Flickr?“. It’s an interesting cross section of the current state of Flickr, including it’s lack of commercial support and examples of well known offline transactions that got their start there. It barely touches upon a topic I’ve talked about (see “The Dark Side of Flickr: Photo Phishing By Co
Photo Taken With An Apple iPhone … Or was it? One of the few things that was not demonstrated at the Macworld 2007 Keynote Address by Steve Jobs was the use of the camera built into the iPhone. Those looking for the first sign of an image from an Apple iPhone seem to have stumbled upon it recently. The EXIF data seems to confirm the image was from an iPhone, but it should be noted it is possible to edit EXIF da
After reading Brian Auer’s blog entry “Who Qualifies As A Photographer?” it got me thinking about a more profound question that was once brought to my attention. When I first became interested in photography I was introduced to the concept of a “photograph” versus a “snapshot”. To be honest when I first heard the definition (see below) I thought it was rather pretentious, but
Sometime ago my friend Oskar approached me with the results of an experiment that was mind blowing. He ran an experiment which enlightened me regarding the aspect of working with JPEG format files that drastically impacts image quality. At the core of Oskar’s observation is that when working with a JPEG file, in many programs (potentially even Photoshop), each alteration made will prompt a save in the program b