12 May 2011 Last updated at 06:08 ET

Twitpic angers users over copyright grab

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-13372982

Picture posting service Twitpic has apologised for seeming to claim copyright 
on every image users upload.

A row blew up over photographs on Twitpic following changes made to the 
service's terms on 10 May.

Many users cancelled their Twitpic accounts because the changes implied that 
the site was claiming the right to sell pictures without permission.

Twitpic defended itself and said the new rules were intended to protect users' 
photos from abuse by the media.

Cash call
Twitpic founder Noah Everett apologised via the company blog for the "lack of 
clarity" in the updated Terms and Conditions.

Mr Everett stressed that Twitpic account holders own the copyright on the 
images and said the terms had been changed again to show "that you still own 
your content".

However, by signing up to Twitpic users also agree to let the service 
distribute their images to the company's partners.

This clause was needed, said Mr Everett, because as Twitpic has grown, a lot of 
the pictures that people post to it have found their way into reports about 
newsworthy events.

One of the most famous images posted on Twitpic came from January 2009 when a 
US Airways jet crash landed on the Hudson river.

"We've seen this content being taken without permission and misused," wrote Mr 
Everett.

By changing the terms, Twitpic hopes to limit this abuse. In this vein it 
recently signed an exclusive deal with the Wenn news group to syndicate images 
posted on Twitpic.

The apology and re-write of the terms came too late for many who said they had 
deleted their accounts and removed their photos.

Evidence of how strongly people felt about the issue was seen by the hashtags 
#twitpic and #delete trending in conjunction on the micro-blogging service.

Many also felt that the explanation did little to clear up the ambiguity over 
who would profit from a newsworthy photo. Mr Everett was pressed for a clearer 
statement via his account on Twitter. So far he has not replied.

Twitpic's terms and conditions are similar to those of many other Twitter 
picture services such as Yfrog, Flickr and Instagram which all give those firms 
the right to redistribute images.

The row prompted MobyPictures to change its terms to include a specific clause 
which says it will not try to sell users' images.

Twitpic is not the first new media company to irritate its users by changing 
their terms and conditions. Facebook has weathered several controversial 
changes as has Apple, Flickr and Google.
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