The original blog entry says they scraped everything on Flickr. I know
Flicker allows you to make your images "private" so the viewer has to
enter a password. I've not used that for mine, but that looks to be in
the future.
Does anyone know if they scraped the "private" images as well as the
public ones?
And what happens if you remove the image from Flickr?
From: Tom C
It makes one shudder. If one were to ask for an image to be removed I
can't imagine there is any kind of mechanism for preventing it from
being scraped again.
Tom C.
On Fri, May 21, 2010 at 2:27 PM, Doug Franklin
<[email protected]> wrote:
> In the couple of hours since I checked the site at work, now it's down.
> ?Here's the message it displays now:
>
> "Imagelogr.com is currently offline as we are improving the website. Due to
> copyright issues we are now changing some stuff around to make people happy.
> Please check back soon."
>
> Uh huh. ?"make people happy". ?Wonder if they're going to admit that they're
> thieves and stop it. ?I'm guessing not.
>
> -------- Original Message --------
> Subject: Mass-scale Copyright Infringement
> Date: Fri, 21 May 2010 16:25:41 -0400
> From: Doug Franklin <[email protected]>
>
> Is Imagelogr.com Trying to Be the Largest Copyright Infringer of All Time?
>
>
>
<http://thomashawk.com/2010/05/is-imagelogr-com-trying-to-be-the-largest-copyright-infringer-of-all-time.html>
>
> --
> Thanks,
> DougF (KG4LMZ)
>
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