That's how it worked for me too, Ann. I can't remember how long ago I
requested an invite, but it was long enough that I completely forgot
about it - so I'd say at least 15 or 20 minutes.
:)

On Sun, Jan 10, 2016 at 12:51 PM, ann sanfedele <[email protected]> wrote:
> I requested, got reply but haven't been invited -- apparently they have lots
> of interest.. politely siad they
> would or might invite in future
>
> ann
>
>
> On 1/9/2016 7:15 PM, David Parsons wrote:
>>
>> I just checked it out.  They are in beta now, and you request an invite to
>> join.
>>
>> On Sat, Jan 9, 2016 at 7:06 PM, Darren Addy <[email protected]> wrote:
>>>
>>> You may have heard about the photographer discovering that one of his
>>> images had been appropriated by ISIS for propaganda purposes. What you
>>> may not have paid attention to is the service that alerted him of the
>>> violation: Pixsy
>>> http://www.pixsy.com/what-to-do-when-isis-steals-your-photo/
>>>
>>> I had signed up some time ago for a Pixsy invite but apparently missed
>>> it when it came. However today I noticed a reminder email from them
>>> and used the invitation. I am very impressed with their algorithm's
>>> ability to find where your images are posted. I just fed them my
>>> Flickr account and they (very quickly) about 25 pages full of links
>>> with my image and the suspected image.
>>>
>>> There were a lot of images that they found on places where I had
>>> posted them (like forum.mflenses.com, pentaxforums.com, etc.) and
>>> there were a lot of inexplicable false positives, they also found a
>>> good number of actual unauthorized uses by businesses and
>>> organizations. What was ESPECIALLY impressive was that their algorithm
>>> found my image inside composite images that had been made by the
>>> infringer, one case where the infringed usage of the image was
>>> somewhat cropped, and another where it was used in a slider graphic
>>> and faded out to one side (in otherwords, my image, but modified by
>>> the infinger. This was pretty impressive!
>>>
>>> You can submit a claim with Pixsy and they will negotiate a licensing
>>> fee with the infringer and pay the photographer 50%.
>>>
>>> However, since they are new, I can't find any info on how much those
>>> negotitated fees might actually be. So for now, I plan to use Pixsy
>>> simply as my "bloodhound" and turn the infringements over to a real
>>> copyright/photo attorney. It may be slower, but I don't think
>>> attorney's charge THAT much unless they actually go to court, and
>>> being attorneys I'll bet they get higher amounts than Pixsy will. (At
>>> least two of my infringers are pretty big name web sites).
>>>
>>> Here is the Pixsy blog: https://www.pixsy.com/blog/
>>> An article from fstoppers from back in March:
>>>
>>> https://fstoppers.com/business/exclusive-sneak-peek-inside-pixsy-beta-60219
>>>
>>> https://www.pixsy.com/sign-up/
>>>
>>> In addition to negotiation licenses, you can also quickly issue a DCMA
>>> takedown notice using images that Pixsy finds that belong to you.
>>>
>>> Hope someone finds this useful.
>>> --
>>> Life is too short to put up with bad bokeh.
>>>
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>>> follow the directions.
>>
>>
>>
>
>
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