Différences entre versions de « Flickr »

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* poser son flux complet Flickr sur un site local. https://github.com/aaronpk/Flickr-Archiver
 
* poser son flux complet Flickr sur un site local. https://github.com/aaronpk/Flickr-Archiver
 
* Clément a trouvé mais n'a pas testé http://try.digi.me/desktop une solution de sauvegarde pour iOS et Android.
 
* Clément a trouvé mais n'a pas testé http://try.digi.me/desktop une solution de sauvegarde pour iOS et Android.
 +
* Depuis juillet 2014, toutes les photos d'Olivier Ezratty sont rassemblées en [un seul endroit](http://www.oezratty.net/wordpress/photos) géré grâce au plugin [[WordPress]] **Photo-Folders** qu'il développé pour lui-même.
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* Vincent a essayé Bulkr pour récupérer une archive complète avec métadonnées d'environ 50000 photos (mettre lien vers URL galerie)
  
 
== ailleurs sur indieweb ==
 
== ailleurs sur indieweb ==
 
{{iwc}}
 
{{iwc}}

Version du 30 décembre 2016 à 05:59

Cet article est une ébauche. Vous pouvez m'aider à l'améliorer et le compléter. Merci.


Cette page est destinée à étudier les stratégies de sauvegarde d'un compte flickr.

Via un post d'Alex lu sur Sauvegarde Flickr, je suis ravi de découvrir downloadair. Une solution simple pour récupérer quelques photos hébergées sur mon compte Flickr : https://downloadair.ghusse.com/

La sauvegarde est en cours et peut plusieurs heures.

@Clément : toutes les métadonnées (EXIF et commentaires) sont perdus. Néanmoins, je prévois de tester l'interface-utilisateur de Downloadair pour sauvegarder en local quelques images posées par les amis sur le silo Flickr. ++ portrait xtof 28 décembre 2016 à 17:45 (UTC)

Flickr-Downloadair 2016-12-28.png


Alternative indieweb à tester en 2017

ailleurs sur indieweb


Flickr is a photo and video hosting silo founded in 2004 that some in the IndieWeb community have posted to and/or currently use as a POSSE destination.

Why

Why POSSE

Why POSSE to Flickr in particular?

  • Tantek Çelik: I noticed that my Flickr photos get some notable re-use due to better discoverability of Flickr photos, and CC licensing. Thus to encourage more notable re-use, I am POSSEing my photos to Flickr, and selectively make them public.

How to

How to export your data

There are various tools for exporting your photos, comments, tags, and favorites from Flickr. Please document such tools here.

Direct Export

From one's account page, Flickr offers a one-click tool that will email you a link for data download.

You can use this tool to download the information that Flickr has about your account, including account preferences, profile information, and your photos and videos. This process will take some time, so we’ll send you an email when it’s ready for you to download.

Using Flickr Camera Roll

This method exports the photos only, no meta information like tags and albums. Open https://www.flickr.com/cameraroll and you should see all of your photos. You can click-and-drag to select multiple photos. At the bottom of the page will be options for the selected photos. Click "Download" and you will be prompted to save a zip file of the selected photos. If you select a large amount of photos, it may automatically break them into separate zip files. I exported 841 photos on 2016-02-23 and it made two zip files. gRegor Morrill

Flickr Archiver

See Aaron Parecki's https://github.com/aaronpk/Flickr-Archiver

flickr-cli

flickr-cli by TheFox is a command-line PHP tool for uploading and downloading Flickr items. It's download function has an option to download all of a user's original files and save their metadata in YAML files.

Feeds

Flickr has numerous feeds to views of content that can be used to PESOS content from Flickr, or to backup recent content.

tag feeds

Flickr has publicly readable feeds of tagged photos: (e.g. photos tagged with "indiewebcamp")

user feeds

Flickr's feeds related to a specific user by opaque userid in the URL are also public, e.g. for userid 39039882@N00 (user: http://flickr.com/tantek ) :

photo/video posts from a user:

favorites of a user:

photos of a user: (people tagged)

activity feed

Flickr has a (totally undocumented?) feed of activity for the logged in user, where activity is anything you would normally be notified about in notifications (faves, comments, replies to photos you have replied on). To limit content to only photos in your own stream, add &activity_view=photostream

These require you to be logged in and redirect to a "secret" URL and may include activity on non-public photos.

WordPress Tool

2019-02-20 Chris Hardie wrote up how he used his own custom tool to export from Flickr and import into his own WordPress blog. The code is available on Github: Flickr Export to WordPress Import with reasonable instructions.

How to POSSE

You can POSSE the following to Flickr:

  • photos
  • videos
  • reply posts as comments on Flickr photos/videos (including POSSE reply-threading, when you reply to an indie photo/video that has a Flickr POSSE copy).
  • like posts as favorites on Flickr photos/videos (including POSSE favoriting, when you like an indie photo/video that has a Flickr POSSE copy).

Bridgy Publish POSSE

You can use Bridgy Publish to POSSE to Flickr since 2015-11-15 the following kinds of posts:

Feature request for POSSEing tag-reply posts:

How to backfeed from

If you POSSE to Flickr, you should backfeed all the responses to your Flickr POSSE copies. E.g.

  • Flickr favorite -> like
  • Flickr comment -> reply

Bridgy Backfeed

You can use Bridgy to backfeed favorites & comments from Flickr POSSE copies back to their originals since 2015-09-17.

Feature requests for backfeeding taggings:

IndieWeb POSSE backfeed examples

The following have gotten POSSE to Flickr working:

Ben Werdmuller

Ben Werdmüller with Known on werd.io since at least 2014-07-17 (fairly certain there are much earlier examples, thus leaving benwerd at top of list)

Jeremy Keith

Jeremy Keith with ACME on adactio.com since 2014-07-08, e.g.

atomicules

atomicules using Jekyll combined with custom deploy/syndication scripts on atomicules.co.uk since 2015-08-15

Tantek

Tantek Çelik using Falcon to automatically POSSE via Bridgy Publish since 2016-032 (manually since 2016-016, including all photos+videos from 2016-01) from tantek.com

Features

Summary of Flickr's features:

Details of some specific features are provided in sections below.

Privacy

Location data has different privacy settings from the photos

Photos on Flickr have a privacy setting for seeing the photo itself, and a separate privacy setting for viewing the location of the photo. For example it is possible to set a photo to public, but have the location only visible to "Friends and Family".

Geofencing

Flickr allows you to configure one or more geofences around locations such as "home" or "work", and any time photos are uploaded that fall into that area, the geo privacy will be set automatically.[1]

Brainstorming

How to delete your account

TBD.

Has anyone deleted their Flickr account? What's the process? How long do they hold your data anyway? Etc.

See also: delete your account

Issues

PESOS unreliability

There has been some experience with a PESOS approach not working well with Flickr:

  • 2014-10-05 @anomalily

    Whoa, leveling up in the #indieweb world: about to switch from PESOS to POSSE for @flickr because PESOS is failing me

Recommendation: POSSE to Flickr instead of PESOS.

Two Pages About You

Users on Flickr have two pages "about" them:

  • /photos/username (also often works at just /username) - no link to your website, but shows your stream of recent photo posts, and has a rel-me link to your /people/username page:
  • /people/username - has rel-me support for linking back to your website. Shows a few recent photo thumbnails, recent photos of your, your recent favorites.

No other service splits your profile identity like this. Typical silos all have integrated profile pages that show both your latest posts and your profile information like your website.

Because of this, and because Flickr encourages linking to the /photos/username page, getting rel=me to work with Flickr is a bit more out-of-the-way work, but still doable.

Criticism

Downtime

  • 2007-02-19 Flickr massage: 420426227_dda4d24789_o.png


Other uses

  • Peter Molnar ended up using Flickr as a geotagging software due to it's relatively sophisticated drag-and-drop map organizer and to the lack of similar in linux land. The short summary is that once POSSEd photos are placed on the map in Flickr, this information can be exported and added to the local image file itself.

History

(stub section)

See Also


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