Instagram

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Instagram is a popular photo and short video hosting silo most well known for square photos that have been processed with an image filter.

Why

Should I join Instagram? Why use Instagram?

Indie photo posting client

Some of us have found it to be a useful client for posting to your site via Micropub and ownyourgram.

If your site supports receiving Micropub requests for publishing photos, you may want to consider creating a private Instagram account, using it to setup ownyourgram, and then use Instagram’s native mobile app(s) and servers purely as a convenient client for posting photos and short videos to your own site.

This technique of using a silo purely as a client to get content to your own site is also referred to as "silos as plumbing".

See PESOS below for more details.

How To

How to use a link to initiate a direct message

Create a link, replacing with the desired username:

<a href="https://instagram.com/m/username">Send a message on Instagram</a>

This is confirmed working as of 2023-12-12.

Features

(this section is a stub and needs your contribution to complete it!)

  • photo post with:
    • reduced resolution photo, e.g. 1080x810
    • caption limited to 2200 characters (just the first comment if it is by the author) (per this post)
      • displayed in full if 125 chars or less, otherwise only the first line or so is displayed followed by a "…" that a reader must click to display the rest.
    • hashtags in caption or any comment by author, hyperlinked inline
    • person-tags at locations (points) on the photo
    • venue (from Facebook's venue database)
  • video post which Instagram now calls Reels
  • story (AKA "Your Story") singular post, one per profile (since mid-2016)
    • ephemeral photos and videos that disappear in 24h. The story feature allowed posting multiple photos (and/or videos) in a time sequence (shown in sequence one at a time) which many use to tell a story about their day. Access to individual story items disappear from other users' views within 24 hours.
    • positioned text labels (optional color/rotation/resizing)
    • stickers on all photos and videos in a story.
    • hashtags on all photos and videos in a story.
    • person-tags on all photos and videos in a story.
    • pin any label/sticker/tag to some thing in a video and have it follow that thing as it moves around
  • multi-photo post (since 2017-02-22) which they call a carousel
    • up to 20 photos (as of 2024; previously was limited to 10 photos)
    • even lower resolution than single photo posts, e.g.: 750x750, 640x640
    • a caption (is just the first comment if it is by the author)
    • inline hyperlinked hashtags
    • limitations: no photo editing (filters only), must be square cropped
    • venue (from Facebook's venue database)
  • collection posts (beyond simple multi-photos) also called carousels
    • up to 20 of any combination of photos and/or videos (as of 2024; previously was limited to 10 photos)
    • per-photo person-tags
    • limitations: no per-item name(caption), no person-tags on videos, no per-item location/venue.
  • follow users
  • mute a following’s posts, stories, or both
  • comment on photos
  • like photos
  • private bookmarking of posts, optionally into one named collection, does not notify post author. (since 2016-12-14)
  • notifications of comments, likes, follows, and person-tags
  • report abuse regarding a user, photo, or comment
  • search for
    • users
    • hashtags
  • private account
  • profile page (equivalent of indieweb homepage) configuration including
    • icon
    • name (as displayed next to icon, before posts)
    • 150 character bio
    • website - but not another silo profile[2]
  • who to follow - shown when you follow someone
    • 3 suggested users to follow
  • settings
    • comments
      • "Hide inappropriate comments: Hide comments that contain words or phrases often reported as offensive" toggle.
      • "Custom keywords: Comments that contain any of the words or phrases above will be hidden. Add keywords, separated by commas."
      • turn off commenting
  • ...

Exporting your data

On 2018-04-25 instagram launched an archive retrieval process, accessible at https://www.instagram.com/download/request/. There is a 48 hour window cited for instagram to comply with an archive request.

Downloaded data consists of

  • Photos, in folders sorted by month, in jpg format at 72dpi (may be larger than original)
  • Post text, comments, likes, contacts and similar information in .json format

Downloaded data does NOT include

  • Photo alt text
  • Any mapping of posts to Instagram URLs

Instaport.me and flickstagram.org let you export your Instagram photos.

freedom.io (source) can copy all of your Instagram photos and videos to WordPress, Tumblr, or Blogger, creating a new blog post for each, with the original dates and all comments intact.

Norm's instagram-backup tool exports Instagram photos and metadata.

Single Photo Bookmarklet

If you view a single photo permalink page, the following bookmarklet will extract the permalink (trimmed), photo jpg URL, and photo caption and copy them into a text note, suitable for posting as a photo that's auto-linked:

For plain text:

javascript:n=document.images.length-1;s=document.images[n].src;s=s.split('?');s=s[0];u=document.location.toString().substring(0,39);prompt('Choose "Copy ⌘C" to copy photo post:',s+' '+u+'\n'+document.getElementsByTagName("h1")[0].innerText.replace(/\n\.(\n\.)+/g,'\n'))

For HTML (e.g. storage files. escapes & < >)

javascript:n=document.images.length-1;s=document.images[n].src;s=s.split('?');s=s[0];u=document.location.toString().substring(0,39);prompt('Choose "Copy ⌘C" to copy photo post:',s+' '+u+'\n'+document.getElementsByTagName("h1")[0].innerText.replace(/\n\.(\n\.)+/g,'\n').replace(/\&/g,'&amp;').replace(/\</g,'&lt;').replace(/\>/g,'&gt;'))

Any questions, let me know! Tantek Çelik (I used the second version ("For HTML") myself as part of my photo post authoring flow until 2017-085. -t).

Drag and drop-able button version can be found here

Bookmarklet improvements

  • remove errant username from start of caption text
  • support multi-photo posts (detecting, producing markup)
  • support video posts (detecting, producing markup)
  • support mixed multi-photo/video posts

POSSE

Instagram does not have a photo upload API. However they do have comments delete / create APIs. Sadly commenting via the API is not supported. So here's how you can fake POSSE to Instagram:

  1. You post to Instagram using their client app, including location information, people tags, and caption (first comment).
  2. Your server receives a notification of the photo post via webhook call back
  3. Your server copies the photo (in PESOS fashion) to your own server
    1. creating a permalink for the photo on your own server
    2. copying the location information, people tags, and caption
    3. adding a link to the copy of the photo on Instagram with u-syndication
  4. Your server deletes the first comment on the Instagram photo
  5. Your server creates a new first comment (thus caption) on the Instagram photo, as you, with:
    1. original caption contents followed by permashortlink for the photo on your server

And bingo, you've effectively created a POSSE copy of your photo on Instagram since it now has a permashortlink back to the new "original" on your own site.

At this point you can also use a service like Bridgy to backfeed comments on the photo from Instagram to your own site.

POSSE via private API

Instagram has a private, undocumented API that is used by the web client. You can use this API to do almost anything the web client can do, but is likely to be changed at any moment.

Grant Richmond automatically POSSEs likes, photo posts and galleries to instagram by resizing his photos and sending the data to the private api with a npm package.

jwz maintains a Perl-based tool using the undocumented API.

PESOS from Instagram

Since Instagram doesn't have an API to post photos, many people use OwnYourGram to do the reverse: post photos to Instagram and have the service post them back to their website. To use this, your site will need to support Micropub.

POSSE responses

  • Kyle Mahan POSSEs likes for Instagram photos via the official Instagram API (which is read-only for everything except, inexplicably, for likes) since 2015-01-03
    • Added POSSE for comments via "unofficial" API (Selenium/PhantomJS browser automation) on 2015-07-12
  • Bridgy Publish can POSSE likes to Instagram since 2015-01-07
  • ...

POSSE via Workflow.is

Sebastiaan Andeweg uses the iOS app Workflow to semi-automate his photo posting workflow, including a post to Instagram. He documented his Workflow workflow on Workflow.

POSSE via SNAP with WordPress

While Chris Aldrich most often uses a PESOS workflow involving DsgnWrks Instagram Importer, he will occasionally use the pro version of the SNAP plugin for WordPress which is able to post photos directly to Instagram using their custom API. Instructions for setting up SNAP to do this can be found on their site.

POSSE as mobile browser

Instagram recently updated their mobile web site to allow mobile web photo posts, thus it should be possible to have your server POSSE to Instagram for you by acting as your mobile browser.

Also looking into this for Bridgy Publish support:

Manual POSSE

gRegor Morrill

gRegor Morrill posts photos on gregorlove.com first, manually posts the same photo and caption to Instagram, copies the Instagram URL and adds it as a syndication link on the original photo post.

Tantek

Tantek Çelik posts photos on Swarm (private account) for ease of mobile publishing, then uses those to create photo posts on tantek.com, and manually posts the same photo and (sometimes abbreviated) caption to Instagram, copies the Instagram URL and adds it as a syndication link on the original photo post.

Manual Notes

Some users manually cross-post occasional notes posts to Instagram, e.g.:

Tweet text to Instagram

As of this edit:

  • the original has only *2* favorites. (2,346 followers on account)
  • the POSSE copy: *130* likes and *3* comments. (14,512 followers on account)

For some reason, POSSE copies, even of *notes*, on Instagram receive more interactions per follower.

Hypothesis: the Instagram reader experience is so much smoother and nicer that it tends to encourage more use and thus more interactions.

IndieWeb note to Instagram

PESOS

Additional approaches:

Previously Tantek

Tantek Çelik uses his iPod Touch to publish photos to Swarm and Instagram for ease of posting from mobile device to the web.

Previously:

From 2015-244 to 2017-085, Tantek Çelik did manual PESOS from Instagram to public posts on his own site (tantek.com), and then used Falcon to automatically POSSE his photo posts to Facebook, Flickr, & Twitter with Bridgy Publish, as well as link back to the Instagram copy as syndication.

Since 2017-087, Tantek Çelik has been manually POSSEing to Instagram (see #Tantek above).

cweiske

Christian Weiske uses instagram2micropub to archive private instagram posts to a self-hosted Known instance automatically.

backfeed

You can use Bridgy to get some backfeed of responses from Instagram POSSE copies.

(this section is a stub)

  • limitations with Brid.gy: only first 10 likes come through.
    • Scraping the public Instagram web pages only gives you the oldest 10 likes for a picture. After that, the UI says 'and X others' anyway. The property is called edge_media_preview_like, and includes a full count, but no names, pictures or URLs of the people who like it, other than the first 10. (You can't poll either, because they give you the first, not the last.)

You can supposedly get your own API key (in sandbox mode) to do your own backfeed. (does anyone do this?)

  • Getting likes seems to be impossible without getting your app approved. Some endpoints work, others give a HTTP 200 status, but an empty array.
    • /users/self/media/recent works, probably because it contains you own pictures
    • /media/:id/likes does not work, probably because the likes are other people's content
    • /users/self/media/liked does not work, probably because your likes contain other people's content
  • Getting your app approved seems to be hard.

API

Supposed Features and Limitations

  • Instagram's official API can potentially create (and delete) comments and likes, but not photos.

Like

Ryan Barrett has found that Instagram's API now supports progammatically "liking" photos (used to 400).

Location

Cannot Comment

Ryan Barrett has found that authing with scope=comments works, but the API call still 400s.

According to Instagram's API documentation, their commenting API only works for those who are whitelisted. Unfortunately the criteria for application for whitelisting are very restrictive.

Unofficial

  • Work has also been done on determining its unofficial API (which is against Instagram's terms of service, but allows you to post): https://github.com/mislav/instagram/wiki
  • Instagram Worm uploaded photos using private/undocumented API (needs citation)
  • Instagram private API changes affect unofficial apps and photos uploaded via unofficial apps
  • Add ?__a=1 to the end of an Instagram profile, photo, or feed URL (e.g. /) to get JSON metadata. This JSON is also embedded in the normal HTML pages. Example parsing code in granary.
    • For feed URLs, the array of photo objects is in the FeedPage.feed.media.nodes[] element.
    • For profile URLs, the array of photo objects is in the ProfilePage.user.media.nodes[] element.
    • For photo URLs, the photo objects are the PostPage[].media element(s).
  • The private API is rate limited to 60 photos per hour

Permissions approval

Instagram is locking down their API and requiring all apps to go through a review process similar to Facebook's. Apps can apply now; the API restrictions start in June 2016. Developer details, legal details.

Specifically, they plan to restrict and require approval for /users/self/feed and /media/popular and any use cases that send photos outside of Instagram.

Here's the new set of permissions (OAuth scopes):

  • basic - to read a user’s profile info and media (granted by default)
  • public_content - to read any public profile info and media on a user’s behalf
  • follower_list - to read the list of followers and followed-by users
  • comments - to post and delete comments on a user’s behalf
  • relationships - to follow and unfollow accounts on a user’s behalf
  • likes - to like and unlike media on a user’s behalf

Ryan Barrett applied for basic permissions for Bridgy and oauth-dropins in Jan 2016. Both were rejected.

UX Observation

  • Videos and Photos have a very similar UI. --Bret.io 00:38, 1 July 2013 (PDT)
  • 2013 video UI: single-tapping would pause the video, you have to tap the play control to replay.
  • 2015 videos started autolooping (like Vine) without sound, and single-tapping was changed to toggle sound on/off.

Adoption

Issues

Hashtags limited to 30

Instagram limits the number of hashtags that you can put on a post to 30. If you try to add more, your comment is rejected with the unhelpful and misleading error message:

Couldn't post. Tap to retry

(no amount of retrying will help, so why ask the user to do so?)

When attempting to add even just single hashtags as comments to https://www.instagram.com/p/Bc_ETrOFTAW

Unfollowing Rate Limited

In a potential dark pattern, Instagram limits the number of accounts you can unfollow at one time in an attempt to "protect our community". This was observed on 2022-12-07 by Anthony Ciccarello after about 15 unfollows.

Dialog: Try Again Later We limit how often you can do certain things on Instagram to protect our community. Tell us if you think we made a mistake.

Repetitive account lock out

2023-01-30 Chris Aldrich reports having been algorithmically locked out of his account twice in under a month without any indication of issues he'd potentially violated, and at a time in which his use of Instagram was almost non-existent. Attempting to regain access takes several days and includes the need to upload a selfie with a custom code, presumably to verify that there is a real person behind the account. Potentially worse, the lockout didn't send an email notification and the issue was only discovered by attempting to log in. Warnings included verbiage that if the account wasn't verified in 30 days the account would be shut down without any seeming means of recourse.

2023-01-21 Anthony Ciccarello also was locked out of his account and only noticed after logging in.

Instagram screenshot announcing account suspension
Screenshot of Instagram notification that reads "Thanks for providing your info. We’ll notify you when the review is finished. If we can confirm your info, you’ll be able to use Instagram again. If we can’t, your account will be permanently disabled."

Automated behavior warning

Screenshot of Instagram reading 'We suspect automated behavior on your account. To prevent your account from being temporarily restricted or permanently disabled, ensure that no other users or tools have access to your account and that you're following the Terms of Use. Also consider changing your password to a stronger one to prevent unauthorized access to your account by third parties.

gRegor Morrill 2023-06-14: Visiting my profile with the Bridgy Chrome extension enabled, I received the warning "We suspect automated behavior on your account" and to prevent my account from being restricted or disabled, make sure no other users or tools have access.

This happened once before in the past few months and I disabled the browser extension to be safe. I re-enabled the extension about two weeks ago to try it again. Unfortunately it seems likely Instagram will keep flagging it, so I am going to keep the extension disabled.

Aggressive spam check and account restriction

gRegor Morrill: 2023-10-30: I left a supportive and innocuous comment on a mutual's post and Instagram immediately said it was spam and removed it, and appeared to restrict me from commenting on any posts for at least 24 hours.

Criticism

username takeovers

How Instagram closed my account and gave it to a football celebrity - "My name is Andrés Iniesta and my only mistake was having the exact name and last name as a famous football player."

"Someone stole my Instagram username"

Bad Silo Interop with Twitter

Shortly after it was purchased by Facebook, Instagram stopped including Twitter metadata on their photo pages, so Twitter Cards no longer show image previews for Instagram photos.

Instagram drives more traffic to their site, at the cost of a worse experience for users.

Using OwnYourGram or another method of PESOSing your photos out of Instagram, you can control how your photos are shared on other silos like Twitter. (e.g., by including Twitter metadata, or by posting the photos directly).

Switch from Foursquare to Facebook venues

Some time in 2014-05, Instagram switched from using Foursquare's venue database (e.g. in the iOS app UI) to using Facebook's places database.

This has resulted in:

  • fewer venue matches (often completely missing venues that were present on Foursquare)
  • less accurate venue locations such as misspellings, "venues" with varied granularity (business vs neighborhood)
  • loss of venue information when cross-posting from Instagram to Foursquare (i.e. checks you into the wrong location, or a generic neighborhood rather than a specific venue)

Articles about worse Instagram locations due to using Facebook venues:

Lack of privacy of location data

When posting a photo to Instagram, if "add to photo map" is enabled (even if no venue is chosen) then the exact lat/lng of the photo is recorded. When viewing the single photo you won't see the location of it. However, when viewing the person's user profile you can switch to the map view and see their photos all on a map.

The map shows photos as clusters, and zooming in will expand the clusters into smaller clusters until finally individual photos appear on the map.

It is relatively easy to figure out the approximate location of someone's work or home by looking for these clusters.

More on privacy

Uneditable Custom Locations

When adding a photo at a venue that doesn't exist, it is possible to create a "custom location", which is unfortunately not editable from that point on.

One potential up-side is when searching for venues, your custom locations now show up at the top of the list without needing a round-trip to the server to search.

Creating this custom location prompts only for the name, the exact geo location is added automatically, meaning it is not possible to adjust the specific location of the venue.

Censorship beyond community guidelines

Instagram is establishing a history of censoring by removing (and sometimes restoring later) and/or hashtag results that are not actual violations of their Community Guidelines, and are otherwise innocuous material. For example:

gay kiss
Instagram has reportedly removed a photograph of a gay couple kissing at their wedding as "inappropriate".
removed/censored a wedding video (happened to be of two women) for supposedly violating their community guidelines: https://www.instagram.com/p/B53zDUuJHoZ/

"So @instagram took down my BEAUTIFUL wedding video stating it’s offensive. My marriage to my wife is OFFENSIVE?! I’m furious! Being gay is not OFFENSIVE, and don’t let anyone EVER let you feel that way! I’ll be damned if I back down from this. Comment and kindly encourage Instagram to fix this and put my video back on my page!
.
.
#lgbtq #lgbt #lovewins #lovewillwin #loveislove #lgbtqlove #love #instagay #instagram #instadaily #gaygirl #lesbianwedding #lesbians #lesbiancouple #weddingvideo #wedding #marriage #wifelife #wifedup" @Kelsey Pearson | LGBTQ | Vegan December 10, 2019

some sexual content
Instagram's removal of sexual content has been criticised as being inconsistently enforced.
menstrual blood
http://www.scoopwhoop.com/news/insta-photo/
http://www.cosmopolitan.com/sex-love/news/a38309/instagram-apologizes-for-removing-poignant-photos-of-a-woman-on-her-period/

Article listing blocked/limited hashtags as of 2016-05-10: http://thedatapack.com/banned-instagram-hashtags-update/


DMCA

No license metadata

Unlike Flickr (and your own site if you so choose!), there's no metadata for marking photos or indeed whole photostreams as licensed under Creative Commons licenses.

i-am-cc.org lets you choose a CC license for your Instagram photographs, but you have to log into the service every three months to 'renew' the license grant.

most locked-in and user-hostile

From 2016-03-26 jwz post: Instagram Hates The Internet

Instagram is a dialup BBS. It is the most locked-in and user-hostile of the bunch, as I will now express through the medium of a <TABLE>

(analysis therein)

from Facebook branding

An update to the Instagram iOS app sometime in 2019 December removed the "Instagram" logo text mark on the splash screen and replaced it with just the icon and

from
FACEBOOK

like this:

opaque terms of service banning

Angelo Gladding attempted to follow a link from chat and was asked to log in. His account had apparently been banned. No email was sent and no response was given other than the red text in the first image below. The account was only ever used to view posts that required login, possibly to like one or two posts to test the feature.

usernames cannot be domain names

Instagram's terms of service explicitly prohibit using domain names as usernames, despite "." being an allowed character in usernames.

You can't use a domain name or URL in your username without our prior written consent

https://www.instagram.com/about/legal/terms/

Algorithmic Manipulation

Algorithm hiding posts

Instagram is not showing all photos by those you follow, but at least in some cases only some subset: https://twitter.com/danrubin/status/968507814544052224

Algorithmic flagging hashtags & content

  • criticism or perhaps blunt blocking of misinformation: “This Hashtag Is Hidden” is a feature of Instagram where certain hashtags aggregation pages display a message instead of a list of posts: https://www.instagram.com/p/CC8uOySnED2/

I also think it's simply an automated check that recognised this hashtag being used in high volumes of flagged/blocked posts, which affects the algorithm temporarily.

In my time as an IG/FB employee, most of the blockages and suspensions were performed by an automated system that frequently runs checks. Not one human is even involved in the process.

That's why content sometimes may even get flagged after being online for a long time.

Only a small percentage was due to actually flagging the content, and most of those rejections, suspensions and blocked accounts had never even been reviewed by a human employee (until further escalation).

The source material is Latex vs Social Media (semi-NSFW content) which is a 3 page report on very similar issues than this site lists, including shadow banned accounts, murky rules, impossible to appeal bans and deletions. The exact source for the quote above is @missamarantha (NSFW, instagram or not)

Downtime

2021-10-08 Outage

https://twitter.com/InstagramComms/status/1446558228410732566

We know some of you may be having some issues using Instagram right now (🥲). We’re so sorry and are working as quickly as possible to fix.

@InstagramComms October 8, 2021

2021-03-19 Outage

Around 10:30am Pacific on 2021-03-19 the instagram apps and websites were unavailable. The iOS app shows an error "Couldn't refresh feed" and the website shows a generic "5xx Server Error" page.


2019-07-03 Outage

https://twitter.com/scottishstoater/status/1146522153644433414

Suppose this is what I get for using Instagram to pull in a photo feed to my personal site 🙄. #ownyourowndata #indieweb

@scottishstoater July 3, 2019

2018-07-13 Outage

Around 12pm Pacific on 2018-07-13, Instagram was unavailable. The iOS app shows an error notification when visiting your home timeline or profile page "Couldn't refresh feed", and visiting the "discover" tab shows "We're sorry, but something went wrong. Please try again." On the website, a generic "5xx Server Error" message was displayed.

2017-08-26 Outage

Saturday morning turned out to be social-media-free for a number of Facebook and Instagram users, albeit involuntarily.

Some people reported difficulties accessing the two social platforms beginning at about 9 a.m. ET

from http://money.cnn.com/2017/08/26/technology/business/facebook-down/

2014-08-22 Outage

2014-08-22 various times throughout the day - "news" activity on photos feature was down with user-unfriendly nginx default error message:

"502 Bad Gateway nginx"

2014-04-12 Outage

2014-04-12 Instagram feeds were down as reported in this @Instagram tweet which itself has been deleted!

2013-08-28 Outage

2013-08-28 17:27-0400 EDT

"Response Error. Technical description: 502 Bad Gateway - Response Error, a bad response was received from another proxy server or the destination origin server."

See Also


<footer>source iwc:Instagram</footer>

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