Deleting photos of some members who don't pay for pro accounts will help build Flickr into a photography service that'll last decades, Don MacAskill says. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET from 1998 to ...
[Update, 11/8/2018: SmugMug updated its Creative Commons and non-profit policy on November 7. All media in free accounts that had a Creative Commons or public-domain declaration of any kind applied ...
Flickr no longer offers free users a free terabyte of space. Prykhodov / 123RF After Flickr changed hands earlier this year, moving from Yahoo to SmugMug, photographers no longer have to wonder what ...
<b>commentary</b> The news is hardly grand enough to change the photo-sharing ways of people already accustomed to free. Jennifer Van Grove covered the social beat for CNET. She loves Boo the dog, ...
Flickr found new ownership under Smugmug earlier this year, and inevitably, that comes with changes. The image hosting service has made a big one: Free accounts will be limited to 1,000 photos from ...
SAN FRANCISCO--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Today Flickr, the world’s largest photographer-focused community, announced several updates to both its Free and Pro accounts, marking a new step forward for Flickr and ...
Venerable photo sharing site Flickr has announced that from January 8, 2019, free accounts will be limited to 1,000 photos or videos. Any content above that limit will be deleted, starting February 5, ...
Flickr will once again return to driving subscription revenue, as new owner SmugMug imposes limits on free users not seen since Yahoo handed all users 1 terabyte of free data in 2013. From January 8, ...
For over five years, Flickr has offered 1TB of free storage to users. After Yahoo sold the service to SmugMug back in April, today Flickr will be reducing the free tier to just 1000 photos. On the ...
Yahoo, in an attempt to make its photo-hosting service Flickr relevant again, decided to offer 1TB of free space to all users. The downside? Everyone who doesn't pay $50 per year gets ads. An entire ...
Flickr announced in November it would be changing its generous photo storage allotment for free users, restricting them to a 1,000-photo limit, and threatening to delete excess photos unless you ...
Flickr, the legacy online photo sharing site, was set to start deleting members' photos Tuesday, but it announced a deadline extension to March 12. Anyone with over 1,000 photos would have to pay $50 ...