A newly-released application can add metadata viewing functionality to websites and web apps, or even on a local computer. IPTC Managing Director Michael Steidl wrote the program, Get IPTC PMD. The application, as configured for a test system, here, can display whether or not metadata is in sync between the three data blocks where IPTC data can live in your files.
Category: News
Jessica Simpson sued over Copyright Management Information
A photo agency has sued clothing mogul and former pop singer Jessica Simpson for copyright infringement and, of more interest to the readers of this blog, removal of copyright management information (CMI). Photo agency Splash News alleges in a lawsuit filed in federal court in the central district of California on January 23 of this year that Simpson posted on Instagram, and later Twitter, a photo owned by the agency.
Is AI image recognition useful yet?
Users discover that their iPhones are using AI image recognition technology to tag their pictures. Of their underwear. Gasp! A ripple on the internet ensues. But for real, can machine learning image recognition be useful? After some snarkiness, we take a look.
The Ask
OK. So what, exactly, is it that I want you to do about this metadata thing?
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- If you give birth to photographs – label them properly with a caption, copyright notice, and some contact information before you send them out into the world.
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- If you operate the means of publishing or distributing pictures, or if you’re just a cog in a great machine that does that, read the label to be sure you know what’s what and that you have rights to publish whatever it is before you publish.
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- If you run a website, make sure your server doesn’t strip the metadata labels, also known as Copyright Management Information, off of works that are published or distributed on your site.
What do I (you) get out of it?
If you’re a photographer, you get the warm and fuzzy of knowing that your work has a fighting chance of surviving. Maybe, years from now, somebody will look at that picture, understand what it is about, and who you are. Maybe that somebody calls you up to buy a license instead of stealing your work. (Or to ask your permission to use it, even.) Heavens to legacy.
In your own life, it means that when you have 50,000, or 500,000, or a million photos in your collection, you’ll be able to find the one you’re thinking of without spending hours or days looking for it.
If you’re licensing your work to the future through Creative Commons or some similar means, it means that, well, that will actually work. Your work won’t just go in the dustbin after one use. Your name, the license information, and supporting data will be right there in the metadata and your work can be used again and again.
If you’re a publisher, metadata on a photo gives you the opportunity to be an honest person. (Without having to break your back about it.) That doesn’t suck. You know that you really do have rights to use that photo. You know for sure who’s in the photo.
You’re preserving culture
By not removing that copyright information, you’ll be following the law. The new, disruptive, novel, one-weird-trick way to not get sued in the intellectual property biz is to follow the copyright law. (A bold strategy if there ever was one. We should make up an acronym for it.) It’s an easy warm and fuzzy. Taking one more threat that might destroy your business, even if it isn’t a statistically huge threat, off the table is a good thing in my book any day. See this post.
And, if you have zillions of assets, you’ll be able to find the one you want, too.
How do you accomplish all this goodness?
Photographer:
Labeling your work with metadata is usually a two-step process.
Your copyright and contact information goes on your pictures automatically (All, or just the ones you might publish, or some that will serve as “signposts” when you are searching through your collection. It depends.) Depending on what software you use, templated information like that goes on your picture when you download them from your camera cards all by itself, or it might take a couple clicks and a few seconds for each batch of photos. (Look around this site for software recommendations and instructions, metadata explainers, and even downloadable starter templates. )
Then, it will take (a little) effort to caption and keyword your final selections. Maybe a minute for each published photo.
(Read what the copyright office has to say about registering copyrights. It’s not really a metadata thing, but since we’re here…)
Website operators, or agencies, or publications:
When a photo comes to you, look at it. Are the rights OK? Does the caption seem to be accurate? It only takes a second (literally) to look.
Insist/encourage photographers, clients and whoever might supply pictures to you to label them properly in the metadata. If – excuse me, when – they don’t, (and some always won’t) mark up the picture yourself. Trust me, you’ll save more time, money and lawsuits than you invest.
Software to do this? Pretty much every creative on the planet has the Adobe suite. Adobe Bridge will get the job done. Not pretty, but done. XnView works great and it’s so cheap it’s ridiculous. One way or the other, you’ve got to look at the picture. It doesn’t really take any extra work to see what the metadata says. See my software articles for specifics.
If you run the backend of a website, make sure your server doesn’t strip away IPTC metadata where all that culturally and legally important information lives. (See this post and this one for more information on how metadata is structured within an image file.)
In the interest of full disclosure: You will pay a small – insignificant, really – price in page load time for the 8 KB or so of metadata that you’re preserving. We’re talking about a millisecond and a half per picture for fixed broadband in the US (2017), and about four milliseconds for mobile devices. By way of comparison, it takes 300 to 400 milliseconds to blink your eye. So – not too bad a bargain.
In WordPress…
If your website runs on WordPress, all you need to do is make sure your server is using ImageMagick (instead of GD) as its imaging library and important metadata will be preserved by default. Most hosting providers support ImageMagick, and many enable it by default. In the latter case, you don’t have to do a darn thing – except choose one of those providers. (In an upcoming post, I’ll publish the first edition of a chart listing providers who support or enable ImageMagick.)
If the provider supports ImageMagick but doesn’t enable it by default, it’s usually just a matter of contacting customer support (it’s chat, usually) and the deed is done in a couple minutes.
And tell your friends to do the same
Check out the IPTC’s Embedded Metadata Manifesto
If your site is on a different CMS, it’s more or less the same idea. You might have to specify a different imaging library or change the configuration of the one you have. Most big-time industrial CMSes already use ImageMagick as their imaging library. In those cases, we’re probably talking about updating a config file.
Hold the phone
I hear someone in the shadows calling out “What about social media? What about phones? Aren’t those things dominating the media landscape now?”
Sort of. We’re not really talking about throw-away content here. That’s the whole point.
But throw away or not, professional content has to be, well, professional. It’s critically important for facts to be right. We can’t afford to accidentally use the wrong photo, or the photo the social media user didn’t authorize. And the quantities of content in the omnichannel world are staggering. Great metadata, great digital asset management and care and attention to rights and attribution help make the difference between living and dying for people working in a social media world.
Social media tends to strip away metadata. But you still need to keep track your assets. You should make sure every picture you put out there has metadata, regardless. If nothing else, you’ll be better able to keep track of the asset later. That stripped-off-by-the media-company metadata may or may not carry the day in some future legal hassle, but it sure isn’t going to hurt. See this post for more on what metadata needs to be on a photo you release and what metadata shouldn’t be.
By the way, your copyright and byline will survive a round trip through Facebook. Everything else ends up on the cutting room floor.
Social media companies may seem like such behemoths that we can never change their behavior. A little pressure won’t hurt, though.
Make metadata on mobile
As for phones – tons of photos are made with phones today. More and more each day. While most pictures that find their way to publication pass through a computer-based workflow on their way there, some don’t.
Not to worry! There are good metadata authoring apps available for both Android and iPhone. I’ll be writing about the best for each platform soon.
Will doing this really help? Will it make a dent?
Yes. It will help you. It will make the environment around you better. Your life will be better and easier.
I just suggested that publishers and agency people insist that photos they pay for be properly marked up. Poof! In one stroke, most of the pictures on your plate will be find-able and easier to use. You’ll save time and money. Life will be good. (Or better, at least. Your health, your family life – those things metadata probably won’t help.)
Photographers will save back the time and effort of marking up their stuff and then some. And just how many calls offering reuse fees does it take to make your day brighter?
If push one day comes to shove and one day you need to sue a copyright infringer, and that CMI in the metadata makes the difference between a lawyer taking the case and getting a judgment or not, that investment in metadata will make for a happy day.
Good works can go viral
There are trillions of photos floating around out there. In terms of that giant pile, good efforts by you and your friends might not make a statistical dent. But the balance of karma around you will improve. Your life will be a little better. The business environment in your segment will be a little better. That’s better than a dent.
And communities are interconnected. Trends take hold. The content creation and publishing communities are big, no mistake. But if the players in your niche start doing a good thing, it will spread to ever wider and wider circles of influence. Good ideas can spread through whole industries in no time at all.
Have you done something with metadata that we all should feel good about? Dive into the comments. Brighten our day!
Do you need the dick pics locator?
New website tells where dick pics come from; it's all about metadata
Dick pics. Film at eleven. This week’s internet’s social, er, upheaval has it all. Bad puns. Check. Click bait. Check. Moral outrage. Check. (I guess.) Metadata. Check. Wait. Metadata?
A meditation on the caption
Captions connect pictures to the world. That connection between an image and its subjects, time and place (and its author, too) gives a photo the power to endure. Join your Aunt Louise as we explore the power of the caption.
Macron portrait meta-mess
Last week’s release of new French president Emmanuel Macron’s official portrait, by photographer Soazig de la Moissonnière, caused a stir on Twitter. Metadata on the version of the photo released on the government’s website revealed that somebody had the picture open in Photoshop for some fifteen hours. But vital information was left off the photo.
Metadata helps marketers
It's about labels. Labeling digital assets, particularly pictures. Digital image files have places to put labels - labels about what's shown in the image, who owns the image, who made the image, what you can do with the image, that sort of thing. In the old days, people put this kind of stuff on the backs of prints with a rubber stamp and pencil.
Why webmasters should love metadata
Webmasters — metadata is your friend. Respect it.
We should be able to look at a photo, or another digital asset, and see for sure who owns the copyright, how to credit the photographer, and what the heck is going on in the picture. It’s one thing that the client signed a contract that promises they’ll give you only material that’s properly licensed. Knowing for sure would be another, better, thing.
If you buy a jar of queso dip, it’s got labels, right? You can see what you can use it for, how to contact the manufacturer, and that “best by date”. It seems reasonable that in this day and age digital assets should have labels, too, right?
Turns out they do have. Make that “can have”, If the creator of the asset chooses to write the information in his or her his file’s metadata. And if we look. Sadly, few people even know that we can look at that information. That makes creators less likely to put it there. Which makes it less likely that anybody looks, which……….. It’s one of those vicious circle thingies.
Good news: it’s not hard to see metadata. Your operating system (Windows, Mac, and Linux) displays captions in its file manager. Image editing software, from fancy and expensive to simple and free, can edit IPTC metadata. Command line utilities can manipulate it on the server.
But there’s bad news. Let’s say if a conscientious photographer does write his or her copyright and contact information and a good caption on a photo, will everything be OK? Ah, maybe. The chances are good that the first website that gets its hands on the poor photo will strip all that information off.
Back in the day, stripping off an image’s metadata actually made sense. That was when the rule of thumb was that landing pages had to be less than 40 kilobytes, back before they were even called landing pages.
That was then. Now it’s different. The internet is flooded with works that have come asunder from their copyright notices and captions. They would be useful if we knew what they are, but we don’t, so they aren’t. There’s a feeding frenzy of copyright infringement and plagiarism and ethical people are concerned, very concerned.
It would be great if critical information was embedded in every photo that was sent out into the internet world; if that information stayed with that asset forever, and we knew just what we were dealing with every time we picked up a photo. Let’s make that (start to) happen.
We need to make some stuff happen
We need to:
Encourage creators to properly document their works. (See my rant on why photographers need to do a good job with metadata.)
And…
Ensure that documentation is not destroyed, so it can travel with the work wherever it goes.
As soon as we publish them, digital photos begin traveling the web at the speed of a right mouse button.
As web developers, designers, and site owners our part is to make sure that neither we, nor our CMSes, ever unnecessarily strip metadata off works.
But wait! “Unnecessarily” suggests that there’s nuance, and nuance suggests that there is annoying underlying technical complication (and acronyms). Of course, there is! This being a full-disclosure kind of blog, we’ll unravel that. Well, some of it. I’ll spare you the low-level stuff. We’ll discuss that in depth later.
Back in the day, there were two reasons for stripping metadata: load time and privacy concerns.
Back then, 8KB one way or the other materially affected load time. Today, that’s like five one-thousands of a second for a user with seriously mediocre internet service. Not a big worry.
I said eight kilobytes because That’s about how much metadata we really need on a photo. That’s the stuff that could be useful for saving the world. There is, however, more.
Really important metadata and less important metadata
Basically, there are a couple of flavors of metadata written into photos.
There’s IPTC metadata. That’s the world saving stuff – caption, creator, and copyright information. IPTC metadata appears in a file twice (usually), once in its old-timey
(There’s also the possibility of other, non-IPTC, data written in XMP format. It’s not very big, either. We’ll just skip that, since in the context of publishing a picture on the web I can’t think of a reason why we would care one way or the other.)
Then there’s Exif metadata. Exif data is written by the camera when a digital picture is made. It’s mostly boring logging data. It records the camera model, serial number and the settings used to make the photo. EXIF also can include GPS data showing where the photo was made. That could identify the user. We’ll come back to that in a bit.
JPEG files can also have an embedded JPEG thumbnail. We’ll leave musing about what the heck for to another day. Said thumbnail, if present, can take up twenty or thirty-ish kilobytes.
The good news here is that the useless and potentially enormous thumbnail resides in
In a future post, I’ll talk about exactly how, and software we can use.
Consider before you strip
Exif or otherwise, in our strip-or-don’t-strip deliberations we should pause to consider some more stuff: legality and privacy.
Here’s where I say that I’m not a lawyer. I don’t play a lawyer on TV, not even YouTube. When in doubt, talk to your own lawyer! You know the drill.
Under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, it appears to be pretty seriously illegal to remove or alter “copyright management information”. Statutory damages are set at between $2,500 and $25,000 per occurrence.
(1) intentionally remove or alter any copyright management information,
(2) distribute or import for distribution copyright management information knowing that the copyright management information has been removed or altered without authority of the copyright owner or the law, or
(3) distribute, import for distribution, or publicly perform works, copies of works, or phonorecords, knowing that copyright management information has been removed or altered without authority of the copyright owner or the law, knowing, or, with respect to civil remedies under section 1203, having reasonable grounds to know, that it will induce, enable, facilitate, or conceal an infringement of any right under this title.
(c) Definition.—As used in this section, the term “copyright management information” means any of the following information conveyed in connection with copies or phonorecords of a work or performances or displays of a work, including in digital form, except that such term does not include any personally identifying information about a user of a work or of a copy, phonorecord, performance, or display of a work:
(1) The title and other information identifying the work, including the information set forth on a notice of copyright.
(2) The name of, and other identifying information about, the author of a work.
(3) The name of, and other identifying information about, the copyright owner of the work, including the information set forth in a notice of copyright.
…[skipping a couple items that don’t apply to pictures]…
(6) Terms and conditions for use of the work.
(7) Identifying numbers or symbols referring to such information or links to such information.
That’s pretty blunt stuff for something that politicians wrote.
The stuff they define as being “copyright management information” would be found in the IPTC fields for Caption, Title, Author, Copyright, Rights Usage Information, and various contact information and PLUS licensing fields. Possibly in Special Instructions, as well. That’s enough of the IPTC fields that we can pretty safely assume that the path of least regret here is to be very cautious about messing with any IPTC data.
You can do whatever you want with the copyright management information on works to which you own the copyright, of course. Or, if the copyright owner gives you permission, you may strip away. Some sites, like Facebook, include language in their Terms of Service that grants them permission to alter CMI on photos. But it’s worth noting that Facebook does leave the copyright notice and the creator’s byline on pictures. They strip out everything else but leave those two fields alone. That says something.
Privacy can be a consideration
Then we have privacy. Everybody nowadays has their undies in a bunch about privacy. Some concerns are legit. Some are silly. But still, we need to think about this.
In the EXIF, there’s that potentially identifying GPS information. Geotagging information can be useful. You could, say, automatically display a map with travel photos. (Or leave the possibility open for the next person who uses that picture.) On the other hand, if you’re not going to mention where a picture was made in a caption that’s visible to visitors, it might be nice to delete the GPS info. I can imagine cases where that would be justified, like maybe a picture of a fisherman at his favorite top secret fishing spot, for example. How convenient it is that GPS info lives in the rather expendable EXIF and not near the DMCA-protected copyright data in the IPTC!
Watch a video demonstration of applying IPTC metadata to a bunch of pictures
And what about identifying information in the IPTC metadata?
When we consider information in the IPTC data, the first point to consider is that the photographer deliberately put it there. Do you trust that he or she did their job properly? The very fact that the information is there says something positive about the photographer’s professionalism.
Identifying is exactly what the caption is there to do. Specificity builds your authority. Barring pretty unusual circumstances, you want to tell your visitors exactly who is shown in a photo, what they’re doing, and in what context.
Now, you may decide for some privacy-based reason or another not to publish
information that is in the metadata with a photo. Then you might want to edit that same information out of the metadata, too. You might be concerned about doxing, for instance.
It’s a case-by-case thing. But honestly, it’s not something that comes up often. In my career as a newspaper photo editor, I published dozens of photos a day. I’d kill a photo or write around somebody’s identity a handful of times a year.
What I’m saying here is always look before you leap and use good judgment for each image you publish. There’s software that makes it easy. I’ll post more on what’s out there and how to use it later.
(General purpose ethical note: If serious privacy concerns are making you even think about whether to withhold all or part of someone’s identity, the ethical path of least regret is usually not to run that picture at all. It’s serious business. One day, I’ll devote a post to this, too.)
So, the big takeaway here is that we should avoid tampering with IPTC data, but we may want to delete EXIF data (and its potentially huge thumbnail).
Systems issues. Or automation might not be your friend.
Content management systems tend to strip off metadata by default. It’s an extremely rare case when that’s a good thing. We really need to make them stop.
Sadly, many websites, including all the big news sites and social media sites, delete metadata. I know why this is. I was there when it happened. All the photos used on professional grade news sites have metadata embedded. Many of those sites create their own images. In the metadata of those images, there may be proprietary or identifying information that might not be at all suitable for publication. (And, yes, of course, there was once a grand mistake, followed by a grand legal mess of the sort that gets publishers’ attention.) That’s when everybody in that business decided to strip out metadata programmatically, rather than simply being careful with each image. The assumption then was that those sites were altering works to which they owned the copyright, so no blood no foul. But who employs full-time staff photographers anymore?
If your content management system is automatically stripping metadata, you should consider making it stop. Compare the cost of paying a developer to fix your server to the cost of paying a lawyer to make a copyright suit go away.
Then there are the CMSes that the rest of us use. WordPress, for example, is the world’s most popular CMS. Over a quarter of all the world’s websites run on WordPress. WordPress only partially honors photo metadata.
When a photo that has a caption is placed on a page or post in WordPress, the caption is automatically formatted and placed on the page with the picture. So, good on the making-it-easy-see-metadata front. (And the making life easier for people who build pages front, too!)
But when a photo is uploaded to WordPress, by default, four versions of the file are put on the server. The files are made at various sizes, to accommodate devices with screens of varying resolution. Only one of the five files has metadata on it! Ouch. Granted, the file with metadata is the biggest one, which is generally served when a user clicks on a picture for a larger view. That is the version most likely to be grabbed by someone who wants to – legitimately or otherwise – reuse the picture. But still, ouch. We have work to do.
Note: WordPress, by default, actually prefers to use the ImageMagick image processing library, which does honor metadata for all of the sizes of images. But ImageMagick is not necessarily installed on your host’s server, and if it is, you have to enable it. Like I said, work to do…
There is a workaround. But workarounds require extra work and can only be performed by people who are well informed and technically savvy. (The readers of this blog, let’s say.) That’s good news for “us”, and a tiny first baby step toward saving the world. I’ll post a how-to shortly.
Insist that your server not do anything you might regret later.
Look carefully at every picture before you publish it. Distrust the ones that don’t have good metadata. Heed what the metadata says in those that do.
Yes, we can do our bit to turn the tide to protect content creators’ rights, keep ourselves out of copyright trouble, preserve history, and save ourselves some time and legal exposure. But there’s work ahead of us. Let’s do it!
I’ll pass on how-to information in future posts. We’ll look at software, legal issues, and best practices. If you make pictures, you can take a look at my companion rant exhorting photographers to put proper metadata on their pictures. It’s already accompanied by some how-to information and a video showing just how quick and easy it is to do the (copy)right thing.
I’d love to hear from you. Please post in the comments, or click the “contact” button!
Metadata Protects Photographers’ Work
Put a copyright notice and caption on every photo!
Once upon a time…. photographs were physical prints. “8×10 glossy” was a then-pop-culture buzzword. People usually/often/hopefully wrote notes on the prints about who or what was in the picture, who made the picture and when. If you looked at that picture later, you knew what it depicted and who owned it. Now, when we look at the old family snap of Great Uncle Harry and Great Aunt Mildred standing in front of the family Hudson, parked beside the old house, we’re pretty grateful for whoever took the time to write a note on the back. Seriously, at this late date, who would even recognize Harry and Mildred, or their Hudson? That note kept our connection to Harry and Mildred intact. Without it, that photo would be an orphan, instead of a treasured family heirloom.
Nowadays, pictures are digital, people make thousands of them, companies and professionals make millions of them, and rather than keep them in albums or in a company file cabinet we set them adrift on the internet. And nobody writes on the back of the print anymore.
A big problem crept up on us
The internet is bubbling over with photos. Every day, millions more show up. They are shared and re-shared. Or stolen and re-stolen. Their connections to whatever site originally posted them fray and break. Most of them wander aimlessly, like lost pets. We don’t know to whom they belong. We don’t know who or what is depicted in them. We don’t know if they are being used by rightful licensees or if they’ve been stolen. Or how many times they’ve been stolen.
Let’s say you, as an ethical and law-abiding sort of person, want to use a photo you find on the internet, lots of luck trying to figure out if that’s OK. If you’re a photographer, you could make a full-time job out of chasing down copyright infringers. If you could collect the usurped fees, it could be a job, that is. Make that “full-time hobby.”
This isn’t a good thing. Why don’t people write notes on the back of their pictures anymore?
Make metadata save the day
What? How the heck? Do digital works have “backs”?
Yes, they do. Digital files are able to include metadata – literally “data about the data”. We can write on the back of the print, so to speak. We can stamp our copyright notice on every work that goes out the door, just like in the old days. We just need to do it.
Watch the video for a demonstration of adding metadata to pictures
This isn’t exactly a new development, by the way. The technology to label our pictures was invented when the internet earth was still cooling. Word about the new technology just never got around, save in a couple of specialized areas. The internet wasn’t that big a thing, yet. Support for IPTC metadata headers was added to Adobe Photoshop in 1994, according to keywording guru David Riecks.
In addition to being the year Pulp Fiction was released, 1994 happens to be the year I first learned Photoshop. I started on version 2.5, but I held off really diving in because we heard that 3.0 would bring us… layers! To be honest, I didn’t pay much attention to the newly introduced ability to caption photos. The internet wasn’t that much of a thing back then! (Hmmm. Not only am I getting old, it appears I just bragged about it. That’s a little troubling.)
Today’s world demands metadata
No photographer should ever send a photo out into today’s cruel world without a copyright notice, a byline, a caption and contact information. Never ever!
You might think about adding a “no strip” clause in your contract or delivery memo, too.
It’s just too dangerous out there. Photos (and all kinds of digital assets) are stolen every minute. They’re shared. And then stolen. Or they’re stolen and then shared. Or they end up in imprisoned for eternity in some sort of archive or index (Google Images, Flickr, whatever dungeon comes to mind) with no caption or contextual information that might serve to secure them useful employment or help them find their way home.
Even if your photos never leave your own computer you’ll make tens or hundreds of thousands of them over a lifetime or career and you’ll one day need to be able to find them. Embed the information you’ll need to search for right in the file today and you’ll thank yourself later.
As I write this, Google CEO Sundar Pichai is on live stream delivering this year’s Google I/O keynote. He is telling us that even now Google has artificially intelligent machines working to build even more artificially intelligent machines whose express purpose in ”life” will be to help you make metadata for your photos. More on this later. But neither Google’s genius robots, nor your grandchildren will know who Uncle Harry is unless you tell them. Write it down!)
Preserve your legacy
Even if – and ESPECIALLY if – you want to share your photos freely, you need to sign your work and provide contextual information. A hundred years from now, your photo (and you, by extension) might be historically significant – but only if people then can figure out what’s in the picture and what generous person was the author.
All the Creative Commons licenses expect CC0 share the requirement that someone who uses the work credit the creator. But if photographers fail to sign their work, or even note on the work that it’s licensed under Creative Commons, how the heck can we expect that to work?
It’s easy to embed metadata in your photos. Chances are, the software you already use will allow you to put copyright notices and captions and your contact information on your work. Heck, in many cases, you can have your camera write contact and copyright info to your photos, the moment you press the shutter. Yes, there are fancy, expensive products you can use. Of course there are! This is America! That’s just the way we roll. But free solutions work, too. It’s not hard. We just have to put on some brand name athletic footwear and just do it. The future -and the integrity of your copyrights – is counting on us.
Every photo deserves a copyright notice, a byline, and a caption.
Metadata makes it better for you, and the world at large
If we all embed our rights and caption info in our photos, will all be right with the world, apart from that tricky mid-east thing? Well, not exactly. Or not right away, anyway. Life will be ever so slightly better for you because you’ll be able to find your stuff. You’ll feel better about your work. And making it possible for honest publishers to reach you and give you money might mean some nice reuse fees. But it won’t be a hundred percent thing by any means. You know what they say about the longest journey…that it starts with one step in name brand footwear!
For things to get better, we need to help three things happen.
Thing 1
Responsible photographers need to put good metadata on their work before it goes out into the world.
Thing 2
Responsible publishers and webmasters need to understand that they need to preserve metadata when they publish pictures. Indeed, ethics and making the world a better place aside, it’s illegal under the US Digital Millenium Copyright Act to remove or alter copyright management information – metadata – from digital works. But sadly, there’s a tradition on the web of doing just that. We have a lot of educating to do.
Thing 3
People generally need to understand that they can and should check for authoritative information “on the back” of digital assets before they use or share them. Honest people know if they pick up a wallet, they can look inside to see who owns it. Nobody seems to know they can look inside a digital work to do the same thing. First, the information needs to be there. Then people will learn that they can look for it. If we empower honest people to do honest stuff, then we’ll expose the less than honest ones and maybe, just maybe, they’ll be inhibited from doing dirty deeds.
And it all starts with us – you and me. One picture at a time, we can save the internet/world with captions and copyright notices.
Let me know what you think. Post a comment below, or hit the “Contact” button.