LazyPhoto: Has everything already had its picture taken?

In the last week, the Blue Angels -- a team of Navy performance pilots -- have been zooming across the skies over San Francisco. The blogger Nivi decided he was going to pull out his digital camera and take some pictures of them for his friend Christa Favot.
But then he realized ... hmmm, there were probably already oodles of such pictures already posted to Flickr. He checked and, sure enough, users had put up dozens of superb, magazine-quality shots.
This led Nivi to posit a funny new meme: LazyPhoto. If you've ever heard of the LazyWeb concept, it is, as Wikipedia describes it:
The idea if you wait long enough, someone will implement that wacky idea you had... (or already has!) Alternately, that if your blog or other publishing outlet has enough readers, a reader will know and provide the answer to a question you are too lazy to research yourself.
Nivi defines LazyPhoto as:
The idea that you don't need to take photographs anymore because someone will take the picture for you and put it on flickr.
I love it. I've often suspected that Flickr could easily morph into a photo-database that puts Corbis -- and other commercial photo-providing services -- to shame. After all, the whole reason commercial photo-provisioning services exist is that photography has traditionally been a highly skilled trade. But digital cameras are rapidly deskilling it, the way that Microsoft Word deskilled word-processing (a "profession" back in the early 80s that people took college-level courses to master), and the way that audio apps like GarageBand are deskilling music production. Since Flickr, which has no barriers to entry, is thus growing many times faster than Corbis is, what would happen if Yahoo made it possible for people to sell the rights to their digital photos for a cheap micropayment? You'd have an enormous, sprawling database of cheap photos of virtually anything on earth. (Indeed, many Flickr users already allow liberal use of their photos under Creative Commons licenses.)
You could even pursue a Google Answers mode: Post a request for a particular type of photo, and buy rights to the best first one taken and posted to Flickr. Of course, this model would be open to all manner of abuse and unintended consequences. But the fact remains, as Nivi pointed out, that Flickr's growth changes the stakes of modern picture-taking: If you can think of it, it's probably already been photographed.
(Thanks to Nivi for this one!)
Posted by Clive Thompson at October 25, 2005 02:02 PM
Trackback Pings
TrackBack URL for this entry: http://www.collisiondetection.net/mt3/mt-tb.cgi/1354
It’d be interesting to see a merger of Flickr’s interface with istockphoto’s transaction system.
Posted by: Tony at October 25, 2005 2:48 PM
Glad you liked my article!
My friend's name is spelled "Christa" not "Crista" by the way.
I expect to see a correction published on the front page of The New York Times.
:P
Posted by: nivi at October 25, 2005 3:34 PM
Posted by: Clive at October 25, 2005 4:13 PM
Tony, I'd not seen istockphoto's system ... checking it out now. Thanks for the link!
Posted by: Clive at October 25, 2005 4:14 PM
I discovered a case of LazyPhotos just last week. A friend and I started a city tagging and blogging website a couple months ago. We recently added links to Flickr so that people could make show their Flickr photos without uploading their photos twice-- once to Flickr and once to our website.
Interestingly, instead of linking to their own photos, a lot of people are using the Flickr links to show other people's photos. Take this listing as an example:
http://bayarea.urbantic.com/places/3979_De-Young-Museum
A person with the name "MyLordy" went to San Francisco's new De Young Musuem opening at midnight last weekend (the De Young stayed open all night on their first night), and was annoyed by the long lines. MyLordy decided to just walk around the building and go home. But he still linked to thirteen photos from the De Young. How? He linked to the Flickr photos that other people who were willing to wait in the two hour line had taken!
Posted by: Hippolyte at October 25, 2005 6:14 PM
Great example!
It's like a form of telepresence.
Posted by: Clive at October 25, 2005 11:30 PM
What about "LazyLabour"?
Example: I should be working on my TPS report right now, but perhaps if I just keep reading CD long enough, someone else will do it...
Posted by: garthbreaks at October 28, 2005 10:44 AM
Post a comment
It’d be interesting to see a merger of Flickr’s interface with istockphoto’s transaction system.
Posted by: Tony
at October 25, 2005 2:48 PM
Glad you liked my article!
My friend's name is spelled "Christa" not "Crista" by the way.
I expect to see a correction published on the front page of The New York Times.
:P
Posted by: nivi
at October 25, 2005 3:34 PM
Ahahha!
I'll fix it now.
Posted by: Clive
at October 25, 2005 4:13 PM
Tony, I'd not seen istockphoto's system ... checking it out now. Thanks for the link!
Posted by: Clive
at October 25, 2005 4:14 PM
I discovered a case of LazyPhotos just last week. A friend and I started a city tagging and blogging website a couple months ago. We recently added links to Flickr so that people could make show their Flickr photos without uploading their photos twice-- once to Flickr and once to our website.
Interestingly, instead of linking to their own photos, a lot of people are using the Flickr links to show other people's photos. Take this listing as an example:
http://bayarea.urbantic.com/places/3979_De-Young-Museum
A person with the name "MyLordy" went to San Francisco's new De Young Musuem opening at midnight last weekend (the De Young stayed open all night on their first night), and was annoyed by the long lines. MyLordy decided to just walk around the building and go home. But he still linked to thirteen photos from the De Young. How? He linked to the Flickr photos that other people who were willing to wait in the two hour line had taken!
Posted by: Hippolyte
at October 25, 2005 6:14 PM
Great example!
It's like a form of telepresence.
Posted by: Clive
at October 25, 2005 11:30 PM
What about "LazyLabour"?
Example: I should be working on my TPS report right now, but perhaps if I just keep reading CD long enough, someone else will do it...
Posted by: garthbreaks
at October 28, 2005 10:44 AM