💾 Archived View for hyperborea.org › log › 2019-01-08-flickr-vs-tumblr.gmi captured on 2022-06-03 at 22:45:15. Gemini links have been rewritten to link to archived content

View Raw

More Information

⬅️ Previous capture (2022-01-08)

➡️ Next capture (2024-08-31)

-=-=-=-=-=-=-

Why I have more confidence in Flickr/SmugMug than Tumblr/Verizon

by Kelson Vibber, 2019-01-08

Last month, Tumblr and Flickr both announced policy changes that will impact a lot of users, and upset even more. Flickr announced that they’d be shrinking the storage offered to free accounts while adding features to paid accounts. Tumblr announced that all adult content was going to be banned, and immediately set about flagging posts and accounts. In the clumsiest way possible. With a lot of errors.

I feel like Tumblr has been knocked out of orbit, and it’s only a matter of time before it goes the way of GeoCities (or at least LiveJournal). But I actually feel more confident about Flickr.

Remember Geocities?

Why?

The Verge also compares the Tumblr purge to Strikethrough

In short: Flickr is focusing on their core. Tumblr just jettisoned a huge segment of their users and gave the rest a big red warning flag.

Now What?

I’ve been a paying Flickr customer for years now, and I’m happy to renew. I still post galleries there, and and my better one-off photos.

My Flickr photostream

Tumblr…I don’t have anything that violates the new rules, but it seems like they’ve taken a step towards self-destruction. Between this, Google+ closing, and the ongoing train wrecks of Twitter & Facebook, I’ve decided to pull back. I’ve downloaded an archive of my entire Tumblr blog, and I’m in the process of clearing out all my share-posts, reblogs, mirrored posts, basically anything that’s not either original to that blog or an actual conversation. And I’m starting to import the original content to my main blog, where it’s under my own control.

The modern social media experience

It’s clear that Verizon has even less idea what to do with Tumblr than Yahoo! did. When they finally give up trying to monetize what’s left of the user base, they’ll have no incentive to keep it going. Or to respect all the user data they’ve amassed.

Tech

Social Networking

Business

Previous: The Modern Social Network Experience

Next: The Smartphone Paradox

Originally posted at K-Squared Ramblings

Fediverse/Mastodon: @Kelsonv@Wandering.shop

Log Home