Rob Cottingham

Meeting your social media humor needs since 1963

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26 May 2011

New feature: replace your family with gorgeous models!

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Category: Everything Else

Adobe email marketing ad

In case you can’t read the story behind that beautiful, moving photo, here it is:

“My husband and I just had our second baby. He’s such a good dad, so I wanted to give him a gift I knew he would love — a shot of him and our new addition. We had a great photo of the baby and my husband, but our dog ran into the shot at the last minute. With Photoshop Elements, I was able to quickly remove Jasper’s tail and create the perfect picture. I put it in a frame and I’m giving it to him for Father’s Day. I can’t wait to see his face when he opens it.”– Maren McCaleb, Boise, Idaho

I do, in fact, believe this story. Maren McCaleb sounds like a thoughtful partner and mother and a skilled Elements user.

But the beautiful, moving photo? I have… doubts.

iStockPhoto source of photo

Maybe Adobe’s marketing folks did this to protect the youngest McCaleb’s privacy. As Alex points out, every family needs a social media policy.

24 May 2011

Why attribution is important – even (especially) on Tumblr and Posterous

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Not long ago, I saw a reference on Twitter to a clever illustration of either Wolverine or two Batmans looking at each other. I clicked through to a Tumblr page, where someone had reblogged it from someone else on Tumblr, who had reblogged it from someone else, and so on.

I wanted to send a quick note of appreciation to the artist, and have a look at some of her or his other work. But there was no credit to the person who created it. It was only after a dive into Google that I found the original artist: the brilliant Olly Moss. (Really – you have to see the illustration.) Others have also identified him, and credit is gradually rippling outward. (Interestingly, his blog is on Tumblr, too.)

But much of that huge initial viral wave passed him by — as it so often does on Tumblr, Posterous and their less-well-known short-form-blogging cousins. Those platforms are designed to make it quick and easy to share media… and even easier to reblog it.

Spend enough time on Tumblr, though, and you’ll notice something is often missing from the photos, cartoons, videos and Photoshopped gags that populate so many of its pages: attribution.

Giving credit to the creator of a piece of work you use is a pretty basic standard of behaviour — and it’s become more tangibly important with the rise of the free economy. Even if we aren’t getting paid when people republish something we’ve made, we can hope for compensation through attribution.

For creators, the reward for creating and sharing is often no longer monetary, at least not directly. Instead, it comes in the form of:

  • reputation
  • instrumental advantage (for instance, if inbound links to content you’ve created help boost your traffic)
  • attention
  • a sense of achievement through reaching and affecting people.

All of those rely at least partly on attribution. If nobody knows you’re the one who shot that amazing photograph that just went OMFG viral, then your reputation doesn’t budge a bit. If there’s no link to your site from that infographic you created that’s just been reblogged a few thousand times, you won’t see any traffic – and won’t build an audience.

This has happened to me a few times with my cartoons. At first, I’d thought it had to be a deliberate thing because of the number of steps I thought had to be involved : save image to hard drive, fire up image editor, crop image to remove credit, save image, and finally post. One incident in particular stands out because the image had (for me) a huge response: nearly 600 reposts and Likes.

But once I looked at the profile of the user who’d first posted it, I started to reconsider my presumption of guilt. Beth Tucker has social media smarts and an engaging online voice. And when I contacted her, my assumption turned out to in fact be wrong. She was mortified to have dropped the credit; she’d used a screen-capturing utility to snag the cartoon, and had inadvertently cropped out the credit at the top. (And she’d acted in good faith, too, maintaining the link to its original home on ReadWriteWeb.) She apologized and quickly replaced the image with a complete version.

It was one of the most gracious exchanges I’ve had online. (And I’m now following her on Twitter.)

The experience suggests to me that there’s hope. For the most part, people aren’t failing to give credit out of malice or dishonesty. Some just can’t be bothered; with others, it’s an accident; and for many others, the information isn’t available because they’re discovering the content second-, third- or hundredth-hand, and the attribution fell off far up that reposting chain.

The fact that so many of the posts on their platforms don’t include creator credit suggests that Tumblr and co. have some work to do to make it both easier to apply attribution, and clearer that they expect it of their users. Kearn makes a strong case for that in a blog post about hunting down the original source for my cartoon:

Someone posts something cool on a site that usually accredits things well and it leads back to Tumblr, where there’s no clear attribution of where it came from, so people give up and just say it was from there…. Most of the time you can’t even search for where it originally came from (even with tineye, which is awesome), because it has been so heavily reposted on Tumblr without notes on where it came from, that the search engines just show you a hundred Tumblr links.

Those of us creating sharable content can make attribution easier, too:

  • If you’re feeling geeky, adding a few lines of code to your template can generate a snippet that people can copy and paste into a blog post to repost content from your site. I’ve done that on Noise to Signal.
  • Tell your visitors clearly how you’d like your content credited, and what permissions you’re offering. (Your Creative Commons notice isn’t a bad place to do that.) For instance, you can say “Feel free to repost my content non-commercially. Please link back to the page you found it on and credit it to (your name here).”
  • If you put Twitter’s Tweet Button on your site, you attach your Twitter user name to attach to a piece of content when people share it. Here’s how to add yours.
  • Embed attribution in your content. My URL is part of every cartoon image I post. Yes, it can be lopped off by mistake – but that doesn’t happen very often.
  • Remember my experience: you don’t want to mistake a fan for a thief. If you find someone has reposted something of yours without crediting you, don’t go in with phasers blazing. Instead, give them the benefit of the doubt and start with a politely-phrased request. (Unless you work for the recording industry, in which case that attitude seems to be a condition of employment.) Of course, if they’re claiming they created it, all bets are off. Cry havoc, and all that. (Depending on how grievous the situation, you may want to start thinking about – sigh – legal options.)

And for anyone reposting content, make sure you attribute it. (If you’re already crediting everything you post, then bless you.) If you’re reposting it from a site that failed to credit the author, and the author’s identity isn’t readily apparent, then take the few minutes needed to track it down:

  • TinEye is an image search engine that can help you find where a particular image has been posted elsewhere. It’s great for tracking down an original source… and handy for checking for uses of your own work, too.
  • Google web, image, video and blog search let you unleash the full force of Google’s sophisticated search queries. There’s an art to choosing search keywords: you want them to be peculiar enough to the content in question to filter out irrelevant results, but general enough that it’s likely the content creator used them. A little persistence will go a long way.
  • Popular YouTube videos are often re-uploaded by users who had nothing to do with creating them. So before you share that great YouTube find, run a search on some obvious keywords — and sort by the upload date. That way, you can go back in time to the original posting. (Sorting by date is great for blog searches, too.)

And link to the source. You’re doing a service to your visitors who like that one piece of content, making it easier for them to go find others like it. It’s also a nice thing to do for the author, who gets a little traffic, attention and search engine juice. And it makes it likelier that the author can find you, and possibly strike up a conversation. (I’ve met some of the nicest people because they’ve shared my stuff.)

I’ll give the last word to Beth, who says “as more content consumers become curators, I think this issue is going to become more pervasive.” Agreed.

Now, your turn. Do you make a point of attributing when you share content? And how can content creators — and platforms like Tumblr — make that easier?

Next Bad Machinery starts May 30th

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Category: Everything Else
Media_httpscarygoroun_mwaie

And I didn’t think the web was going to get me anything for my birthday. John Allison’s lovely comic Bad Machinery, currently on a brief hiatus, returns that very day with a new episode.

Which would be a great time for you to look into it, if you haven’t checked his work out before. It’s charming and witty, and I’m going to read this next one with Li’l Sweetie.

Posted via email from Rob Cottingham’s posterous

23 May 2011

Blogged on Griffin

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Category: Everything Else

I was chatting with cartoonist, Rob Cottingham on Twitter last week. Rob is the brains, talent and humor behind Noise to Signal. The cartoon takes a funny look at social media, business and how we live and work in a digital world. Rob explained that he often uses our Stylus to sketch his cartoons on his iPad!

I’ve been subscribed to Rob’s blog for a long time now. Naturally, I was thrilled to see that he enjoys using Stylus to illustrate his hilarious cartoon.

Let me return the compliment, Dave. I’ve been a Griffin customer for years – and I suspect you’d be hard-pressed to find very many Mac freaks who don’t have at least one Griffin dongle, case, charger, adapter or life-enhancer in their bag. (Or in their car, or on their desktop.)

One item in particular was a life-saver: the iMic, an inexpensive USB audio interface that let me overcome Apple’s (mercifully temporary) insistence on depriving some of its laptop users of an audio input.

So you can guess I’m pretty psyched to be featured on the Griffin blog today. And in celebration, I’ll break out my Stylus this evening to doodle up tomorrow’s #TombstoneTuesday cartoon.

Posted via email from Rob Cottingham’s posterous

21 May 2011

6 captions that won’t win the caption contest

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Category: Noise to Signal

Cartoon of someone texting on their phone while being carried away by the Twitter birdFolks, you have to enter this contest. Here are six captions that won’t be winning:

  1. Anyone know a cheap source of Imodium for birds?
  2. Live-tweeting of Spring Migration 2011 not going so well.
  3. Just blogged: update on avian flu threat.
  4. Memo to self: there are worse things than commuting by transit.
  5. Hey, @NikitaFromDivision – got an update on Operation Sparrow.
  6. I just became Foursquare Mayor of 5,000 feet above the ground!

18 May 2011

Highway 8 to Gimli

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Category: Everything Else

winnipeg sunsetI drove from Winnipeg to Gimli tonight (my first time ever taking Manitoba’s Highway 8). I snapped this at an intersection in Winnipeg as the sun was setting. By the time I was about halfway to Gimli, the sunset was more subdued, but still arresting.

Then I passed a farmer’s field, half of it underwater. It was one of the only instances of flooding I saw on the drive here (this part of the province appears to have been spared so far), but it was a big swath of water.

It was also one of the loveliest things I’ve ever seen. The dry patches of field, trees and buildings were utterly black, but wherever there was standing water, the sunset spread fire: a sprawling puddle of red and orange and yellow spilled on the darkness.

I watched it with more than a little awe. And I watched knowing full well that while I was captured by the strange beauty of this flooded silhouette, thousands of people in this province and others are watching rising floodwaters warily, or taking shelter far from homes that may not be there when they return.

I’ve been in Manitoba before during flooding, on the same in-one-night-out-the-next schedule. It feels odd to be present and yet completely apart from an unfolding event like this.

Hey, Victoria – YOU MUST SEE RACCOONERY!

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Media_httpintrepidthe_cyfye

I work with Morgan, so I’m obviously biased… but I also find it hard to feign laughter. So believe me when I say that when Morgan Brayton’s premiered at Vancouver’s Fringe Festival, I spent my time more or less like this:

  • 45%: guffawing

  • 32%: howling
  • 13%: giggling
  • 9%: tittering
  • 1%: desperately trying to catch my breath
  • She performs Raccoonery! this weekend at Victoria’s UNO FEST, starting Thursday night at the Metro Studio. Check out the description of her one-woman show, and if it sounds like it’s even remotely up your alley, go — you won’t be disappointed.

    Posted via email from Rob Cottingham’s posterous

    17 May 2011

    Updating this plugin (just killed my site) (a WordPress song)

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    Category: Blogging; Technology

    So I saw this from Alex a few minutes ago:

    I have a shiny toonie for the person to write, record & upload a song called “Upgrading this plugin just killed my site.”Tue May 17 17:19:34 via HootSuite

    I’m comping you, sweetheart.

    Upgrading This Plugin (Just Killed My Site) (43 s)

    And here are the lyrics:

    I searched high and low down on WordPress dot org
    looked for advice on the forums and boards
    Decided the new version would work just right
    But upgrading this plugin just killed my site

    Just killed my site!
    When my traffic was doing so well
    Just killed my site!
    A single click sent the whole thing to hell

    I dove in deep, and I launched Sequel Pro
    Oh holy crap – where did my database go?
    Looks like I’m going to have a long sleepless night
    Cos upgrading this plugin just killed my site

    Just killed my site!
    When my traffic was doing so well
    Just killed my site!
    A single click sent the whole thing to hell

     

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