Search form

Back to Blog

Instagram Backs Down on Image Ownership

In a move that sent ripples across the Internet, photo-sharing Web site Instagram attempted to adjust its privacy policy to claim ownership of all images publicly uploaded by its users.

After public outcry over the policy shift, Instagram reversed its course and ceased actively seeking ownership of the images.

Had the policy shift been successful, effective January 16, 2013, anyone with an Instagram account would no longer have been the owner of any images he or she had uploaded. The images could have been sold, without compensation or notification, for reasons including advertising and promotional materials. That means a photograph taken at Disneyland and uploaded to Instagram might have been purchased by Disney for use in TV or print advertising without the permission of the photographer, and without notification or compensation. The only way for users to avoid losing ownership of their photographs would have been to delete their Instagram account before the January deadline.

 

More

A Facebook Fictional Writing Caper...

The following two part blog is an excerpt sample Facebook fictional writing caper lesson plan from the new book Social Media Writing Lesson Plans by Erik Bean and Emily Waszak, published by Westphalia Press, imprint of the Policy Studies Organization, Washington, D.C.. 

Creative writing takes on a new twist in this Facebook caper. Your class will collaborate on including character development and dialogue as well as uploading pictures of key settings coupled...

Gifted Kids End of School Year Survival...

Looking for a way to challenge your gifted kids during the final days of school (and help other teachers stay sane)?

If so, I have an idea for you. 

Let’s be honest. The last few weeks of any school year can be rough. After testing and more testing, 180 days or so of sitting in seats, and listening to teachers, students are ready to break for summer. Teachers find themselves in a similar mindset....

End of the Year Letter to Students. Do...

Do you write an end of the year letter to your students? If, so, please share.Here is the one I used with my 6th graders:

Dear students,

The end of the school year has passed so very quickly. It seems like we were just beginning to learn about the world in which we live AND a bit about each other, and now, it is time for me to say goodbye to you as you continue to...

Flag Day is Coming, a Day to Honor the...

Flag Day is coming, a day to honor the flag of the United States. This year, Flag Day is June...

What Gifted Kids Can Learn From...

Before class, one of my third-grade students came to me and showed me a picture of a dog that she had drawn. I noticed that it looked very much like every other dog picture that she had drawn.

Not wanting to discourage her creative spark, I gently told her that I liked it and that I noticed she had drawn the shape of the dog’s head in the very same manner in every...

The Global Search for Education: A...

When Quincy Jones was chosen to produce "We Are The World" in 1985, the idea was that it would be a collective effort of the music community donating its time and talents to make a difference for others in crisis. Who can forget the story about the world's biggest recording stars being told to "check your egos at the door" - this cause is so much bigger than your celebrity.

...

Opportunities to Challenge Gifted Kids...

Recess-it is a precious commodity to elementary students.

Having it taken away can be a most painful experience. So when a group of gifted students faced losing it because their classmates were being noisy and uncooperative, they began to stress. I felt their pain, but I also saw something else-an opportunity to challenge them.

After they groaned...

Pages