If you’re reading this, then chances are you already know about Web 2.0. Even if you don’t know the term itself, you’re one of millions worldwide who are actively creating, sharing or benefiting from user-generated content that characterizes Web 2.0 phenomena.
As a communicator, I want to expand the reach of the Library and access to our magnificent collections as far and wide as possible. Of course, there are only so many hours in the day, so many staff in Library offices and so many dollars in the budget. Priorities have to be chosen that will most effectively advance our mission.
That’s why it is so exciting to let people know about the launch of a brand-new pilot project the Library of Congress is undertaking with Flickr, the enormously popular photo-sharing site that has been a Web 2.0 innovator. If all goes according to plan, the project will help address at least two major challenges: how to ensure better and better access to our collections, and how to ensure that we have the best possible information about those collections for the benefit of researchers and posterity. In many senses, we are looking to enhance our metadata (one of those Web 2.0 buzzwords that 90 percent of our readers could probably explain better than me).
The project is beginning somewhat modestly, but we hope to learn a lot from it. Out of some 14 million prints, photographs and other visual materials at the Library of Congress, more than 3,000 photos from two of our most popular collections are being made available on our new Flickr page, to include only images for which no copyright restrictions are known to exist.
The real magic comes when the power of the Flickr community takes over. We want people to tag, comment and make notes on the images, just like any other Flickr photo, which will benefit not only the community but also the collections themselves. For instance, many photos are missing key caption information such as where the photo was taken and who is pictured. If such information is collected via Flickr members, it can potentially enhance the quality of the bibliographic records for the images.
We’re also very excited that, as part of this pilot, Flickr has created a new publication model for publicly held photographic collections called ???The Commons.??? Flickr hopes???as do we???that the project will eventually capture the imagination and involvement of other public institutions, as well.
From the Library’s perspective, this pilot project is a statement about the power of the Web and user communities to help people better acquire information, knowledge and???most importantly???wisdom. One of our goals, frankly, is to learn as much as we can about that power simply through the process of making constructive use of it.
More information is available on the Library’s Web site here and on the FAQ page here.
And with that, gentlemen (and gentlewomen), start your tagging!
UPDATE: You can read Flickr’s take here.
(Image of baseball player ???Bugs??? Raymond from the Library’s Bain Collection because I liked the surname. Image of grain elevator from Caldwell, Idaho, from the Library’s FSA/OWI Color Photographs Collection because it helps illustrate that there are active Flickr user groups for even such diverse subjects as grain elevators.)
Comments (257)
Congrats on the launch. LC is the second (that we know of) library to work with Flickr. The National Library of Australia and their Picture Australia project has offered a Flickr section for a couple of years. We’ve posted about it on ResourceShelf.
I love this idea. This is exactly the right direction to go in with parts of your collection. Thank you!
Now, since I can’t help meddling… It would be useful to find ways to geo-locate these photos. Within your existing information on many, there is information as to town or county in which the photo was taken. Why not add that information in tag form (geo_state:delaware, geo_county:kent, geo_place:dover, for example).
beyond that, there may be users out here that can place a photo with more specificity. Flickr provides a very nice map interface that allows us to “place” our own shots. It might be possible to open that up in some form to the commons to allow people to “place” some of these. You might have to add some oversight to that, to avoid irresponsible or erroneous placement. Perhaps suggested placements could be qued for review by staff?
just a thought…
This is so great! The only disappointment is not being able to search within the collection (either by using the searchbox or clicking on tags). Will that work in the future?
Lynn, in terms of the tags, the only tag that was added to each image was “Library of Congress.” Part of the pilot aspect of this is to set the community loose and see what tags it applies. Hopefully a colleague can answer the search question …
Lynn – that problem should be addressed now. We had to give our search boxes a bit of a kick 🙂
E.g. http://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress/tags/orange/ should be showing up for everyone now.
Mike Mahaffie : If you are interested in adding geo-related tags, you might also be interested in the “machine tags” feature on the site :
http://www.flickr.com/groups/api/discuss/72157594497877875/
The short version is : machine tags are just like tags but with a special syntax to both identify, and search for, facets of a tag.
So, “geo_county:dover” would become “geo:county=dover”, “geo:state=delaware” and so on.
Once indexed, you can query for photos based on entire machine tags or just parts (geo:, geo:county=, etc.)
http://www.flickr.com/services/api/flickr.photos.search.html
Cheers,
I’d like to encourage the LOC to mirror the data on their own site. The vast majority of districts I work with block Flickr because of CIPA compliance. Since Flickr names images within their root directory, and only links to those from the subdirectory, it doesn’t seem to work for the district to unblock http://www.flickr.com/photos/library_of_congress.
I’d also like to second Mike’s suggestion (#3) about geo-location, both within the tagging and with absolute coordinates, where available. It would make a nice mashup with Google Earth!
That’s great news. Are you also going to submit public-domain pictures to the Wikimedia Commons (http://commons.wikimedia.org)? As much as I love Flickr (I’m a Pro user with several thousands of pictures up on the site), it’s still a commercial company, whereas the Wikimedia Foundation is a non-profit with a clear mission.
Flickr (heart) You, and so do we! I second (third?) the suggestion to open up the geolocation tagging. The map is one of my favorite flickr features.
What an awesome idea! Thanks so much for doing this!
In the interests of “as far and wide as possible” can other sites get in on the game? Maybe even collaborate together?
I run SmugMug and would love to participate somehow.
Thanks!
This is sounds like a great project. The functionality of Flickr’s user interface and the LC collection. I can see myself browsing for hours on end.
I’m so stoked right now. This is incredible. Thank you, thank you, thank you!
I was disappointed to learn from an earlier comment that the Childrens’ Internet Protection Act has resulted in a ban on all of Flickr. Rather than mirroring, perhaps the underlying problem with the legislation or with its implementation should be fixed…
This is an excellent move and it looks like the pilot project is already getting the attention it needs for LC to start moving forward with additional projects!
Has the Library and/or flickr considered randomizing the images that appear on the collection homepage? I suspect that this would help to even out the page views and tag distribution.
Not that folks on the internet are too lazy to view 172 pages of images, but…
What a great idea!
If you need assistance with video you should try the equivalent, Viddler.com 🙂
Brilliant. Thank you!
Why is a part of the federal government giving such a huge gift to a commercial company?
Was there some sort of competitive bidding for this plan?
How do I get 3000 or more outdoors pictures I can put on my website?
I’ve been writing one my blog about archival photos from The Library of Congress and the National Archives and Records Administration since July of 2005. I’m looking forward to easily seeing new images as you post them to your account.
Neon Poisoning: The Best Photographs the Federal Government has to Offer – 8
I like the surname, too. 🙂
I hope those working on this project consider presenting at the American Association for History and Computing Conference being held online. It will be all about Web 2.0.
http://www.theaahc.org
Congratulation on the launch, thanks for doing this!
I also learn to use flickr in my few blogs. It has amazing features. I agree that flickr is not just a photo sharing.
There seems to be no mention of security whatsoever.
As a university librarian, I can see some value in what the LOC is doing but I think it’s another misguided attempt in their continuing efforts at dumbing down metadata.
It’s great that they’re providing more access to these images by making them more readily apparent to the public. They’re crazy if they think anything meaningful will come from letting users tag these photos.
The LOC should be looking to the future by guiding metadata standards for the semantic web and ensuring that the library as an institution is still relevant 10-20 years from now. They should not, in my opinion, spin their wheels and waste time, effort and money playing catch-up with tagging technology that’s, at best, a temporary measure until the day when information on the web finds you and not the other way around.
They have (had) a real opportunity to be the leaders in intelligently organizing the world’s information, or at least in providing the framework through intelligent metadata standards. Unfortunately they seem content to say “Me too!” to trends and technologies that are, by today’s standards, already old.
Given the way their cataloging standards are slipping I don’t find this to be surprising as much as disappointing. I really expect more from the LOC.
I am over the moon. You have brought history to me and brought it alive. I use my local library many times a week. I’ve worked in many museums. I think I’m pretty saavy. But I would never have found your online home if it weren’t for the flickr program. Thank you a million to the forward thinking people who took the brilliant step to look outside of yourselves for a new way to exhibit and have a two-way communication on the WWW.
Nice. Very Nice. An absolutely great idea! Thanks very much for doing this!
This is great news! Congratulations to everyone involved, and thank you!
Wow – this is amazing. It’s like the great photographers of the past century rose from the dead to school us amateurs on Flickr on how it’s done.
This sounds like a great project! I was wondering if Flickr was persisting the tags within the JPEG file in addition to persisting them within its own database? This would insure that the tags that people enter are copied, each time the photo is copied. Typically this information is written into EXIF tags within the JPEG file. It would also make it easier for the LOC to index the images once they get them back from Flickr.
Kudos!
These images are awesome. This was such a brilliant idea! I’ve been going through them in Flickr and tagging like crazy for the past 2 hours!
Kudos on a fabulous idea. Brilliant. Please post a lot more photos. Put history right in front of folks’ eyes so they can’t miss it.
classic picture… Thank for share
Great news – makes me feel proud to be a librarian. Geo-location tagging would be nice as well. Thanks!
This is great. Access to the photos from LC will be the greatest. Though 60+ yo, am studying the world via photos, and some of the architecture, cathedrals, etc., lead me to more knowledge. Some private photos don’t reveal where taken. I love the geo tagging.
Great news. It will be interesting to see what additional insights this brings to these collections.
Geotagging information would be a good addition, however, I was disappointed to see that the images that are on Flickr have no metadata in them at present!
I’m curious as to whether they had any Exif / IPTC / XMP metadata when uploaded, and this has been stripped out on upload to Flickr, or whether they never had any to begin with.
Using Jeffrey Friedls online Exif Metadata viewer (http://regex.info/exif.cgi?) about the only information in the file I saw was that the files had been saved or processed with Handmade Software, Inc. Image Alchemy v1.11.
Having the metadata that appears under the image in the file itself would be much more useful for any of us that might download an image for reference, as without this info it’s doubtful that we will be able to track it back to the LOC or Flickr.
David
Yes, fan mail. Us cycling fanatics have been scraping the bicycle pictures, which are getting many comments and are being enjoyed by people world-wide. Once again, I cannot think of a better use for a small slice of my tax dollars. Kudos.
This would be a dream job to have! If only libraries in Canada would get on the bandwagon…
This is such a good and open-minded approach to the public. A great idea which I’m sure will take off. Being able to see all those old images so easily is great for us photo fanatics and also history buffs. The tagging is so helpful when browsing the collection.
This is a great idea, being able to tag photos like these will be incredible and I imagine diverse and interesting.
I love looking back at photos like this, it’s visual history and very interesting, I love that we have recorded life in this way. And being able to search and browse through them with this extra help is great!
I’ve been using the American Memory site for years. My students have turned out some great multimedia projects with LOC images. And I’ve been able to illustrate History lessons with images not found in textbooks. This new partnership with Flicker makes accessibility that much easier. Truly, our national treasures are being shared with the people.
I applaud the effort and find it very exciting!
One question – will you be posting anything at a higher size/resolution?
At 1024 pixels, the images are a bit small for doing anything other than browsing.
Thanks for this effort!
what a shame the LOC has put their slipshod collection on flicker , its almost like a training course on how not to present pictures cocked , poor color adjustment , poor levels , dirt and scratches , never mind about tagging these pictures i think the flicker folks should band together and clean these ,its a national shame to present our countrys tresures like this , and if you doubt my word go to the loc web page and check out the little seen ansel adams collection of pictures taken in the japanese internment camps , every one needs work
i think web 2.0 is over rated goplay was years ahead of myspace and is exactly the same as goplay apart from it makes money, as for Flickr don’t get me started on that, still love the photos.
Jake McKee: On the individual Flickr pages for the photos, there is a link back to the Prints and Photographs Online Catalog record for the image.
There you will be able to find VERY high-res versions, generally TIF files in the tens of megabytes.
It is such a wonderful idea to make these photos available online to those of us who may never make it to the Library of Congress. I hope eventually the entire Library collection, including photos, video, etc. will be digitized and put online in an interactive format such as that provided by Flickr.
its nice to see the post and game over fliker .Last year I wrote about the possibilities of crowdsourcing photo archives, so I was happy to learn that the Library of Congress is giving it a go
I have one concern about what you said about people adding bibliographic information to photos. How can you verify that captions added to photos are correct? Some users might think they know something about a photo and turn out to be wrong.
Very good idea making these photos available online. The web helps people communicate over great distances. Might as well make the most of it.
It’s nice that these images are going up on flickr, but I’m disappointed that the Library of Commons chose to partner with Flickr instead of the non-profit Wikimedia Commons, which is doing amazing things for the sharing of knowledge online.
This is so wonderful to see. The Library of Congress has such a vast collection of rich and vibrant pictures available. It will be so beneficial to have such easy access to that excellent resource.
Keep up the great work!
I would love to see hi rez photographs too. Regardless, this is a terrific initiative, one that will benefit everyone.
Matt: All of the images link back to the Library’s online catalog, which does indeed offer high-res downloads.
I agree with Matt.
“I would love to see hi rez photographs too. Regardless, this is a terrific initiative, one that will benefit everyone.?
Kristal Rosebrook
Congress has started a pilot program to publish their photo archives on Flickr.
I was disappointed to learn from an earlier comment that the Childrens’ Internet Protection Act has resulted in a ban on all of Flickr. Rather than mirroring, perhaps the underlying problem with the legislation or with its implementation should be fixed…
Great news and congrats on the new launch. Who’d have thought you would come up with this great idea to make your images more accessible to the public!
Congrats on the launch. LC is the second (that we know of) library to work with Flickr. The National Library of Australia and their Picture Australia project has offered a Flickr section for a couple of years. We’ve posted about it on ResourceShelf.
Congrats on the launch. Thanks for access to great images.
I really enjoy this photostream. I posted a comment on another post about it, but I think it is better suited here. I just wanted to comment on how much I enjoyed looking at the photos on the LOC Flickr. There is a lot of diversity in the images, I really enjoyed looking at them. I really enjoy looking at old photos like that. I like to picture myself if I lived at that time and was at the location the photo was taken. It’s surreal. I really enjoyed it, thank you.
This is so cool that you all are doing this. What a win-win for all of us. (Plus great choice for the top pic you included in this post!) I’m glad the LOC is embracing our Web 2.0 world and allowing more people to more easily access your treasure trove of photos.
I LOVE flickr and I love this stream, for sure. One of my favorite things about flickr is just randomming through; sometimes I end up on family pictures, once I landed upon the christmas party for some business loan office group, and i especially love it when i happen upon people’s wedding portraits!
This is so cool that you all are doing this. What a win-win for all of us. (Plus great choice for the top pic you included in this post!) I’m glad the LOC is embracing our Web 2.0 world and allowing more people to more easily access your treasure trove of photos.
I hope those working on this project consider presenting at the American Association for History and Computing Conference being held online. It will be all about Web 2.0.
If you wan to read more about this you can read a blog post by David Weinberger or go directly to the original post.
Flickr has been a great help to my web design business.It helps my company provide affordable seo to our clients by letting us share client pictures with trackback URLS. Good stuff
One of my favorite things about flickr is just randomming through; sometimes I end up on family pictures, once I landed upon the christmas party for some business loan office group, and i especially love it when i happen upon people’s wedding portraits!
What a wonderful idea. We use photos from Flicker on out sites, a great source and super website.
I’ve been using the American Memory site for years. My students have turned out some great multimedia projects with LOC images. And I’ve been able to illustrate History lessons with images not found in textbooks. This new partnership with Flicker makes accessibility that much easier. Truly, our national treasures are being shared with the people.
Truly a great idea. Flickr is by and large the best resouce for photo sharing on the internet. The only comparable (albeit slightly more popular) site is facebook, which has too many privacy restrictions to facilitate any collaborative sharing.
This is absolutely great! I would really like to see hi resolution photographs too. Regardless, this is a terrific initiative, one that will benefit everyone?
I live in South Africa and I wish my government had even a fraction of the initiative you people have. If you type in .gov in Google SA you find that most sites are contracted to people who still think frames are cool. Good for you.
I’ve been using the American Memory site for years. My students have turned out some great multimedia projects with LOC images.
LOVE flickr and I love this stream, for sure. One of my favorite things about flickr is just randomming through; sometimes I end up on family pictures,
Thanks for …
The combination of Flickr and an archive of historical photos will be pure magic. It will be amazing to read the comments from people reminiscing about where they were when certain events happened and the emotions they felt at the time.
Congrats on the launch. Thanks for access to great images.
Great job with the info. How did you find it? Please let me know.
Yes the internet is a lot of resources, where the exchange of photos, and various videos.
but may be worth ….
I think this is really a good idea. I personally use Flicker because it is friendly user.
I’ve been looking at this feature on WordPress blogs for ages and wishing Blogger would implement it. Followed your instructions and it works a treat!
I wish my government had even a fraction of the initiative you people have. If you type in .gov in Google SA you find that most sites are contracted to people who still think frames are cool. Good for you.http://www.heelsunion.com
Flickr brings me a loads of traffic last two months.. Its one of the biggest online marketing tools ever, specially if you are running photography website like I do..
What a great initiative and I’m sure they are finding Flickr to be a good partner in this project.
Thanks for the good post.
What a wonderful idea. We use photos from Flicker on out sites, a great source and super website.
THANK YOU VERY MUCH FOR SHARE .
Thanks for sharing. Flickr and systems alike make it a lot easier to find related information to images, although there’s still room for enhancements.
Great news and congrats on the new launch. Who’d have thought you would come up with this great idea to make your images more accessible to the public!
Wonderful!
Wonderful! Very good!
I live in China,when can i enjoy all this???
One of our goals, frankly, is to learn as much as we can about that power simply through the process of making constructive use of it.