Search the Help Forum Can't download images janwillemgoossen says: I am using Flickr app for android. If I press on download image, I can pick the size I want, my cellphone says starting download, but nothing happens Posted at AM, 26 January PST permalink kmacgray says: janwillemgoossen : Try restarting your device. Feed — Subscribe to help discussion threads. Latest: 2 hours ago. New Flickr Notifications Center and Settings available to all members. Latest: 2 months ago. Welcome to the Flickr Help Forum!
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Feed — Subscribe to help discussion threads. Latest: 2 hours ago. New Flickr Notifications Center and Settings available to all members. Latest: 2 months ago. Welcome to the Flickr Help Forum! Latest: 18 months ago. Will there be any Pro offers for Black Friday? Solved - Safe photo deemed unsafe for cover photo??? Latest: 9 hours ago. Second Life artwork are not photos Latest: 11 hours ago. My new group is shown as inactive Latest: 14 hours ago. Copyright remains with the photographer or image owner.
This post is an alternative method to the relatively painful AdBlock Flickr technique from August this year. If you really want to download a lot of Flickr images often, the AdBlock technique might be worth the trouble.
Alec has been helping businesses succeed online since Nice solution. A photographer should be flattered that someone likes his or her images enough to save them for reviewing later. I was just trying to print a copy for my son to make sketches of medieval tapestries, all of which seem to be copyrighted, annoyingly enough. Pictures of Medieval tapestries as above cannot be legally copyrighted by the photographer in most jurisdiction they are copies of existing art work.
I very well might want to keep a local gallery for my own enjoyment and in fact do. The internet is ephemeral. One rule for everyone else, another rule for Google on copyright, privacy, etc. Thanks so much! They are on display, they are not there to be downloaded for free.
I think you are overreacting here. Whether someone has to do screenshots or right click makes no difference. I suggest you take an IP lawyer out to lunch your dime sometime and have him or her explain to you the limitations of copyright. Thanks, I was trying to get racing pics that a local racetrack photographer posts so people can let him know which ones they want to order, and now I can copy them for free and get them printed myself.
He may quit being the track photographer if everyone does it and his time photographing and editing are wasted, but so what, at least I get what I want for free. If you are happy printing low res crappy copies of the racetrack photos, you are unlikely to be the person who would pay for high quality prints or for the full res digital negative. Alec, thank you so much for your tip. Alec, I completely understand your reasoning for downloading copyrighted images for free.
I have my own simpler way of copying protected Flickr images. I only use the copied images as wallpaper on my computer at work. I enjoy the image for a few weeks and then I seek out another. I also save them in a folder in case I ever want to purchase the image for a large print for my collection. My method is simple: I find the image I like on Flickr and copy the tag words used into a Google image search; the image I want is typically within the first few results then I select the image and Google shows me the picture in their preview screen where I then right click and hit save as.
If that happens, I just find another image I like and try again. It typically works within a couple tries but it does take some patience to find an image that works. Your posts make a lot of sense and I enjoyed reading them. Photographers need to realize that the Internet is a blessing and a curse- your images reach people in every corner of the world but some of those people will steal your work.
Thanks so much. The instructions you posted and the comments made it simple to save what Flickr tried to make difficult. The technique I use works perfectly in firefox for any site — I use it at Pbase aswell. I right click anywhere on the page and click view page info, switch over to the Media tab, and skim through the list for the link that ends in.
Think what you want about people who post pictures, scrape pictures, etc. I do some events and the organisers use Flickr for photos,I usually can find some but never seem to be able to actually get them though we are told they are free. The instructions above are pretty clear. On the other hand, if you are using these photos for presentations, you better be very sure they are indeed Creative Commons or free for distribution. Downloading pictures for your private use is pretty much at your own discretion despite the intimidating and desperate cries of authority freaks like Jim above.
Or inclusion of said photos in an article about the photos themselves as illustration is also fair use. Try this command:. Thanks so much for the solution. What you say is exactly right. Will download you a nice picture of a section of the Bayeux Tapestry. Without that, you will just get the picture in your browser. They are up-front about this. The key to the copyright is to NOT use it inappropriately. Where photogs have a legitimate complaint about this is when they start seeing their work on other websites without attribution or remuneration.
In my experience though the only people who have to worry about this is people who take pictures of women. Love your comment about if you want something to be private then do not put them up on the internet… Now I can have all the ferrari photos I want!!! Please be sure to at least properly credit the people whose photos you are republishing.
I do not have google chrome, I have internet explorer 8. How can this be done using that web browser? I ask you instead of endlessly trolling google because you seem competent, knowledgable and able to withstand bad spelling, criticism and some hysteria over copyrighting ;p.
And yes I am one of those people who download pics for reference in future renovation and home decor ideas with the web addy so I can buy the quality image later.
Silver lining on the cloud. If anyone knows how to apply this technique in IE8, please let us know. Thank you for taking your time to help us. I bet most of their images are sucks as their sad life. Any smart photographer would be aware of internet threats before post their work online. And you must be too dumb to post full size image on flickr. Enough said. Go Internet Trolls go away.. Just because somebody publishes a website featuring their photographs, does not give anyone a license to steal.
I have no problem with somebody downloading my images for personal, non-commercial use. A lot of unscrupulous people out there. With overlays, watermarks unless they are very discreet , the only person whose work you damage is your own by damaging the enjoyment of the end user. Anyone who uses your images commercially without permission makes himself or herself eligible to be sued. The thugs at Getty Images are even making a big business of it, buying up Creative Commons portfolios and then beginning to sue based on an after the fact license change.
You can also right click on the image. Go to inspect Element. Go to the url and the picture should pop up, this time unprotected by any code. Now you can right click and save. Also I apologise for not pointing out other people who suggested the same as Shey. I find this to be an extremely selfish and shortsided point of view. For example, take a look at this Flickr pool flickr. As far as I can tell, this is the only resource for these images online of this scope.
This is the same selfish mentality that museums employ when they limit the ability to take non-flash photography of public domain works and greedily control the use of said images because they own the physical original.
I agree with Alec that a photographer should be flattered if people find their work beautiful enough an use it with proper credits. What none of the whiners here seem technologically astute to bring up is that any time you look at a photograph on a webpage you are already downloading the image.
But hey, if I want to share my photos in a limited way, I must accept that there are people like you happy to use my images in any way you want. This is not like Napster or other file sharing. Flickr users are real people who generally have a love of photography. Many would be happy to share a full-res image with you if you expressed appreciation for the work. Simply downloading images like a commodity is easier for you, but shows no respect for the photographer.
If you are unwilling to ask for the copyrighted image, maybe meet the photographer half way. Go ahead and download her photo, but at least write a nice comment. The tonal range is striking and the bokeh is as smooth as butter.
To be honest, I think talented photographers would get really tired of constant requests from people wanting to save their images. On the other hand, photo dweebs with little skill or vision would appreciate these very infrequent emails.
On top of that most websites are ephemeral especially specific URLs so if I want to see the image in two years maybe someone is working on a long term project on ceremonial decorations for example , I better have saved it to my own hard drive.
I assure you musicians are real people with real home, real stomachs and real lives. I purchase lots of imagery and music. And it often starts with free….
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