New app lets publishers save time searching for images
Publishers often need to add images to articles that appear on their Web sites. Unless the publisher has a specific photo taken from the location of the story, that means searching a number of different photo sharing sites such as Google Images, Flickr, TwitPic, PhotoBucket, and others. Once the picture is found, you have to click through to see the full size image, right click to download it, then choose Import to paste it onto the site, and make sure you have the copyright clearance to use it. It’s all a very time consuming process.
What if you could do all this in 2 steps? That’s the idea behind Ginipic, a small startup with a big idea. Enter a search term and the Ginipic application crawls 15 different web-based photo sharing application. The software then presents the results on a single screen.
That’s already a big improvement from Google’s image search, which only displays a maximum of 25 photos on a page, requiring users to click the “Next Page” button repeatedly.
Ginipic will even search your own computer.
Once you find the image you want, simply drag and drop it into the application you’re using. Ginipic is designed to work “side by side” with other programs to help eliminate switching back and forth between screens.
Ginipic shows copyright details and a photo’s Creative Commons status to keep you from inadvertently infringing (a dollar sign and a large “Buy Now” button appear when an image isn’t free).
Ginipic is entirely free right now and, unlike other web services that pitch a paid premium version, the company’s business model is to cut “white label” deals that will give an existing photo sharing site Ginipic’s functionality but with the partner’s branding. Those deals will be in the $10-30,000 range in order “to bring the product to market as fast as possible,” CEO Lior Weinstein told me.
Ginipic is not a web application but a download and it works on Windows only (bad news for all the creative types and increasing numbers of students who use Macs).
Ginipic is not without competitors. Meta-search services like Copernic have been around for years, and Microsoft Office’s Clip Art tool is already built into Word (“although no one uses it,” Weinstein mused). Other sites, such as CoolIris, are more about enjoying images online than searching them, Weinstein pointed out.
So far, in the 9 months since Ginipic launched, it’s signed up over 100,000 users “on $0 advertising,” Weinstein said. Approximately 25 percent of those are active users.
Among the services with which Ginipic works are DeviantArt, Flickr, Picasa, Google, Fotolia, Bing, PhotoBucket, SmugMug, Yahoo, Dreamstime and Crestock.
Brian Blum heads Blum Interactive Media, a consulting firm that creates multimedia content for social media: blogs, podcasts, video, eBooks, research and more.
Zuckerberg’s roommate recounts Facebook’s birth
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz has an interesting account of the birth of Facebook – from Mark Zuckerberg’s Harvard roommate who has since immigrated to Israel.
Arie Hasit, now 26, shared an apartment with Zuckerberg and even joined the same college fraternity. Facebook, as is well known, started as a utility for Harvard students. What’s less famous is that Zuckerberg’s original site was a version of the now famous “Hot or Not” where members could rate who was more attractive.
The site became so popular that within a few hours of its launch in 2003, the Internet server at Harvard crawled to a halt and budding entrepreneur Zuckerberg was denied access to his own site.
Zuckerberg had also founded a Harvard site called Course Match which allowed students to find out who among those living in the same dorm are taking what courses, so that they could form study groups.
Eventually, Zuckerberg created the “real” Facebook which, like its Hot or Not predecessor, took off fast. In less than a week, there were 4,000 students signed up. A few weeks later, Zuckerberg opened up Facebook to Stanford and Dartmouth Universities.
And where is Hasit, Zuckerberg’s roommate, today? He’s currently serving in the Israeli army in the public spokesperson’s unit. And yes, he has a Facebook account (we even share some friends).
Two startups try to change the way news is written, distributed
I attended an interesting meet up in Tel Aviv last night. Speakers at the TechAviv event included Iamnews founder Nir Ofir (we wrote about the company previously here), and WeBook CEO Itai Kochavi. Both companies are trying to redefine how writers work together.
In the case of Iamnews, the idea is to create an alternative – and less expensive – news distribution network to compete with existing 300-pound gorillas like AP and Reuters. Iamnews will empower editors at newspapers and blogs to set up their own reporting networks through which they can assign and solicit stories. The system will track who wrote what so that contributors get paid.
The company won the “People’s Choice” award at September’s TechCrunch50 conference. Whether newspapers will opt for Iamnews over AP remains to be seen. The service might be more interesting to high profile news-oriented blogs and Web sites. Iamnews also has some serious financial challenges – it is now trying to raise an A round in a decidedly down market.
WeBook is not for newspapers per se; rather it allows writers to collaborate on the creation of books. CEO Kochavi told the audience that in light of the runaway success of Web-based social networking technology, authors no longer want to write alone. WeBook, accordingly, allows authors to post a manuscript and solicit comments from other WeBook members, as well as to collect individual commissioned articles on a theme and digitallly bind them into an anthology. The company promises to publish the best books as in print, eBook, mobile and audio formats.
Truthfully, I thought the idea a bit far-fetched. But maybe WeBook’s “crowdsourcing” concept could be a good add on for citizen journalism projects at newspapers where content is shorter and turned around more rapidly. Maybe there’s even a match with Iamnews? WeBook just raised a $5 million round, so at least some VCs believe in the concept.
Speaking of VCs…the TechAviv meet up also featured a talk by Adam Fisher who represents Bessemer in Israel. Fisher presented an investor perspective on raising money in a time of global financial turmoil. Fisher’s talk was inconclusive. On the one hand, he admitted that startups will need to hunker down and even lay off staff in order to weather the next months or years as VCs will understandably be more reticent in investing.
On the other hand, those same investors whole raison d’etre is to find the next big thing and they won’t be able – or want – to cease investments entirely. Investments will continue, Fisher predicted, albeit in lower amounts and at lower valuations. Indeed, Fisher advised portfolio companies to take “anything” that’s offered to keep their companies afloat including an acquisition at a lower price than the company might have commanded even a few weeks ago.
That potentially represents an opportunity for larger media publishers: If there’s a small company that seems interesting, you might be able to grab it for a fire sale price in the near future, so keep reading our blog and your eyes and ears open.
New startup develops new semantic analysis tech for advertising, snags $12m
Here’s a new startup to watch (tip of the hat to the Israel21c Web site): Israel’s Peer39 has developed a new semantic technology for on-line advertising that doesn’t use cookies or keywords and doesn’t invade Web users’ privacy.
The company’s technology has attracted some serious attention: $12 million in venture capital from Canaan Venture Partners, Dawntreader Ventures, and JP Morgan and recognition by the MIT Technology Review as one of the “10 Web startups to watch in 2008.”
Semantic analysis is a different animal from contextual analysis that picks up keywords, or behavioral analysis that forms a profile of the user by looking at a user’s most recently browsed sites. Peer39′s “SemanticMatch” understands the meaning of a page and then targets advertising to that page from the company’s ad inventory in real time.
“SemanticMatch algorithms read a page and understand the content meaning and sentiment,” explained company founder and CEO Amiad Solomon.
Peer39 classifies ads into more than 1,000 categories and can adapt to new categories on the fly. If an article is about transportation and discusses cars that do not spew excess carbon dioxide into the environment, hybrid auto ads will be targeted. The system also picks up “sentiment,” said Solomon. “That means the system will not show a particular brand name if the page content expresses a negative attitude towards that brand.”
Peer39 has been two and a half years in the making, the entire time in stealth mode. Its 40 person team, just outside of Tel Aviv, includes computer scientists from the Institute of Advanced Studies at Princeton, the Technion-Israel Institute of Technology, and the Israel Army.
Solomon predicts the company will reach 1 billion impressions by the end of 2008.
Where did an Israeli company get a name closely resembling San Francisco’s famous Pier 39? Solomon was in town for a meeting with investors a couple of years ago and thought the pier’s business model reflected what he was trying to build. “It is a festive marketplace which offers all kinds of merchandise,” he said.
See our separate article about Curt Viebranz, ex-Tacoda CEO, joining the company’s board.
Here’s the original story on Israel21.
