Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake: Web 2.0 and photo sharing\r\n Video
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ZDNet's Dan Farber asked Flickr co-founder a final question\11
ZDNet's Dan Farber winds up his chat with Flickr's co-founder by asking, "When's my video go onto Flickr?" Caterina Fake spoke with Farber December 14 at the Syndicate conference in San Francisco.\r\n
Caterina Fake, co-founder of Flickr
ZDNet Editor in Chief Dan Farber spoke with Caterina Fake, co-founder of Flickr, on Dec. 13 at the Syndicate 2005 conference in San Francisco. Here's the whole interview.\r\n\r\n
Flickr makes money for the members?
Caterina Fake talks about revenue for Flickr and its users. She spoke with ZDNet's Dan Farber at the Syndicate conference in San Francisco on December 14th.\r\n
At the Syndicate conference in San Francisco, Flickr co-founder Caterina Fake tells ZDNet's Dan Farber how it got started and why Flickr is different from earlier photo sites. It seems it was only meant to be a game.\r\n
Freeing the API for Flickr\r\n
Flickr's Caterina Fake says the free API has led to an explosion of creativity and utility among users. At the Syndicate conference in San Francisco on Dec. 14, she spoke with ZDNet's Dan Farber and said there's more to come.\r\n
From blogger to executive: Caterina Fake of Flickr
A global gallery was not what the founders of Flickr intended at first. But talking to Dan Farber of ZDNet during the Syndicate conference in San Francisco on Dec. 14, Caterina Fake says, now, events like Hurricane Katrina lead to instant photo collections visible worldwide.\r\n
Flickr co-founder: Data is users' own
Google uses "brute force computation," says Fake, who adds that Flickr recognizes its users own their personal data. ZDNet's Dan Farber caught up with Fake at the Syndicate conference in San Francisco on December 14.\r\n
Since being bought by Yahoo earlier this year, Flickr has five times as many photos and 10 times the users. In a community, says co-founder Caterina Fake, you don't make unilateral decisions.\r\n
Yahoo to bring RSS to the masses
At the Syndicate 2005 conference on Dec. 14 in San Francisco, Dan Farber of ZDNet and Scott Gatz, Yahoo's senior director of personalization products, discuss the integration of RSS into Yahoo's offerings.
Dan Farber and Rafe Needleman interview Bret Taylor, co-founder of FriendFeed.com, a Web site that enables friends to instantly share and discuss everything they find interesting on the Internet.
