Ask HN: If I build it, will you pay? (Open photo sharing service on S3)
TLDR; If I build a photo sharing service based on Amazon S3 (and CloudFront) would you pay to use it? You'd upload photos through the service into your own Amazon S3 bucket - meaning you have 100% control over the photos. Low resolution copies (for sharing) will be stored on your CloudFront distribution.
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The details
The state of photo sharing is absolutely horrible. Most people upload photos to Facebook and I won't even go into the 1001 reasons why their photo service is abysmal. Some use Picassa or Flickr, while better than Facebook they still control the destiny of your photos. Flickr's got APIs - so that's a start but it's not trivial to get all your photos and their meta data (comments, tags, etc).
What I'm envisioning is a frontend for YOUR photo collection that resides in an Amazon S3 bucket you own. A good interface to upload photos, share them, and control privacy. The whole point of this is to be open and let you retain ownership of your photos.
Lots of potential features on the roadmap but what I described is phase I.
My guess is the cost would be in the $1-2 / month range + any S3 costs you'd incur yourself. I'm hosting about 18 GB of photos and it costs me around $2 / month.
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The team (me)
Who the heck is this dude and what are his qualifications? My website is at http://www.jaisenmathai.com. I was a co-founder of a photo sharing startup back in 2004. We shut down shop in 2007 but you can see it here: http://photos.jaisenmathai.com/users/jmathai/photos/tags-tavin,favorites/.
I'm pretty positive I can build the first version of this out in a couple weeks (with a basic UI).<p>If you're a graphic artist and want to provide ongoing design services then you can have an account for free :).
[+] [-] minalecs|15 years ago|reply
If you are speaking of a tool for developers then I would like to know more details, but yes I have paid for image services that will resize and dump them into my bucket.
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
The idea of making it available for developers is an interesting one. I hadn't considered it but if there's enough interest to build it out for some consumers then making it work for developers shouldn't be a stretch.
[+] [-] elbrodeur|15 years ago|reply
I don't know if I'm your target demographic though:
> Hobbyist photographer
> Flickr Pro account user
> 29 years old
> Upload ~15-20 photos a month mostly because I use flickr as a showcase rather than storage
> Shoot in RAW
EDIT: Also... Please do not use a dark background. Or, if you do, please give users the option to customize the theme. Dark backgrounds are extremely irritating to me.
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
I haven't even got to thinking of how the site would look but I presume it'd be theme-able and let you provide your own CSS if you wanted.
I really don't want to dictate anything about your photos. I want to provide the utility of uploading/resizing etc.
I do this for myself and after 6 years and a few thousand photos I realize how valuable it is. I also know that the chances that my kids will be able to see their photos is orders of magnitude higher than if I were uploading them to Facebook.
Just want to spread the love :).
[+] [-] atgm|15 years ago|reply
Long: I would love to see some features that other sites haven't put in yet.
1. The ability to upload from a computer or via e-mail (from a cell phone, for example).
2. The ability to automatically repost pictures to specified Facebook galleries and Twitter.
3. Robust tagging/sorting/searching systems.
?. An offline system with a searchable database that you could synch with the cloud system would be amazing, so you could organize photos on your computer in the same way and keep everything synched up.
Edited for clarity.
Another thing that would bring over a lot of people I know is the ability to automatically import flickr/picasa photos and tags. Most people won't move from established galleries because it's such a pain to relocate all of that history -- they're locked in.
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] dsl|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] Jsarokin|15 years ago|reply
Also, I'd go with $12-$24 a year instead of $1-$2 a month. Just looks nicer, and converts a lot better.
[+] [-] atgm|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] newtini|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
I do this myself for my own photos and thought others would enjoy and pay for a service that did the say. I love that my photos are backed up on S3 and it's not someone else's Amazon account. I own it and can do whatever I want with my photos.
I agree that it's a bit intimidating. My original idea was to see how many technical people were interested - hence posting the question on HN :).
[+] [-] kevinherron|15 years ago|reply
Who is the target user for your service?
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
As far as target, I'd presume people who want to keep control of their photos and keep them for the long term (10+ years). Who knows what's going to happen with all those Facebook photos 10 years from now.
[+] [-] clemesha|15 years ago|reply
I'm not a Facebook user, but I do know that photos are one of the main reasons why people use (love, are addicted to, etc) it.
Maybe even compare your improved solutions to the poor features of Facebook's service. Thanks, and good luck!
[+] [-] elbrodeur|15 years ago|reply
> Original photo size (additionally, optional sizes)
> EXIF data
> Compression
> Sharing as a link, embed, BBCode, etc. -- anything outside of Facebook can be done by copying image URL, but that URL can change without a moment's notice.
It's designed for people who take snapshots, not for photographers or artists.
[+] [-] thesash|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
Dropping photos into a directory and having those resized and uploaded is just a script that looks for photos in a given directory and posts them to any of the photo sharing sites with an API, no? But then you don't really own the storage of your photos (or at least aren't billed for it - which implies some level of ownership).
[+] [-] middlegeek|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] alexchu|15 years ago|reply
[+] [-] jmathai|15 years ago|reply