I am deleting all of my photos from @twitpic and moving them to @posterous.
We all have to make choices and those choices usually are based on rationality or emotion. Last night I saw the first tweets in my timeline pointing to a story on TechCrunch that can be summarized in the following way:
- Posterous created a tool that allows its users to import all of their photos hosted on TwitPic with a touch of a button via RSS.
- TwitPic didn’t like it and blocked Posterous’ servers, thus telling their users that, if they want to move their photos, they will have to transfer them manually.
- Legal battle may ensue *insert dramatic soundtrack with laugh track*
TwitPic blocking Posterous’ servers is reason enough to ditch TwitPic and move to another service but l am going to try to explain the rationale around my decision.
Posterous is only supplying a service that makes life easier for its users and only to those users that want to import their TwitPic content to Posterous. It’s voluntary and users are given the choice.
What TwitPic is telling its users by blocking Posterous’ servers is: No bloody way you are putting all of your photos on another service. If you want to do that, you will have to do it the hard way, because we want you to stick with us even if it’s against your will.
Does this make sense? Not really. It sounds like something that Apple could come up with… oh wait! They do it all the time as do mobile carriers #fact
Am I the only one crying OVERREACTION!!! here? Is TwitPic’s management so out of touch with reality that it doesn’t understand their target audience or the open web any longer?
Posterous? TwitPic? YOU!
The fact that Posterous users want to import their photos (yes, the photos belong to the users not TwitPic) hosted at TwitPic doesn’t mean that they will stop using TwitPic.
The generation that uses all of these tools are curious and want to use whatever the next new feature is on any website/application/service but that doesn’t mean, at all, that they will stop using other services exclusively. Importing images from TwitPic via RSS will not remove the images from that site, it will just add them to one more location increasing the user’s mashup. There is no casual nexus between the two and to believe that is totally wrong. One example? I have tried Tweetdeck, Hootsuite, Power Twitter, SNAPTU but my Twitter clients of choice still are Destroy Twitter and Gravity. Do I have the other applications still installed? Yes! Do I sporadically use them? Yes! Do I download the latest updates? Of course! #GeekLove
TwitPic’s management might not understand but, by blocking Posterous servers, they are actually admitting defeat; the move portrays that they think Posterous is way cooler than TwitPic and that the only solution they have is to do a wall-of-China-move to stay alive, to keep their user-base from flocking to Posterous. The irony is that this is not even true; TwitPic is integrated with the most popular Twitter clients used by millions every day. It recently introduced a user-tagging and geo-location system that is very promising and has an excellent track record for reliability.
These three reasons alone should be enough for TwitPic’s genius-team *insert dramatic soundtrack with laugh track echo echo echo* to see Posterous not as a threat but as healthy competition and, instead of losing time whining with a legal battle, they should be working on introducing new features that would attract new users and appease the current ones. What features? Slideshows, integration with Flickr, groups, a tagging system based on the content of the message field (that isn’t being used at the moment) come immediately to mind. Ah, and a visible “delete my TwitPic account” would also be nice. #justsayin
For all of these reasons I will stop using TwitPic today and will start using Posterous instead to post pictures to Twitter via my mobile phone.
Since I am not a Posterous fan boy, and only opened my account today, if I don’t like it I will start using another service that allows me to post pictures to Twitter in the same way. I will just make sure that it is a service that is not run by people that don’t understand that users do have, and want, a choice and realize behaving like a bully only makes you look like a loser.
For more info:
Posterous
Posterous on Twitter and founders Sachin Agarwal and Garry Tan

P.s. Dear Noah, please take the advice of someone who works in the fashion business for the last 5 years: You should consider updating your 1997 MySpace-like avatar on Twitter (it is okay to keep it on MySpace, no one goes there anyway).


[#Zargon] New Post: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides @ http://bit.ly/aLVnST
TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://bit.ly/bkXBeB
TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://goo.gl/fb/Bdywg [TheZargon]
?? @garrytan @a4agarwal @noaheverett "@TwitPic or @Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides" http://bit.ly/aLVnST
RT @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read
RT @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read /via @krystynchong
Worth considering! I don't like bullies.RT @fjfonseca: [#Zargon] New Post: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides @ http://bit.ly/aLVnST
RT @krystynchong: RT @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read
RT @krystynchong: @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read <ditto>
RT @krystynchong: RT @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read
TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read RT @fjfonseca @krystynchong @loripop326
RT @krystynchong: RT @fjfonseca: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 *great read
Fernando is at it again! Amazing and funny read! ^KJ RT @fjfonseca: @TwitPic or @Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2
RT @PublicSpacesLab: Fernando is at it again! Amazing and funny read! ^KJ RT @fjfonseca: @TwitPic or @Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2
@TwitPic or @Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides | http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 | RT @fjfonseca
TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://goo.gl/uFUF
RT @technobozo: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://goo.gl/uFUF
RT @alex: RT @technobozo: TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://goo.gl/uFUF
RT @technobozo TwitPic or Posterous: Why I’m Taking Sides http://goo.gl/uFUF wow so not cool. Youd think compnies would learn its our data!
TwitPic or Posterous: Why I'm Taking Sides http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 / RT @fjfonseca @ShellyKramer
Why @fjfonseca is taking sides with @posterous over @twitpic | http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 | a GREAT read!
RT @ShellyKramer: Why @fjfonseca is taking sides with @posterous over @twitpic | http://bit.ly/a9xWF2 | a GREAT read!
Fernando, I LOVE Posterous and you must subscribe to my feed immediately (haha). Seriously, I love it, use it and recommend it often. And, for the record, Sachin provided me with amazing customer service when I had some initial problems that were my own fault. I. Love. Posterous.
That said, TwitPic’s logic is flawed and you are spot on with your rant. As usual.
Your friend in soapboxes,
Shelly
@shellykramer
http://v3im.com
I agree with Shelly heart-fully YES! Posterous done some amazing job getting beginners into blogging. Their bookmarklet is very useful.
I love Posterous and I was faithful to Twitpic from its inception. All I wanted to do was copy over my Twitpics to Posterous so I could flesh some of them out with details or even full blog posts. I would have continued using Twitpic for all of my quick “Hey, look at this” pix that I send out on a regular basis. Now that the import has been blocked, I am reluctant to continue putting my trust into Twitpic’s hands. I do however, agree with this post by Andrew Hyde on the point of choosing a friendlier tactic in advertising the 15 import tools in 15 days. Instead of claiming all the other services were “dying,” I would have chosen to say something like, “bring your pictures over from your other favorite services and see what you can do with them on Posterous!”
Nice post and good analysis – I just don’t necessarily agree with you
As you say, this is just more of the same anti-competitive actions we’ve seen from Apple, Microsoft, Oracle … I can’t think of a vendor that hasn’t used this tactic (when put in this position from a position of dominance).
To look at this perhaps another way, I may not like the actions of an artist, but I can still appreciate the art. I think if you want to use Posterous, do so – me, I post most of my picks to my blog (self-hosted which gives me all the heartaches and control, or is that the other way round?:-) and use TwitPic as a fast way to post simple pics w/ a tweet of text.
At some point, one of the other services (Yfrog for example) will overtake TwitPic, but only when they get sufficient mobile app support and client support to make a run.
So for me, if I were already using Posterous I’d probably do what you’re doing. But I’m not, so I’m sticking where I am, ready to move to the next cool thing….
In general, I think loyalty on the net has died – the next cool thing rules (FWIW) – Bob
Me moving to Posterous is something I decided to do only because of the attitude by Twitpic’s people: blocking servers on the open web is just stupid: after all users are choosing something that is then denied to them.
I often wished I had more space than just the subject line to write something that would go along with my mobile pictures and Posterous seems to do it. For some reason YFrog is something that I never got used to, even if I love the logo
The situation probably wouldn’t be enough to make me stop using twitpic (which I do), but I agree it’s a stupid move on their part. It will just annoy people (geeks) who like you use multiple services. Far better to respond to Posterous by setting up an automatic feed to import Posterous to Twitpic!
Hehe RSS importer. Nice
I LOVE THIS Roger! That would be so cool!
That is a good point. I think they both could have benefitted.
Fernando I liked how you put the perspective here but I would go with @PurpleHayz about this matter. Twitpic is not necessarily comparable industry with Posterous.
As for YFrog, they are pretty much promising and eventually will make more sense than twitpic but sometimes all i want to do is to share a piece of moment … snap.. post .. that is all..
I’m realizing day by day that I’m using twitpic less and yfrog more (maybe due to the mobile client)
Posterous on the other hand can be used as multipurpose tool .. for example
1. Post or email a story with a photo
2. Do quick blogging
3. Bookmarking engine
4. A curators powertool
5. Many more
Now .. TwitPics move on blocking Posterous servers is a immature thinking but I would like to see TwitPics point on this matter. Don’t you?
That is something that I would also like to see from Noah that apparently has no official position about this apart from blocking Posterous’ servers.
I guess there is more to it since the RSS feed is only a thumbnail version of your photos so some tweaking had to be done to push the actual pics to Posterous.
Unfortunately this is just a guess I am making.
mad love for posterous.
I’ve grown extremely tired of TwitPic and have seriously considered assimilating all of my photo content into my personal blog. The only thing holding me back it the time and effort required to move the old photos. Fortunately I have much of it already in my laptop library.
I wonder has anyone else considered doing this?
Cheers,
@mikelking
You know, I don’t use twitpic. Read this article because I’m moving all of my wordpress blog stuff over to posterous and was reading posterous’ blog stuff while waiting.
Choice makes the world go around. I use a little bit of everyone, depending on the situation. Too bad twitpic doesn’t get it.