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Industry News



WpN Ends Daily Feed, Focuses on Assignments

01 February 2008
Published in : Industry News

World Picture Network discontinued its daily photo feed as of Feb. 1 in an effort to modify its strategy in the crowded photo distribution industry. The company will, instead, focus its resources on its growing photo assignment business.

While layoffs at WpN are imminent, the network will also add editors to manage the market demand for assignments to its freelance photographers.

WpN's photo feed featured daily coverage of the world's events. CEO Brian Miller said that the service was "not economically viable" given the state of the industry. Miller also noted that assignments are the company's most rapidly growing...



Sale Rumors Swirl Around Getty Images

01 February 2008
Published in : Industry News

Market rumors were ignited in January, claiming that Seattle-based Getty Images, the world's leading distributor of visual content, had put itself on the market, with offers pending, mostly from private-equity firms, that could total $1.6 billion.

The New York Times first broke the story Jan. 21 with information from "people briefed on the situation" and listed Kohlberg Kravis Roberts and Bain Capital as interested parties.

Getty Images responded with a release stating that its policy is to neither confirm nor deny market rumors, but it did announce that it is "exploring strategic alternatives to enhance shareholder value." The release also stated...



Olympic Images Flow Freely from Beijing

02 January 2008
Published in : Industry News

Despite early fears of internet censorship by the Chinese government, professional photographers in Beijing this summer were able to capture and transmit a stunning array of images to the rest of the world during the 2008 Olympic Games.

The Associated Press wired up to 1,000 images per day from the more than 70 photographers they had assigned to cover the Games. Getty, as the official photo agency of the Games, brought more than 40 photographers to Beijing. Reuters photographers also took many photos but did no editing on-site...



Bridges Project Adds South African Classroom

09 September 2007
Published in : Industry News

Seattle photographer Phil Borges, has widened the horizons of his Bridges to Understanding program to South Africa. Founded by Borges, Bridges to Understanding is a nonprofit group that encourages children to learn about the world through photography and visual storytelling.

The Amy Biehl Foundation, located in the Khayelitsha Township, near Cape Town, South Africa, is the newest member of the Bridges to Understanding worldwide network of classrooms. As part of the month-long festivities to celebrate...



Help Sought for Media Covering 9/11

08 September 2007
Published in : Industry News

An official with The New York Press Photographers Association (NYPPA) has asked members of the media who have experienced health problems since covering the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks to contact NYPPA.

In a memo sent to all members this summer, David Handschuh, chair of NYPPA's Intergovernmental Affairs committee and photographer for The New York Daily News, said he wants to determine how many media professionals suffered health problems after the attacks. So far, he said, more than a dozen 9/11 media workers had...



ASMP Gets Library of Congress Grant

07 September 2007
Published in : Industry News

The American Society of Media Photographers (ASMP) was recently awarded with funding from the Library of Congress to promote digital photo standards based on the Universal Photographic Digital Imaging Guidelines (UPDIG).

The three-year project will include the development of new educational resources that use web-based awareness campaigns for the UPDIG guidelines. The award was given, however, with the stipulation that the ASMP cannot use the funds for any ongoing operations, including the UPDIG.

As part of the Library of Congress' Preserving Creative America initiative, eight partnerships projects...



AP State Photo Center Closes

06 September 2007
Published in : Industry News

On Oct. 1, the State Photo Center (SPC) closed its doors in Washington, D.C. Overseen by Associated Press national photo editor Victor Vaughan, the SPC will no longer traffic images from freelancers and member news agencies.

The SPC lasted 10 years and was first put together as a consolidation of regional photo desks in Atlanta, Chicago and Los Angeles. The SPC offices in the nation's capital have been merged with AP's Manhattan office.

The 16 workers at SPC in Washington were given the choice of moving...



Marilyn Monroe Dispute Addressed in California Assembly

05 September 2007
Published in : Industry News

The California Assembly recently passed a bill reversing the decision made by two federal courts regarding the denial of payment to Marilyn Monroe's estate when using commercial images of the deceased actress. In both court cases, the issue surrounded Monroe's post-mortem rights to images as claimed by her estate, MM LLC.

The bill would allow for Monroe's estate to benefit from licensed images being used for commercial use. Originally, the courts had ruled that, because the statutory post-mortem publicity rights were nonexistent in...