• On MovieTome: The 10 worst movies of 2009 so far!
September 10, 2008 10:17 AM PDT

Fotonauts crafts Wikipedia for photos

by Dan Farber

An estimated 500 million images are captured every day, but less than 5 percent end up on major photo sharing sites. Uploading photos is not the easiest task and most photos are locked into a specific photo sharing service and have all rights reserved licenses. Jean-Marie Hullot, wants to liberate photos from silos and offer news ways to organize and discover images.

Fotonauts is a smart registry for images that come from other photos services, according to CEO Jean-Marie Hullot.

The former CTO of NeXT and Apple's application division, Hullot showed off fotonauts,a kind of Wikipedia for photos at TechCrunch50. Currently in private beta for Windows and Mac users, the Web application stores 1080p thumbnails of photos from major services and provides synchronization of photos across multiple services. As a result, fotonauts allows users to share, remix and reuse and enrich images across multiple services, Hullot said. Fotonauts includes an event stream for people or albums a user is following, and a drag and drop facility for moving image into different albums.

Fotonauts albums can mix images from multiple photo sharing services.

But Hullot isn't satisfied just to create an collaboration environment for images. "We have one goal--create a great search engine," he said.

At the core of fotonauts' search engine effort is tagging that comes from adding relevant content, such as maps and Wikipedia content, to images and albums and applying tags from other services. Fotonauts also created its own ranking algorithm, ImageRank, which combines tags and usage data to deliver the most relevant results. But, search won't be very effective until fotonauts reaches a critical mass of users.

Jean-Marie Hullot

The same goes for the business model. Hullot said that users will be creating content useful for the whole community, and like Wikipedia, fotonauts could offer contextual advertising as well as product placement. "We know lots of things about what users like. For instance, if person interested in cars, we have an event streams and we are very graphically oriented and Toyota could push an image into the event stream or add it into a widget," Hullot said.

In addition, fotonauts public albums can be turned into widgets and easily distributed to any Web page. Fotonauts provides a unique URL for each album for sharing.

Fotonauts has received $2.3 million in funding, from Ignition Parnters, Banexi Capital, SoftTech and Digital Garage, as well as from angel investors.

Fotonauts allows users to add comment and follow the albums and photos of other people.

"Fundamentally, a lot has been done in the photo space in last 4 to 5 years, but no one has built a proper photo search that is one or two times better than Google's search," fotonaut investor Jeff Clavier of SoftTech told me. "The fotonauts feature set allows individuals to collaborate and take the world's pictures from Flickr, Picasa and other services and create structured datasets with metadata. When you have tens of thousands of photos organized and structured by people, you have a huge dataset, which also becomes an index--a Wikipedia of photos."

Clavier said that Hullot's track record gave him a lot of confidence in the future of fotonauts. Indeed, fotonauts has a better shot at going into orbit than most startups on the stage at the TechCrunch50.

Dan Farber is editor in chief of CBS Interactive News, which includes CBSNews.com and CNET News. He has more than 25 years of experience as an editor and journalist covering technology. E-mail Dan.
Recent posts from Webware
Popular iPhone movie app flops on BlackBerry
Opera Mobile 10 beta browser: First Look video
Google trying not to cross 'the creepy line'
Integrated retweet on its way to Twitter
Mozilla's e-mail group looks toward the cloud
Facebook: We're going after scammy ads, too
Alterna-browsers Firefox, Chrome get quick fixes
Offerpal Media mess gets stickier
Add a Comment (Log in or register)
by Jack K1 September 10, 2008 11:24 AM PDT
What about copyrights?
Reply to this comment
by paulmwatson September 10, 2008 11:34 AM PDT
It has to respect original copyright. Not sure how this is like Wikipedia. Can anyone edit a photo and a revision history is kept?
Reply to this comment
advertisement

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

FAQ: Buying the right Windows 7 upgrade

Readers still have lots of questions on just which version of the software they need to buy in order to upgrade their PC. CNET News tries to offer some answers.

N.Y. lawsuit details Intel's 'largesse' toward Dell

Attorney General Andrew Cuomo's federal antitrust case filed Wednesday alleges a longstanding symbiotic relationship between Intel and Dell.

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right