vsmopa.blogg.se

Flipboard website
Flipboard website







View The Big Picture from within Flipboard, however, and you'll find all of the images available, scraped-or "parsed", to use Flipboard's phrasing-to Flipboard's own servers, resized into a grid, and then distributed to every single Flipboard app. The Big Picture's RSS feed presents a single image and a description for each collection. It's content paid for by the Boston Globe, licensed from the photo wires with strict limits on how it can be presented and distributed. Take 's The Big Picture, for instance: Each of those large images come from wire services. Unfortunately, those tools may not be, strictly speaking, on the right side of copyright. Flipboard and its ilk are taking ideas that have been percolating for years and turning them into software tools that are very useful for readers. Hopefully we can do more on this front soon. In the past 48 hours, we've received an incredibly positive response from content creators who are happy about being featured in Flipboard, and who want to work with us on doing a better job displaying their content. As mentioned before, though, we are happy to limit or hide content as requested. As such, we believe that we're providing value to content creators by helping to drive new readers in their direction. We see Flipboard a great way to discover content, particularly recommendations from your friends of sources that you may not already subscribe to. If the user wants to read the full article, they tap "Read on Web" and are taken to the full site in an embedded browser. We do not offer a "full article" view in Flipboard for articles of arbitrary length. What is the rationale for scraping content? I presume you guys are claiming a reasonable system under fair use, but what is Flipboard's policy?ĭoll: Flipboard shows short content previews.We're happy to accommodate the requests of any content publisher who want to choose how much content to show in Flipboard, or to hide their site's content altogether.









Flipboard website