SAN FRANCISCO
— Yahoo Inc. is shutting down Yahoo Photos, its first-generation photo
storage site, and asking users to move instead to Yahoo's Web 2.0 photo
sharing site, Flickr, a Yahoo official said on Thursday.
In June, tens of millions of registered users of Yahoo Photos will be
notified of various options including upgrading to Yahoo's Flickr
service or various outside-photo storage sites, according to Flickr
co-founder Stewart Butterfield.
Yahoo also will offer consumers the option of loading their photos on competing sites when users are notified next month.
These include PhotoBucket — the most popular online photo sharing
service among users of social network sites like News Corp.'s MySpace —
or more conventional photo printing and storage site such as Kodak
Gallery, Shutterfly Inc. or Snapfish, he said.
“Flickr will get top-billing, of course,” he said in an interview about the plan to give users multiple alternatives.
The move follows the explosive surge in growth by PhotoBucket, an
independent photo storage site based in Palo Alto, California, from a
quarter of the market a year ago to around 40 per cent last month,
according to Hitwise Inc. data.
In the same period, Yahoo Photos' share has been cut two- to three
times over to around 5.8 per cent of the U.S. market. Flickr,
meanwhile, has grown to 4.5 per cent, up from 3.7 per cent, according
to Hitwise U.S. Web audience data.
Yahoo continued to support both Photos and Flickr over the past two years, reflecting the different audiences of the two sites.
Yahoo Photos is a more conventional photo-finishing site, full of
family snapshots, while Flickr has attracted a passionate fan base of
amateur and professional photographers who use the site to share
digital photos online, and for whom printing is largely an afterthought.
According to data from comScore supplied by Yahoo a year ago, Yahoo
Photos counted 30 million registered users, who had uploaded 2 billion
photos as of June 2006.
By contrast, PhotoBucket rose to 32 million users in 2006 from 12
million users in 2005. It is set to grow to around 62 million users by
the end of 2007, PhotoBucket Chief Executive and co-founder Alex Welch
said in a recent interview.
Butterfield and co-founder, Caterina Fake, his wife, sold Flickr to
Yahoo in 2005. Butterfield is now a director of product management at
Yahoo.