With this article I've been here on Iperntity for about two weeks. I have to say that I am blown away by the welcoming spirit and true community.
But what really caused me to write this article, is that yesterday I found a surpise message that another Club (paid) member gifted me with Club membership. This really became emotional to me, that someone who hardly knows me would invest financially in my participation here, and to my furture creative success.
Back when I was on here for about two day's, this member sent me a note to let me know how they recognized me from Flickr and to welcome me here. We exchanged a short chat, and a few picture comments, and I thought that would be it. Not so.
It turns out this member too was gifted a Club membership and, well, they gave me the okay to share with you their words:
"Two days ago I checked my email, as you do now, and to my utter astonishment discovered that a complete stranger had gifted me a club membership subscription. Totally out of the blue. I had no idea who this man was. I had never met, nor spoken to him before.
What a guy! What a place this is! He told me he did it because, “I like your style and look forward to seeing where you go with it next”, and, “I’m keen to support ipernity”. ... I made a promise to him, there and then, that I would repay his generosity, and the generous welcome I have received from others in the short time I have been here.
As it happens I had already decided that I would like to contribute to the upkeep of this wonderful community. I can see that they need, and deserve every penny they can get. I was just waiting to see what transpired from the restructuring of the subscription plans. Now, I don’t have to wait. And now neither do you.
It’s a very hard, cynical and selfish world we live in, but the warmth and kindness of these people has restored my faith in the innate decency of human beings. I am more than happy to add my contribution to ipernity’s coffers, and to share my good fortune."
I couldn't say that better myself! And I too intend to pass on the 'blessing'. All this caused a daydream: what if the only way you could get a Club membership is that another member gifts it to you? I don't think really this would fully work, as this might cause gaming the system, but it was a nice thought.
But how does a welcoming online community like this happen?
Anyone who puts Ipernity together with Facebook, Twitter or Instagram, lets make one thing clear: these platforms have come to be called social media. The reason that they called it social media is mostly because you can sell media. But that is not what Ipernity is. It is an online community. There is a difference.
You see, social media today is an extortion of sorts of the online communities across the web. And to fix them you almost have to start over. Go back to the founding principles, without compromising the terms you promised your present members. Because with a true online community, like Ipernity, means that everybody who is here is not marketing. They are having conversations. They are known to each other, and they are being part of the community they are participating.
The power of an online community is where many people feel more at home online than in their actual hometown. Or where the tool is not as important as the conversation and the connections that create them, becuase, many soclal media platforms do this the other way around.
And the foundation that builds onto an online photo sharing community is how today more pictures are made with a smart phone camera than all the pictures in the history of photography - and nobody has any idea where to put these photographs (for eternity). From this you create culture that sticks.
The tone you set from the begining is the tone you keep. And I can tell you from day one here on Ipernity, the number of greetings I found and the welcoming spirit, was a pleasant surprise. And this tone here is creating a hospitable climate.
In other words, the members here own the website, and because Ipernity is building a meaningful people-oriented internet, to include the community in decision-making, the members have a real stake in what happens inside their society here. The distiction here is the difference between members who care about the health of the community, and those who only care about themselves.
So when one member gifts another with Club membership, it can be like a dream come true. For example, many people I know who grow up wanting to be a writer or an artist, often times nobody in their family, or society, thinks that is a viable career choice. So these people who are given this inspired creativity from this community of members, would actually have the encouragement and the possibility of making their work possible.
And Ipernity provides this community with good communicaitons tools, good manners and good examples from day one: Picture Threads, Groups and Discussions, and Blogging. Not to mention the discussion threads on the membership newsletter blog.
I've participated in many social media and photo sharing platforms, and the probelm with many of them is they don’t know who they are: they are trying to ecompass it all. And that doesn't work, because you want to be part of a community that shares your values, and the systems that you believe, not one with a compas that makes you tolorate morals that you don't.
Frank J Casella
www.ipernity.com/user/frankjcasella
(edit) This is a very powerful, emotional piece. You obviously care deeply and passionately about this.
Frank J Casella has replied to BillathonHope you continue to enjoy it here. Nice blog.
Frank J Casella has replied to Bee OrchidExactly as the founder of Flickr put it in his frustrated farewell letter to yahoo:
www.flickr.com/photos/81731019@N00/2588984515/sizes/o
Frank J Casella has replied to DornbergerHere i have little views but hey..they are real,10..10,20,30..real ipernauts,real people,there is no that disguisting flashy awards,and that shit,bots,etc,just people with real comments and with a sense of community.
Frank J Casella has replied to Marko Novosel clubLeon_Vienna club has replied to Marko Novosel clubFrank J Casella has replied to Boarischa Krautmo clubwww.ipernity.com/blog/team
And surely there will be ups and downs in the future as well. But the best thing is that people do care. For me social media does not mean internet only. A hand written note on a billboard at the local grocery store can be just as much social media as is an online blog article. And actually, the word "media" is what is a little misleading. Better definition could be social network, and it either exists or not. It is people who make it.
At best social network can manifest as face to face meetings:
www.ipernity.com/search/group?w=0&q=meeting
Or a chain of gift giving, like we once had in a form of Win a Club Membership group:
www.ipernity.com/group/winclub
So, welcome to Ipernity, and I especially hope this place help you find friends and contacts =)
Frank J Casella has replied to Sami Serola (inactiv… clubYou might find this article interesting calnewport.com/blog/2018/03/25/beyond-deletefacebook-more-thoughts-on-embracing-the-social-internet-over-social-media
Sami Serola (inactiv… club has replied to Frank J CasellaBut I disagree on some arguments said on that article. Here are few points:
Calling "social media" as "an attempt of a small number of large companies to monetize these capabilities inside walled-garden, monopoly platforms" is only one way to define the concept. It is somehow funny, and on the other hand sad, how words to call some phenomena can get either good or bad reputation. There are also other definitions for "social media".
Personal domains and companies selling server space can be seen big bad evil as well. Only very few have enough money to put up her/his own server that really runs, is safe to use, and helps to get audience. Barlow's "A Declaration of the Independence of Cyberspace"* is and was no different than Karl Marx's "The Manifesto of the Communist Party". Both are possible only in utopia, where are no living creatures and physical world. In practice someone always owns the infrastructure. All good plans to come up with something "owned together" always falls in parts when someone finds a loophole to exploit the system.
A personal space (domain, server, blog etc.) is ultimately not a good way to collaborate. I still (maybe foolishly) believe the best platforms to come up with relative equal "social interaction" are the large "town squares" provided by some "big company". The company then can be also a "government" or something like this "ipernity members association".
I hope this made some sense... =D
* en.wikipedia.org/wiki/A_Declaration_of_the_Independence_of_Cyberspace
Frank J Casella has replied to Sami Serola (inactiv… clubFrank J Casella has replied to Jean-luc DrouinThere are frustrations for photographers here. I know some fine photographers who have left because they wanted a wider audience for their work. I think it can be difficult for new members to garner more than a handful of views and comments, because of the present smallness of the community....And, to extend the analogy of the village...it can be a while before newcomers are welcomed and work out if it suits them.
I think village life and big city life both have their charms.
Mind you, I could make another analogy and see Ipernauts as a band out to change the photo-sharing world! I like the dream of an act of positivity having a domino effect. And that tactic works best on a smaller scale, like Ipernity.
It’s wonderful to find Ipernity drawing in new and old friends.
Frank J Casella has replied to Steve Bucknell clubI agree that ipernity is on the best track to out perform the photo-sharing world. It's not only with Flcikr, but many use iCloud for example in place of Instagram to share pictures with family and friends. ....
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