PicScout will be making some significant announcements regarding connecting image buyers with stock agencies and licensors later this month. Stay tuned and check back with this blog soon. Or follow PicScout’s founder, Offir, on Twitter @offirg
PicScout will be making some significant announcements regarding connecting image buyers with stock agencies and licensors later this month. Stay tuned and check back with this blog soon. Or follow PicScout’s founder, Offir, on Twitter @offirg
I just came back from the Digital Innovation Summit in Berlin organized by VDZ where PicScout was invited to speak about its leading image tracking service as part of the Search and Content Session .
VDZ is a German organization of 400 publishers together producing more than 3,000 titles. The Israel Export & International Cooperation Institute also sponsored the event and helped scout out innovative Israeli companies in the digital media and software space.
The summit hosted young and innovative companies from Israel and USA among of them were companies like Kaltura, Clicktale, Tvinchi, Dapper and PicScout which showecased their company and solutions for the digital media market.
I was amazed to see how the traditional print industry is seeking for help and innovation in order to leverage their brand into the digital world. We were sharing how their evolution to online from print was similar to the evolution stock agencies had moving from 35mm to e-commerce websites.
Next month I will speak at the American Bar Association’s Annual Intellectual Property Law Conference which will discuss how emerging technologies, like the PicScout’s ImageTracker, can solve problems relating to “orphan works”.
Offir Gutelzon
There may not be any guns, saloons or sheriffs, but the lawlessness of the Wild West is alive and well on the Internet. For many years, infancy was an excuse. “It’s so young that no one knows what rules to make,” people would say. Or you’d hear things like, “It’s changing too fast to make laws. As soon as you make one law, people come up with 10 more ways of doing the same thing.”
Theft is so commonplace and easy on-line – music, movies, content and images are up for grabs with a few mouse clicks – that many people no longer even consider it stealing.
And it is exactly this problem that prompted entrepreneurs Eyal Gura and Offir Gutelzon to create a solution that would curb piracy and allow content providers the potential to earn money without charging bloggers and publishers.
The Picapp story originally started with Picscout, a content monitoring Web site that scours the Internet for files that are violating copyrighted images, founded while Gura was an undergraduate in the ZELL Entrepreneurship program five years ago.
At Picscout, Gura and Gutelzon noticed that 90 percent of the copyrighted files on-line were being used illegally. The pair also noticed that traditional business models, in which content owners get a fixed licensing fee for their content, were no longer working with the on-line media world. The problem, according to Gura, is especially noticeable when it comes to rare and newsworthy articles that drive a lot of traffic and ad revenue, because a huge disparity exists between the value the content creates and the benefit the content owner receives in exchange – most often nothing.
With Picapp, bloggers and publishers can access an enormous image bank for free, which solves the growing problem of finding photographs to accompany text if you’re not part of the traditional media world.
“Picapp allows small publishers to legally license content in an affordable way and provides an opportunity for content providers to track and monetize their content,” says Gura.
By now you may be wondering what the catch is. How does Picapp provide more than 20 million high-end copyrighted files from companies like Getty Images and Corbis and license them at no cost to themselves or bloggers?
Therein lies the revolutionary part. By exchanging content for advertising space, they are essentially paying for the images through on-line advertising. Instead of giving publishers and bloggers an image that can be stolen or misused, Picapp provides a link that allows users to paste the image of their choice – (with an advertisement underneath) – into their page or blog. Through this link, Picapp tracks images that are being used on-line and receives revenue from the advertising rather than the bloggers or publishers having to pay for expensive rights.
Starting this month, a new version of Picapp will also allow blog networks and publishers who embed images using a plug-in for wordpress to download a thumbnail without visible advertisement. When users click on the thumbnail, a new page will open. Hosted by the publisher, the advertisements will be in this page. This new feature will create more page views for networks and publishers as well as incremental revenue.
The images from Picapp also include a description that has two purposes: It ensures that the images are not being misused editorially and it provides good longtail search engine optimization so that people are more likely to find the content in Google searches.
“By including a description, we avoid abuse and mislabeling,” says Niran Amir, the director of business development at Picapp’s San Francisco office. “If someone downloads an image of Paris Hilton, they need to write about her, not Lindsay Lohan. We don’t allow people to change the description because we don’t want them to say that an image is from Tienanmen Square when it’s really from somewhere else, for example.”
The content partners are happy to receive revenue for their images, which would otherwise be used illegally, and bloggers and publishers are happy to receive them legally for free.
But the new concept is not without kinks. Not every blogger can use these images. If you have a wordpress blog, for example, Picapp doesn’t yet allow its images to be downloaded and pasted in. And sometimes the images are slow to upload.
Perhaps the bigger issue, however, is with education. For Picapp to really take off, bloggers will have to be reeducated. They’ve gotten used to borrowing pieces of content and assuming it’s acceptable to the content owners, so they will first need to understand the new on-line rules and then be willing to share their advertising revenue with Picapp, which launched its public beta in March.
“The business model of exchanging content in return for ad space is very new and still unproven, so it is up to the Picapp team to build a great, mass-distributed product in order for the monetization part to kick in and the image impressions to create sufficient revenue for the content owners,” says Gura.
Despite the downside of sharing ad revenue and not being able to use the images for commercial purposes, the upside of having access to high-quality images for free is an appealing one for those not connected with mainstream media.
“The power of blogs is overwhelming and it’s great because it gives power back to the people,” says Amir. “Anyone can write about whatever they want today and at Picapp we’re interested in enhancing that content with free images. And you know what they say, a picture is worth 1,000 words.”
Offir Gutelzon, CEO of PicScout has been invited to speak at the Digital Innovators Summit in Berlin Germany on March 3rd, 2009 as an innovative company in the area of Content and Search. Offir will talk about how PicScout’s Image Tracking Solution: Image Tracker helps image owners protect their copyrighted images on the web and in print media.
The two day conference is co-sponsored by the Association of German Magazine Publishers (VDZ), CeBIT, the world’s largest trade fair for digital IT and telecommunications solutions, and emediaSF, an American digital media research, analysis and consulting company. The event is endorsed by the Israeli Trade Center in Germany and the Israeli Export Institute (IEICI) is involved in the organization of the event.
Offir Gutelzon was appointed to be PicScout’s CEO. Gutelzon is a co-founder of PicScout and in his previous position as General Manager led the company’s development and implementation of the leading image recognition solution Image Tracker ™.
After the announcement was made, Gutelzon commented, ”I look forward to this challenge and am confident in our team’s abilities to continue to build innovative solutions. We will be using our technology platform to enhance our Software as a Service (SaaS) offering and create new applications and tools for our customers and partners to help them solve their copyright issues. I want to thank PicScout’s co-founder, Eyal Gura, who as founding CEO was instrumental to PicScout’s success from initial vision to market leadership.”
”Six years after its founding, PicScout is a profitable market leader with a unique and scalable image recognition technology and most importantly, a strong team with entrepreneurial culture” says Eyal Gura , PicScout co-Founder and chairman of the board. “The Board of Directors congratulates Offir and has confidence in Offir’s ability to take the company to even higher levels”
As General Manager and co-founder of PicScout, Offir led all product management and R&D activities. Prior to PicScout, Offir worked with several start-up companies and was involved in the vision and creation of various software and hardware solutions. One of the start-ups was Tundo Telecommunications where Offir held product marketing and project management positions. Offir served in a key technology unit of the Israel Defense Force and is a graduate of the Zell Entrepreneurship Program of IDC Herzliya.
Here are some pictures we took while down in NY, at the Annual PACA conference…
Arik Bernstein (Our Account Manager)

Offir Gutelzon (PicScout Co-CEO) at our customer workshop



Make sure to keep reading this blog for more info on our trip to PACA.