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The site debuted in November 2003 and has since grown greatly in popularity. The main page has a file selection field, where the user may select the image file to upload. The [[image file format]] must be either [[JPEG]] (JPG), [[Portable Network Graphics|PNG]], [[GIF]], [[Tagged Image File Format|TIFF]] (TIF), [[Windows bitmap|BMP]], and the file must be smaller than or equal to 5 megabytes. Uploaded BMP and TIFF (TIF) images are automatically converted to PNG format.
The site debuted in November 2003 and has since grown greatly in popularity. The main page has a file selection field, where the user may select the image file to upload. The [[image file format]] must be either [[JPEG]] (JPG), [[Portable Network Graphics|PNG]], [[GIF]], [[Tagged Image File Format|TIFF]] (TIF), [[Windows bitmap|BMP]], and the file must be smaller than or equal to 5 megabytes. Uploaded BMP and TIFF (TIF) images are automatically converted to PNG format.


After the file is uploaded, the user is redirected to a page containing different versions of [[Uniform Resource Locator|URL]]s to the uploaded image. These URLs are preformatted in a variety of [[HTML]] and [[BBCode|Bulletin Board code]] snippets, which can be used to hotlink them on websites and message boards. These URLs are not listed publicly, therefore only the user and the people to whom the user shares the URL can know the file location. In mid-2008, Imageshack began 'hiding' the direct link to images, in an attempt to reduce the number of directly-linked images, as they provide no advertising revenue. After receiving feedback from users Imageshack discontinued 'hiding' the direct links and placed them on the top of the page.
After the file is uploaded, the user is redirected to a page containing different versions of [[Uniform Resource Locator|URL]]s to the uploaded image. These URLs are preformatted in a variety of [[HTML]] and [[BBCode|Bulletin Board code]] snippets, which can be used to hotlink them on websites and message boards. These URLs are not listed publicly, therefore only the user and the people to whom the user shares the URL can know the file location. In mid-2008, Imageshack began 'hiding' the direct link to images, in an attempt to reduce the number of directly-linked images, as they provide no advertising revenue. After receiving feedback from users Imageshack discontinued 'hiding' the direct links and placed them on the top of the page. However, it now claims you must register to see the direct link (viewing the image directly or reading the url from the source code also works).


Images are stored on ImageShack indefinitely unless the image or the user who uploaded it abuses the [[Terms of Service]]. The image will be rendered inaccessible if the image uses over 300 megabytes of bandwidth in a one-hour period. If the image in question is not accessed a single time in one year, they will remove it.
Images are stored on ImageShack indefinitely unless the image or the user who uploaded it abuses the [[Terms of Service]]. The image will be rendered inaccessible if the image uses over 300 megabytes of bandwidth in a one-hour period. If the image in question is not accessed a single time in one year, they will remove it.

Revision as of 05:18, 11 March 2011

ImageShack
ImageShack Logo
ImageShack Logo
Type of site
Image Hosting Service
Available inEnglish
OwnerImageShack Corp.
Created byAlexander Levin
URLwww.imageshack.us
CommercialYes
RegistrationOptional

ImageShack is a free image hosting website. ImageShack has a subscription service but the majority of its revenue is produced from advertising related to its free image hosting.[1] The imageshack.us Alexa ranking in September 25, 2007 was one of the top 40's, but now as of March 10, 2011 dropped to 90.[2] According to Nielsen//NetRatings, ImageShack was the fourth fastest growing web brand in July 2006.[3]

Image hosting

The site debuted in November 2003 and has since grown greatly in popularity. The main page has a file selection field, where the user may select the image file to upload. The image file format must be either JPEG (JPG), PNG, GIF, TIFF (TIF), BMP, and the file must be smaller than or equal to 5 megabytes. Uploaded BMP and TIFF (TIF) images are automatically converted to PNG format.

After the file is uploaded, the user is redirected to a page containing different versions of URLs to the uploaded image. These URLs are preformatted in a variety of HTML and Bulletin Board code snippets, which can be used to hotlink them on websites and message boards. These URLs are not listed publicly, therefore only the user and the people to whom the user shares the URL can know the file location. In mid-2008, Imageshack began 'hiding' the direct link to images, in an attempt to reduce the number of directly-linked images, as they provide no advertising revenue. After receiving feedback from users Imageshack discontinued 'hiding' the direct links and placed them on the top of the page. However, it now claims you must register to see the direct link (viewing the image directly or reading the url from the source code also works).

Images are stored on ImageShack indefinitely unless the image or the user who uploaded it abuses the Terms of Service. The image will be rendered inaccessible if the image uses over 300 megabytes of bandwidth in a one-hour period. If the image in question is not accessed a single time in one year, they will remove it.

There is also a free registration service that gives the user the ability to see and delete their previously uploaded images.

In May 2006 it was reported that ImageShack serves 100,000 concurrent user requests during peak operation.[4]

ImageShack also provides a standalone open-source application for users to upload images and videos. The ImageShack uploader is available for Windows, Mac, and Linux.

Torrent service

ImageShack's torrent service, also known as Torrent Drive or ImageShack Drive,[5] offers server side torrent downloads through a web-based interface. Torrents are downloaded by ImageShack servers and kept for 30 days. Once finished, an HTTP download link is provided. It is provided for non-paying registered users, but limited to a quota that all such users combined can download, measured by the amount of use of the servers by paying users.[6][7] As of 28 October 2009, ImageShack stopped the free service for Torrent Drive [8] and currently stopped the service all together [9].

Hack by Anti-Sec

The Antisec Movement's manifesto which had replaced a number of pictures hosted by ImageShack

On July 10, 2009 at 7:34pm PST, the Antisec Movement compromised ImageShack's services[10], a group with the goal to eradicate the publication of security exploits. The group had gained control of how images were being displayed, and as a result some images hosted by ImageShack were temporarily redirected to an image detailing the manifesto of the movement. The message adds that “no images were harmed in the making of this … image”, implying that ImageShack images were not lost. Normal functionality was restored less than two hours later, and ImageShack asserted that no user data or content was damaged or lost.[11]

Blocked by Colombian Government

As of 24 August 2009 Imageshack was blocked by the Colombian Government under their Internet Sano program. [citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "DivShare Launches ImageShack Wannabe, ImageShack Launches Profiles". Mashable.com. Retrieved 2007-02-27. [dead link]
  2. ^ "Related info for: imageshack.us". Alexa. Retrieved 2007-09-25.
  3. ^ "MySpace Tops List of Hottest Sites". I Media Connection. Retrieved 2007-02-27.
  4. ^ "ImageShack Simplifies Image Sharing". Bios Magazine. Retrieved 2007-02-27. [dead link]
  5. ^ Imageshack main userpage, menu item
  6. ^ ImageShack - Torrent Index, Website notice received when quota is reached
  7. ^ "ImageShack FAQ". Retrieved 2008-11-05.
  8. ^ "ImageShack Drive stopped the Free Service". Retrieved 2009-10-28.
  9. ^ http://stream.imageshack.us/content.php?page=drive
  10. ^ "Slashdot IT Story | ImageShack Hacked, Security Groups Threatened". Retrieved 2009-07-11.
  11. ^ "Your media is secure". Retrieved 2009-07-13.