But the photo sharing site has no future as a key tool in the journalism racket if it plans to keep acting the way it acted toward Shepherd Johnson last week. Johnson says the site deleted his paid account with no warning and wiped out over 1,000 photos, all without a formal explanation.
Johnson had posted several comments on photos in the official White House photostream that were critical of President Obama's support for suppressing torture photos. Someone -- probably someone from the White House charged with moderating comments -- deleted them. So Johnson posted some more comments, embedding an Abu Ghraib photo in one of them. Then he found his entire account zapped, and his photos gone.
A source who knows how Flickr works says that anyone viewing the site could have flagged Johnson's comments as abusive, and if enough flags are raised, a low-level worker somewhere deletes the account, photos included. It's a matter of an employee following instructions, with little judgment involved. Flickr keeps no backups. Any deletion is permanent.
Gawker reports that Johnson appealed to Flickr co-founder Stewart Butterfield, hoping Butterfield would step in and moderate the conversation between Johnson and Flickr VP for customer service Heather Champ, who had first told Johnson he'd been deleted for "spamming" the White House photostream, then, after some back and forth, had blocked him from sending her any more messages.
Butterfield told Johnson he's no longer involved with Flickr, but added that he'd known and worked with Champ for years, and: "If she's blocked you, it's because you're a dick."
That very well may be, but it's beside the point.
Here's the point: Flickr's policies in this area might be perfectly logical at every step of the way. Account-holders can moderate comments on their own photostreams. Users can flag abusive commenters. Flickr is in the photo-sharing, not the photo-storage, business, and does not back up the millions of images posted to the site.
But the way all that plays out in real life is that a photographer gets zapped for exercising his right to free speech and loses two years' worth of work.
This isn't going to work out for journalists. Should Johnson have backed up his photos? Sure. And eaten his broccoli while he was at it. But this is the real world. Johnson, like most Flickr users, I'd wager, trusted the site not to summarily delete his photos without any kind of warning because he'd rubbed enough of his fellow users the wrong way.
What if he weren't "a dick"? What if he were just a guy with an opinion that a certain bunch of people don't like -- abortions should be safe and legal, let's say, or John McCain would have been a better president than Barack Obama -- and that group organized to flag the hell out of him and get him booted?
I had just been thinking recently that I've fallen so far behind in curating and posting pictures of my kids to my personal blog that maybe I should just dump them onto Flickr. I'd have less control over the presentation, but it'd be easier and I could still write captions.
After the Johnson incident, I don't think I'm going to do that -- even though I back up every photo I upload to Flickr. If I were a real journalist taking important pictures, I wouldn't dream of doing it. I'd find a site that would host and display my photos with an assurance that those photos wouldn't disappear without warning.
And if there weren't such a site, I'd get to work creating one.
If Flickr is going to be a useful tool for the next generation of citizen journalists, it should not be deleting photos without warning. The worker has to have power over the tools, not the other way around.
If a user deserves to be banned, ban the user. But would it be prohibitively difficult to give that user, say, a 48-hour window to back up his or her photos if necessary, and to appeal the banishment, before the whole collection gets vaporized? A message to Yahoo, Flickr's corporate parent, asking that question was not returned.

Salon.com
Comments
http://www.flickr.com/photos/tequilaanddonuts/
this is one reason i won't get a pro account from them.
As a journalist, I post stuff to Flickr all the time; but I have the luxury of covering relatively non-controversial topics -- public transit, urban planning, arts & leisure type stuff. If I ever thought that my content or conduct might get flagged, I'd just host it on my own site. Angering the capricious invisible Flickr wizards isn't worth the risk.
So what does a Flickr pro account give you other than the chance to give Flickr your money?
My mistake.
The estimable Noam Chomsky has the last word on freedom of expression, I think: "If we don't believe in freedom of expression for people we despise, we don't believe in it at all."
I think Scott Carter's point is important: the site isn't necessarily about complete freedom of expression, although the public perception leans in that direction.
It seems as though Flickr management allows quite a variety of expression (drift through the tag cloud one of these days), but political expression doesn't have a home.
I have complained in the forums there that staff need to actually LOOK AT the photos of the person being accused and make their judgement based on what they SEE, not what someone else SAYS. Deven's situation was compounded by the fact that they set loose a program bot to systematically delete comments she had made on other people's photos as well - comments that, now erased for eternity, leave discussions with a gaping hole in them.
This whole "We reserve the right to delete all your stuff at any time for any reason" shit needs to go. In America (which is Yahoo!'s base of operations, I believe) you are supposed to be innocent until PROVEN guilty. Staff have the ability to take anyone's photostream out of public view - they've done it in the past - while they sorted out complaints and issues. That is by far a more fair scenario than the one they seem to favor (the knee-jerk deletion of accounts).
Thumbed.
But there are many egregious examples of Flickr hitting the panic button before the brain engaged, like they gave supreme authority to interns or something. The Icelandic photographers scrubbing was unjustified (amazing photos). The whole "Think Flickr, Think" grass roots protest in re the Yahoo takeover and how that affected German patrons was clumsily handled as well.
They have a history. I have all my Flickr images backed up on DVD from a third party service, just in case they go postal or apeshit again.
And, I don't like Heather (good thing I have backups).