tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4995107919527402869.post5273142389566439764..comments2024-02-05T06:34:54.746-05:00Comments on Creators Against Pinterest: Finding Your Work On Pinterest PART 6A Glass Artisthttp://www.blogger.com/profile/04547449968402945578noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4995107919527402869.post-79244805905132280192012-05-21T21:59:18.409-04:002012-05-21T21:59:18.409-04:00In Internet Explorer, you can get the image locati...In Internet Explorer, you can get the image location by right-clicking, and choosing "Properties." You have to click on the link to get the link location. <br /><br />When processing a large number of infringement, the extra steps involved in mining the link location and the image url with IE are too clunky to be practical. I strongly recommend that these artists make the effort of installing Firefox.<br /><br />I have found Pinterest to be rather cagey with image removal. When reporting a pin page, repins are not removed, the "embed" feature continues to allow fourth party websites to use your images through Pinterest. When reporting an image URL, they do not take the initiative of removing all the copies of it they know to exist on their serviers.A Glass Artisthttps://www.blogger.com/profile/04547449968402945578noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-4995107919527402869.post-34368398834377316282012-05-20T15:16:54.949-04:002012-05-20T15:16:54.949-04:00Very important info, and I've found that the i...Very important info, and I've found that the image url can be obtained by right clicking in Firefox's browser, but many people seem unable to get the image url in whatever browser they are using. For those who can't get the info or don't understand how to, I suspect Pinterest is NOT going to the effort to remove the images from their servers, even if the copyright owners state to do so. Any advice for them in that case?Cindy Schnackelhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/12688594942182785865noreply@blogger.com