The 10 Most Blatant Design Ripoffs in Social Media


Pinspire vs. Pinterest




It doesn't get more blatant than this. Pinspire is pretty much a pixel-for-pixel Pinterest clone, created by the serial digital ripoff artists at Rocket Internet. It's a bit obscene just how much of a copycat Pinspire is -- from concept to functionality to the cursive-style logo. Will it be as lucrative for the Rocket's Sawmer Brothers as their other projects, an eBay clone they sold to the real auction site for $50 million or the European deals site that Groupon gobbled up? Or will someone finally serve them with a cease-and-desist letter? If that happens, someone please pin it.

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In the world of social media, discovering that worthwhile original idea for your app or website is by far the hardest thing to get right. It’s so hard, in fact — and the field so potentially lucrative — that many parties who jump into the field tend not to bother. Why should you create something original when there are so many successful sites and services that you can just rip off?

At least that appears to be the thinking behind many Internet companies whose concepts, web design or apps appear to owe a lot to other, more successful forebears. Once you start looking, it’s not hard to find digital ripoffs. At best, they’re quirky homages inspired by a successful digital brand. At worst, they’re ersatz imitators looking to cash in on someone else’s idea — just a step or two above malware.

Perhaps that’s a little harsh. After all, the humor writer Josh Billings once said, “About the most originality that any writer can hope to achieve honestly is to steal with good judgment.” If you substitute “web designer” for “writer,” he may have been talking about the state of digital design today. After all, it would be impossible to find a design that isn’t at least a little derivative.

SEE ALSO: Top 5 Web Design Mistakes Small Businesses Make

Still, there’s a difference between borrowing some core design ideas and wholesale imitating. In social media, where the essential premise of connecting and sharing with your friends provides a basic architecture, perhaps the line between the two is blurrier than in other fields. After all, Facebook was called a MySpace clone, which was called a Friendster clone before that. But they are (and were) nothing like each other.

While building on existing concepts will always be part of design, so too will mimics, where the cloning is so pervasive and total that the site is nothing more than a copy of the original, merely slipped into a different skin. Here are the 10 most flagrant design ripoffs in social media today, at least to Mashable‘s eye.

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How Do You Disconnect? Send Your Photos & Videos to Mashable & CNN iReport


Many of us consider mid-August the dog days of summer: the hottest, stickiest time of year. Those long hours tethered to a desk in front of a computer might be getting just that much more difficult to bear.

CNN and Mashable want to know what you do to disconnect. How do you get away from your life online? Do you enjoy being outdoors? Maybe you’re able to get away for an extended period of time, or perhaps you have the perfect backyard set-up for cooling off and losing yourself in summer.

Send us your photos and videos of how you unplug, and tell us: Do you miss technology? How important is it to you to break from your favorite gadgets and websites? You can upload your photos and videos by using the assignment page, or email it to iReport. Instagram and Picplz users, we encourage you to post your images there, too, and tag them with #disconnect. Please submit your photos and videos by Monday, August 15. The best submissions could be featured on CNN and Mashable.


Submit photos and videos of the way you disconnect to CNN iReport and Mashable!


Image courtesy of Flickr, adpowers

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How Do You Disconnect? Send Your Photos & Videos to Mashable & CNN iReport


Many of us consider mid-August the dog days of summer: the hottest, stickiest time of year. Those long hours tethered to a desk in front of a computer might be getting just that much more difficult to bear.

CNN and Mashable want to know what you do to disconnect. How do you get away from your life online? Do you enjoy being outdoors? Maybe you’re able to get away for an extended period of time, or perhaps you have the perfect backyard set-up for cooling off and losing yourself in summer.

Send us your photos and videos of how you unplug, and tell us: Do you miss technology? How important is it to you to break from your favorite gadgets and websites? You can upload your photos and videos by using the assignment page, or email it to iReport. Instagram and Picplz users, we encourage you to post your images there, too, and tag them with #disconnect. Please submit your photos and videos by Monday, August 15. The best submissions could be featured on CNN and Mashable.


Submit photos and videos of the way you disconnect to CNN iReport and Mashable!


Image courtesy of Flickr, adpowers

More About: cnn, instagram, ireport, mashable, picplz

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HOW TO: Document Your Life Using Photo Apps


The Digital Photo and Film Series is supported by Adobe® Photoshop® Elements. To connect with the product team, find creative tutorials, tips and information, join them on Facebook and Twitter.

With smartphones projected to take over feature phones in the United States this year, there are a lot of people walking around with cameras in their pockets.

And so, an abundance of apps has launched recently to cater to all the smartphone owners who might want to snap a quick shot as they roam the city streets. It’s now easier to take, tweak, share and display photos than it ever was in the pre-app world. These are some of our favorites.


Snap and Share


Instagram and Picplz have virtually identical functionality for adding effects to photos and sharing them with friends. Both allow you to add filters after you take photos, share them to Facebook and Twitter, view popular photos from other users, and follow friends to see their photos from a news feed. Even the interfaces of the two apps are so similar that at first glance you might mistake them for each other.

The biggest difference between the two free photo sharing services is that PicPlz has an Android app while Instagram does not (neither has a BlackBerry app). Picplz also gives its users slightly more control of camera settings in its Android app than Instagram does in its iPhone app, and it recently added a “collection” feature that easily adds photos to a group file (Instagram accomplishes this function via hashtag).

If you’re an iPhone user and have the option to choose between the two (Android users, also check out Vignette), the best way to decide between them comes down to which network most of your friends use. You can scope out the situation on each app by connecting your Twitter and/or Facebook profiles to the photo app.

Hipstamatic, $1.99, is another similar option for iPhone. While its more expansive filter collection produces beautiful effects, it doesn’t integrate social sharing like Instagram and PicPlz do.


Share Selectively


Chances are that all 600 of your Facebook friends are not interested in seeing your life documented. Nor are you probably interested in sharing all of those photos. But for a close group of friends, access to your photo diary is an interesting way to stay in touch.

Path, which launched in November, aims to personalize photo sharing. The app asks you to create a network of fewer than 50 people. Each time you take a photo using the app, you have an option to tag it with three simple things: people, places and things. Each photo can be shared to just your Path friends, individual friends, or your Facebook wall.

If your Path friends have push notifications set, they’ll get a message when you share it with them, and your photo posts will also show up on their Facebook newsfeeds (only visible to friends who you’ve selected).

As you take and share photos, you create a timeline or “path” of your life. As of March, you can alter shots with Instagram-like photo lenses. There’s also an option to add 10-second video clips to this timeline.


Sort and Display


memolane_photo

Using multiple photo apps can easily result in photo overload, but there are several apps that address this very problem by organizing and streamlining your pics.

Browser app Memolane takes social media activity, including photos from Instagram and Facebook, and automatically plots it in a searchable scrapbook. When you want to remember, let’s say, a vacation, you can search for that point in the timeline to see Foursquare checkins, photos, videos and updates you made during that time period.

Gramframe, a $1.99 iPad app, uses Instagram’s public API to create iPad photo gallery screensavers for its users. If you want to put your friend’s photos into the mix, Pixable’s Photofeed iPad app has a slideshow feature that can accomplish something similar with friend’s Facebook photos, though the iPad will still go black after its normal sleep time.

Photofeed browser, iPhone and iPad apps also allow you to follow photo updates from specific Facebook friends and sorts photos into categories like “most popular,” “family updates” and “new profile photos.”

If you want to bring things into the physical world, you have your pick of services for creating albums from digital photos — SnapFish, Shutterfly, MyPublisher and Apple’s photo book service are some of the most popular. Then there’s Instaprint, which prints Instagram photos with a retro Polaroid camera look.


Series Supported by Adobe Photoshop Elements

The Digital Photo and Film Series is supported by the Adobe® Photoshop® Elements product team. Adobe’s® photo-editing software delivers powerful options that make it easy to create extraordinary photos, unique print creations, quickly share memories in online albums, and automatically organize and help protect your photos. Download a free trial of Adobe® Photoshop® Elements® 9 to try it out!


More Photography Resources from Mashable:


- iPhotography: 10 Pro Tips for Snapping Perfect iPhone Photos
- 15 Incredible iPhone Dog Photographs
- 7 Superb Short Films Shot With Cellphones
- 10 Essential Websites for iPhone Photographers
- 10 Incredible iPhone Portrait Photographs

More About: Digital Photo and Film Series, gramframe, hipstamatic, instagram, iphotography, memolane, Path, photo apps, Photos, picplz, Pixable

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Have a Creative Workspace Arrangement? Send Your Photos & Videos to Mashable & CNN iReport


Let’s face it – we spend a lot of time in our workspaces. Whether you work at an office, from home or in a public space, it’s all too easy to end up hypnotized by your computer screen after sitting in the same chair for hours on end.

So, Mashable and CNN want to know: How have you customized your work environment to make it more livable? Maybe you’ve found an alternative to that desk chair, like an exercise ball or a desk at which you can stand instead of sit. Or perhaps you’ve spiced up your cubicle with some colorful art or a beta fish?

We want to see photos of your creative workspace arrangement. Take us on a video tour of your customized work area. Let us know why you’ve altered your office and what the benefits are.

Upload your photos and videos by using the assignment page, or email it to iReport. Instagram and Picplz users, we encourage you to post your images there, too, and tag them with #workspace. Please submit your photos and videos by Friday, April 15. The best submissions could be featured on CNN and Mashable.

Are your creative wheels already turning? We encourage you to brainstorm your submission ideas in the comments below.


Submit photos and videos of your workspace to CNN iReport and Mashable!




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Your #TechLife Digital Photo Collages on CNN iReport & Mashable [PICS]


We asked you last week to get creative with your digital photo tools and send us a collage showing the role technology plays in your life.

We teamed up with CNN iReport to consider submissions from Instagram with hashtags #techlife and uploads to iReport’s assignment page. After viewing a number of inventive collages, we chose some of the best to feature in the gallery below. In the captions, you’ll find what makes up each collage, including what editing and collage-creation apps participants used and what some think of the mobile image-sharing boom.

This is the second project in what will be an ongoing partnership between Mashable and CNN iReport. We’re delighted to be working together and want to know: What thoughts do you have on how to further involve the mobile photography community? We welcome your ideas for future projects in the comments.

A big thank you to our partners at iReport and all those who participated! You can read more about the featured submissions in iReport’s blog post. For more mobile photo projects, follow us on Instagram by searching Mashable under usernames.


#TechLife in London




From upper left corner, going clockwise: Underground station, restaurant, Underground station, window display of Harvey Nichols (a department store in Knightsbridge, London). All photos were taken with an iPhone 4 in London, and edited with Instagram's "Hefe" filter. The collage was created with Photoshake. "It's nice to know when your work really connects to someone else, and the immediacy of getting that information via Instagram is amazing." - Arianna Power, 24, London


#TechLife in Madrid




Top left: iPhone alarm, Nespresso coffee maker; Top middle: Electronic air control in the car; Top right: GPS in the car; Bottom left: iPhone apps; Bottom left-middle: Office computer; Bottom-right middle: TV set, DVD player at home, Instagram logo; Bottom right: iPhone. Photos were taken with an iPhone 4 in Madrid, and edited with the HDR Pro, Camera Plus and Impression apps. The collage was created with Diptic. "It's a walk through my day-to-day life using, every single minute, something related to technology." - Philippe Gonzalez, 40, Madrid


#TechLife in New York




From upper left corner, going clockwise: Office workshop, desk, member bulletin board, Instagram lesson. All photos were taken with an iPhone 4 at Hive at 55 co-working space in New York, NY. The collage was created with Diptic. "Photographs are a great way to tell a story about yourself, life, and your surroundings, your interests, etc." - Brian DiFeo, 33, of Jersey City, N.J.


#TechLife in Connecticut




From upper left corner, going clockwise: Whole Foods recipe app, black beans, potatoes, tortillas, finished dish. Photos were taken with an iPod Touch 4G in the photographer's kitchen in Willimantic, and edited with Instagram's "Hefe" filter. The collage was created with Photomess. "Technology made dinner happen." - Brytne LeVasseur-Mason, 34, Willimantic, Conn.


#TechLife in the U.K.




From upper left corner, going clockwise: Working from home, Wilson the dog while surfing the web, working from home, Power Monkey Explorer solar power device. Photos were taken with an iPhone 3GS in Fareham and Cornwall, U.K., and edited with Photoshop. The collage was created with Diptic. "I might be an environmentalist but I'm also a geek, and I love my tech." - Alan Williams, 38, Fareham, U.K.


#TechLife in the Philippines




Photos of different phases of sunset from different times and places. The top left and top middle were taken with a Sony Cybershot 12.1 and the others with a Canon. The collage was created with Photoshop. "The future of mobile will... give users more options and more ways wherein photography can be done so easily and more beautifully." - Lia Ocampo, 41, Manila, Philippines


#TechLife in Seattle




Three rapid images of an online live broadcast of the most recent space shuttle launch (in the order they were taken). Photos were taken with an iPhone 4 in Seattle. The collage was created with Diptic. "I was able to watch history live on my laptop, then capture that history on my iPhone to create a unique piece of art." - Joe Mirabella, 34, Seattle


#TechLife in Texas




Top, from left: Hard drive with the lid removed, a can of duster; Middle, from left: Dual processor PC, Linksys wireless router with ethernet and power cables showing, box of chocolate donuts; Bottom, from left: Box of used hard drives; Front shot of server rack, back shot of server rack showing the ethernet and KVM cables. Photos were taken with an iPhone 4 in Abilene, Texas. The collage was created with Collage. "Phone/internet video-streaming apps like Ustream and Qik will become the next big tool for citizen newsgathering and reporting!" - Kevin Palivec, 46, Hawley, Texas


#TechLife in Singapore




Computer monitors daisy-chained together to produce a singular larger screen that spans across multiple screens. Photos were taken with an iPhone 4 in Singapore and edited with Instagram. The collage was created with Diptic. "With Cloud technology and the exponential expansion of the social media scene, both mobile photography and conventional photography will receive some sort of a cultural revolution." - Muhammad Zaki, 28, Singapore



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Photo Sharing Fan? Send Your #TechLife Digital Collage to Mashable & CNN iReport


The next generation of digital photography is here: built-in cameras, photo-splicing apps and image-sharing communities such as Instagram and PicPlz. It’s inspired many to turn their smartphones into miniature picture-editing and collage-making studios.

Now, in partnership with CNN iReport, we’re challenging you to get creative. Use your digital photo tools to make a collage showing the role technology plays in your life.

Build a composite image out of three to four photos; splice them together using a photo app like Diptic. If you don’t have access to such apps, other photo editing methods work just as well.

Upload your collage by using the assignment page or e-mail it to iReport. Instagram users, we encourage you to post your images there, too, and tag them #techlife. Please submit your collage by Friday, February 25.

As with other iReports — which range in topics from the unrest in Egypt to the Verizon iPhone — your photos could be featured on CNN, as well as here on Mashable.

Are your creative wheels already turning? We encourage you to brainstorm in the comments below.


Submit Your #TechLife Digital Collage to CNN iReport and Mashable!


Image courtesy Flickr, N-Sai



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Pulse Pretties Up Mobile Apps With Picplz, Vimeo and Reddit Integration


Pulse — the iPhone, iPad and Android social news consumption app from startup Alphonso Labs — is proving Wednesday that it’s far more than a stylized RSS reader with the addition of six new content sources.

Pulse now features six popular social media sites as sources: Reddit, Digg, Vimeo, YouTube, Picplz and Flickr. The application is pulling content from these social sites via APIs instead of RSS feeds, a big first for the company.

Application users can now consume the most favorited YouTube videos of the day, watch Vimeo videos curated by staff, pan through Picplz’s most interesting photos, scroll through the most viewed photos on Flickr, read up on what’s hot in the Digg community and digest Reddit’s top news.

The content quality will, obviously, vary by the source and the users who do the creating. But Pulse’s tailored, lean-back approach to social stream consumption, more so than the content nuggets themselves, makes this update noteworthy.

“For a lot of our users, Pulse has now become their go-to ‘browser’ for consuming content,” reads an article announcing the new sources. The primary point is that the startup never intended to build an RSS reader for the iPad. Instead, it’s a much richer experience designed for consuming web content of all varieties.

With that in mind, one should anticipate Pulse to add additional sources via APIs in the weeks ahead.

“We wanted to experiment with social news, photos and videos — hence, we picked these initial sources. All these services have really neat APIs, and it literally took Charles [new team member Charles Chen] two weeks to get this up and running,” says co-founder Akshay Kothari. “Many more to come — stay tuned!”

More About: APIs, digg, flickr, picplz, pulse, pulse news, reddit, Vimeo, youtube

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