The photograph and our understanding of photography is ever changing and has transitioned from a world of unprocessed rolls of C-41 sitting in a fridge 50 years ago to sharing photos on the 1.5" screen of a point and shoot camera 10 years back. And today the photograph is again something different. The way we take photos is fundamentally different. We can view, share, and interact with photos on the device they were taken on. We can edit, tag, or "filter" photos directly on the camera at the same time the photo is being taken. Photos can be automatically pushed to various online sharing services, and the distinction between photos and videos has lessened. Beyond this, and more importantly, there are now lots of them. To Facebook alone more than 250 billion photos have been uploaded and on average it receives over 350 million new photos every day [6], while YouTube reports that 300 hours of video are uploaded every minute [22]. A back of the envelope estimation reports 10% of all photos in the world were taken in the last 12 months, and that was calculated already more than three years ago [8].Today, a large number of the digital media objects that are shared have been uploaded to services like Flickr or Instagram, which along with their metadata and their social ecosystem form a vibrant environment for finding solutions to many research questions at scale. Photos and videos provide a wealth of information about the universe, covering entertainment, travel, personal records, and various other aspects of life in general as it was when they were taken. Considered collectively, they represent knowledge that goes * This work was done while Benjamin Elizalde was at ICSI.† This work was done while Karl Ni was at LLNL. ‡ This work was done while Damian Borth was at ICSI. § This work was done while Li-Jia Li was at Yahoo Labs.
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