
I'll add that I have changed absolutely nothing with regards to camera settings or my editing workflow.
Moderators: richierich, ua900, PanAm_DC10, hOMSaR
Runway28L wrote:Vikkyvik, that's what really gets me the most. They aren't the most spectacular, but I've had worse get accepted somehow, so I figured those would have had at least some sort of chance. I guess not though.
ufospotter wrote:i uploaded same photos those had accepted years ago , but rejected this time
vikkyvik wrote:ufospotter wrote:i uploaded same photos those had accepted years ago , but rejected this time
How long ago were they accepted?
vikkyvik wrote:Runway28L wrote:Vikkyvik, that's what really gets me the most. They aren't the most spectacular, but I've had worse get accepted somehow, so I figured those would have had at least some sort of chance. I guess not though.
It is what it is. Borderline shots will by definition sometimes get accepted and sometimes get rejected.ufospotter wrote:i uploaded same photos those had accepted years ago , but rejected this time
How long ago were they accepted?
airkas1 wrote:Just for full disclosure;He got banned (+ all photos deleted) on his first account back in March for continously uploading and appealing marginal and unfixed photos, for which he had been warned plenty of times. Plus leaving 'fuck u' comments under photos and posting similar texts on the forum and via E-mail. The ban was set until the end of September 2019. On April 1 (no joke), his second account got banned as he uploaded the exact same unfixed marginal photo that got his first account banned. Then he made a third account (different name than the other 2), which we intended to let him have as long as he didn't cause a scene again. But then he changed that account to his original name, leaving us little choice to ban that one until September as well.
Runway28L wrote:Lately I've kept getting pegged with the same rejection reasons for almost every photo (usually low contrast, blurry, or soft) after waiting over 16 days to have images screened. Ever since the queue got backed up last month, my acceptance rate has nosedived and there appears to be a direct correlation between the two. This leads me to ask... were quality standards heightened on this site recently? I upload to several other sites and it has been nowhere near as stringent as it has been on A.net as of late. Uploading here over the past month has been the most frustrating it has ever been during my entire time on here. It's to the point where I'm considering pulling all of my photos from screening until the queue gets shorter.
I'll add that I have changed absolutely nothing with regards to camera settings or my editing workflow.
fsx98 wrote:wondering if having more screeners would help alleviate the backlog of the screening queue?
airkas1 wrote:Hi Victor,
I'm not seeing your post as a rant and I appreciate the honest opinion. But please allow me to be very honest then as well.
I do understand your point and that seemingly inconsistent screening is going on. I will never claim that we are 100% consistent, but I think you could also do better. Every time I look in your thread, I see the same kind of photos; taken in marginal/poor light and it reflects in the quality of the photos. In my mind I've tried to tell you this a few times, but perhaps not in strong enough words. Vik's words come into play again; the result can go both ways.fsx98 wrote:wondering if having more screeners would help alleviate the backlog of the screening queue?
More active screeners would. If the current set would be more active, then it would be fine as well. Although it's nothing new; in the summer months we usually see a peak in the queue due to screener holidays and then later in the year (at times) when summer is over and the weather becomes better for being indoors and editing.
JakTrax wrote:I'll chip in on the issue of blurry images because I feel it perhaps needs addressing....
I see quite a few genuinely blurry shots in the feedback forum but some the screeners claim are blurry puzzle me at times; not because they're succinctly blurry but because it's impossible to tell at the (mostly) tiny sizes we upload at here. When I migrated to another site a few years back I started uploading at a minimum of 1400 pixels wide; on the odd occasion I chose to also upload here I again chose 1400 pixels (admittedly so I didn't have to produce two edits). I now upload at 2000 pixels and so coming back here and looking at images downsized to 1000 pixels is really a strain on my eyes. In my opinion it's just too small to properly pick out faults; not only that but I've seen perfectly sharp original images reduced to 1024 pixels and they look... blurry!
I also think the way modern sensors work is compounding the issue, as we lose sharpness on a per-pixel basis. To my eye images taken with the current crop of 24mp cameras just don't seem as sharp overall as those taken on cameras from 10 years ago. Kas and I had a discussion recently about CA along high-contrast edges, and how that can give the illusion of softness and, in some cases, blur.
In this day and age is it not time to up the minimum size to something greater than 1000 pixels? I know a multitude of sins can be masked at small sizes but conversely fine detail is often reduced or just not preserved at all. If we must stick with tiny images would it not be better to only allow it for images that push the envelope, i.e. those that are inherently going to suffer flaws? If a LH A320 isn't of sufficient quality to upload at a minimum of 1400 pixels, do we really need it in the database anyway? Having been viewing images of at least 1400 pixels recently it makes me realise just how aesthetically unpleasing these tiny images are. They may make a not-so-perfect image look better but they also can make great images look poor.
Karl
Crosswindphoto wrote:This might be a dumb idea, but I’m gonna float it anyway.
What about seasonal/temporary screeners? Uploaders who have lots of free time, and have a certain number of photos in the DB, and can be trusted to screen reliably, what if they helped out to knock the queue down in the peak months?
It would be a commit to thing as well and by no means permanent, or any screener special treatment etc.
Miguel1982 wrote:It is indeed too blurry and was accepted by mistake. The photographer has been notified already and the shot will be removed.
I have to agree that the angle and the motive are great, but in this case the quality just isn't there.
Cheers,
Miguel
airkas1 wrote:He got banned (+ all photos deleted) on his first account back in March for continously uploading and appealing marginal and unfixed photos, for which he had been warned plenty of times. Plus leaving 'fuck u' comments under photos and posting similar texts on the forum and via E-mail. The ban was set until the end of September 2019. On April 1 (no joke), his second account got banned as he uploaded the exact same unfixed marginal photo that got his first account banned. Then he made a third account (different name than the other 2), which we intended to let him have as long as he didn't cause a scene again. But then he changed that account to his original name, leaving us little choice to ban that one until September as well.
As Vik mentioned, borderline shots can go either way every time, but in this case the learning curve seems to be very flat.
NwaAviator wrote:I think so, looking at fr24 and saw a shot that was cropped horribly with one wing totally missing with the top of the fuselage. I guess it just depends on the screener.
Miguel1982 wrote:It is indeed too blurry and was accepted by mistake. The photographer has been notified already and the shot will be removed.
I have to agree that the angle and the motive are great, but in this case the quality just isn't there.
Cheers,
Miguel
airkas1 wrote:I knew this would be the photo concerned. It has our attention and will likely be removed. Obvious bad quality.
dutchspotter1 wrote:Instead of removing it, it has been made Photographers Choice? Can't take this stuff seriously anymore.
dutchspotter1 wrote:Still remains a mystery how such (obviously bad quality) photos are being accepted while other (higher quality) photos are being rejected. Sure, once could be an accident, but now it's starting to make people raise their eyebrows regarding the screening policy/consistency.
dutchspotter1 wrote:but now it's starting to make people raise their eyebrows regarding the screening policy/consistency.
JKPhotos wrote:Still a spectacular uniqe shot might be accepted despite some issues.
dutchspotter1 wrote:JKPhotos wrote:Still a spectacular uniqe shot might be accepted despite some issues.
I believe there are other websites for that, e.g. airplane-pictures.net. Isn't the A.net philosophy to display high quality photos, regardless of whether these are plain landing shots or spectacular unique shots?
dutchspotter1 wrote:I'm also curious how exactly PC works. As a photographer we can vote once every 12 hours. Does that mean that there are 2 photos per day selected as PC? Sometimes a photo becomes PC even days after it has been added to the database. I noticed as well that frequently half of the PC photos is taken by just one photographer out of the PNW region. Sure, most of these are high quality photos, but also just plain taxi or landing or ramp shots. Makes me wonder why similar photos (regards to quality/style) of other photographers are far less likely to become PC.
JKPhotos wrote:Just because some blurry shots go through it is like no reason that others are now acceptable? Honestly that is like arguing just because some were not caught speeding you feel the right to drive 100 where usually the Limit says 70 as well.
johnr wrote:, it would be naive to think that a handful of photographers don’t receive special treatment on this site. .
johnr wrote:My appeal for blurry and four ( 4 ) other rejection reasons was turned down, but reduced to just blurry and quality, with the personal message that it was obviously blurry and not a rare airframe in the DB. That’s fine.
johnr wrote:My question now is how many shots does it take for an aircraft to be deemed not rare?