Tensions are really heating up this week in the world of online image sharing. First, on Monday, Heather Champ and Derek Powazek, co-creators of the socially-produced photography magazine
JPG (you've probably flipped through it at Urban Outfitters whilst waiting for your significant other to try on pants), announced that they were leaving their baby in the hands of their former business partners. The split was acrimonious, to say the least. The magazine and its parent company, 8020 Publishing, will now be run by CEO Paul Coutier, in partnership with CNET founder Halsey Minor. As Champ put it
in a blog post, the new ownership
...has decided to rewrite the history of how JPG came into being, removing the original six issues from the site, and any mention of Derek and I. I've started to get emails asking why I'd quit, so I felt that it was important to publicly state that my departure was as much a surprise to me as it might be to you.
In
post on his own blog, Powazek (who is Champ's husband as well as collaborator) painted Cloutier as an underhanded power-grabber. Cloutier's goal, he argues, is to recast
JPG as less of a built-from-nothing community-powered experiment, and more of a traditional publishing venture.
Paul informed me that we were inventing a new story about how JPG came to be... I just could not agree to this new story. It didn't, and still doesn't, make any business sense to me. Good publishing companies embrace their founding editors and community, not erase them. Besides, we'd published six issues with participation from thousands of people. There's no good reason to be anything but proud of that.