Como encontrar o GIF certo para cada momento?

GIFs são uma ótima forma de se expressar em diferentes momentos, mas nem sempre é fácil encontrar o melhor para cada situação.

GIFGIF permite que você faça uma busca pelo GIF perfeito baseado em uma emoção.

É aí que entra o GIFGIF, um banco de dados criado por Travis Rich e Kevin Hu, estudantes do MIT Media Lab, com o objetivo de facilitar a vida de todos.

O site permite que você faça uma busca pelo GIF perfeito baseado em emoções. E, para que cada GIF traduza, de fato, a emoção desejada, o site é sustentado pelos próprios usuários que analisam os GIFs presentes.

Assim, ao entrar no GIFGIF, a primeira coisa a ser feita é responder se os dois GIFs apresentados remetem claramente a uma determinada emoção.

gifgif-1 gifgif-2 gifgif-3

Com alguns resultados mais voláteis do que outros – “felicidade”, por exemplo, é uma emoção traduzida por GIFs mais claramente do que “vergonha” e “alívio” – a meta não é ser o maior repositório de GIFs da web, mas sim o lugar aonde os usuários vão para encontrar o GIF perfeito para determinada emoção, reação e momento.

gifgif-4

Até o momento são mais de mil GIFs coletados, todos retirados do popular Giphy. Lançado dia 3 de março, o liberar ao público sua API em breve.

Brainstorm9Post originalmente publicado no Brainstorm #9
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Saucy TV Ad Gets Viral Boost After Being Made Into an Animated GIF

How do you get your ad to the top of Reddit? Try erasing all the audio and bad copywriting, leaving only a few silent scenes of a sweaty, stripping tutor.

At least, that seemed to work for European thermostat app Wiser, whose new ad, "A Very Hot Afternoon," soared to Reddit's front page this week after a user converted the spot from agency Being into an animated GIF.

As you can see below by comparing the original YouTube clip to the silent animation, this translation really highlights how mediocre and pointless the actual ad's final 30 seconds are.

Also, as with any scene from the "hot for teacher" trope, it's always funny to imagine how disturbing this spot would be if the genders were reversed. A sweaty guy slowly undressing next to a young girl? Watching that kind of clip is likely to get you a visit from the feds, or at least Chris Hansen.


    



There’s Now an Awards Show Honoring the Best Animated GIFs

Proving yet again that there's no creative endeavor too specific to merit its own awards show, CP+B Los Angeles has launched the .GIFYs, honoring animated GIFs "as a medium, social commentary and art form."

Panelists from Buzzfeed, Gawker, Mashable and elsewhere picked finalists in 12 categories. Cats get their own bracket, separate from the otherwise all-inclusive Animals, which will make those feline freaks even more insufferably smug than they already are.

Other categories include News, Sports, Politics, WTF, GIF of the Year and Can't Look Away (actually, in most cases, I could—though not from that gal getting pelted by hot dogs). Vote for your favorites through month's end.

Unlike the seemingly endless Academy Awards ceremony, this ceremony is sure to be a brief one. You could screen the entire batch of nominees in just a few minutes. The whole show would be over in a .JIFFY!

In case you're curious, here are the nominees for GIF of the Year:


    



Why Brands Should Be Wary of Animated GIFs

Attention brands in social media: Just because you can now use animated GIFs on Facebook doesn’t mean you actually should use animated GIFs on Facebook. Or, to be more specific, you probably shouldn’t post any GIFs featuring scenes from movies, TV shows or celebrity appearances—which negates about 99 percent of the good options out there. For a professional opinion on the issue, we turned to attorney Michael McSunas, one of the legal field’s top social media experts and senior counsel for marketing at Chrysler (though he notes that the following are his opinions, not those of Chrysler).

McSunas says the only way to post an animated GIF of a celebrity on your business page without risking legal trouble would be to get the permission of everyone featured in the clip, the copyright holder of the original recording and (just to be safe) the person who actually made the GIF. This applies to GIFs featuring noncelebrities as well.

“It would be a case-by-case basis,” McSunas says, “but if we were going to actually use a GIF, I'd say we'd need consent from the TV show. Or if it's a GIF of someone falling down, we'd want permission from the person falling down. I would treat it like any video. We'd need releases.” Without releases from liability, businesses risk legal action for using a celebrity’s likeness without permission or violating the copyright of a film studio, animator or other content creator. Here are McSunas’ tips for businesses that want to use animated GIFs on their social media channels:

1. Make your own GIFs featuring your own copyrighted materials.

2. If a GIF’s not yours, get written releases from the people featured in it and the copyright holder.

3. Don’t have releases? Consider linking off to the GIF or retweeting someone else’s post rather than embedding it in your own social channels.

4. If you’re making a GIF from a program your business sponsors, be sure you still have permission from the copyright holder.

5. Just because other brands get away with using a GIF, that doesn’t mean you will. And the larger your business, the more likely you are to become a target of legal action.

 

Be safe out there. Our thanks to Michael McSunas, whom you can follow on Twitter at @AdLawGuy. Image via Giphy.