The only time I seem to interact with Pinterest is when I’m searching for images of something on my phone, let’s say “pictures of mountains”. I want to get the image in full res so I go to the site, then I can’t copy it or download it.
From these brief interactions and exploring the site I just don’t see the appeal. Pinterest just seems like a terrible image search engine with the ‘feature?’ that every few scrolls pulls up similar-ish categories to the image search you did(Mausoleum might bring up Pharaohs for example). It could be that I’ve just never taken the time to use it properly, so I thought I would ask people: what is Pinterest good for / why does it exist.
Hopefully is not too harsh I am high atm.
It exists to fuck up search results.
Kagi lists the top domains that Kagi users have blocked results from.
https://kagi.com/stats?stat=leaderboard
The top 7 blocked domains are all Pinterest domains.
That’s a pretty damning vote, I’d say.
That’s… Amazing. What a worthless site.
Interesting, thank you for sharing
Very interesting!
I forgot it existed because some lovely person made an extension to block it ☺️
Whoever does their SEO is a genius but should also have been drowned at birth
Would you be so kind to share more about that extension please?
The one I use is called “Unpinterested!”, and is on both the Firefox and chrome extension stores. You can also use uBlacklist to block the domains.
Sweet, I see in the comments many others have an extension for this. Crazy I didn’t even think about it as an option!
There’s also one called “Personal blocklist” which is very handy.
It’s a pinboard. You collect idea’s in a visual way to create moodboards or visual collections of idea’s.
I used to be a big fan and my daughter and wife still use it a lot when researching a project. It works really well but is cluttered with paid content these days.
What’s a mood board?
On top of the definition provided by the other commenter, it’s vaguely analogous to shopping for something, and opening a new tab for everything that looks vaguely good. Then doing a pass to winnow down and close items.
There’s also structure for organizing things that are related. So if you weren’t sure if you wanted a toaster or a toaster oven, you could spatially have two separate groups.
It only clicked for me once I saw someone else use it. I’m used to it just being hostile to search traffic.
You ever see in the movies, those teen girls and young women with a cork board full of magazine cutouts? That’s a mood board.
You kind of get an idea for something, like “the ideal vacation” and any time you see something that fits that theme for you, you put it on the mood board. When you’re done, you are able to see your details together in a big picture view.
Pinterest is kind of neat because it gives you the convenience of a digital medium.
The only time I encounter it is when doing image searches for normal things and it seems to exist to make it maximally annoying to search for and download images. If I ever end up on Pinterest it’s just a guaranteed headache.
I fucking hate it. It’s unintuitive, it’s clunky, it doesn’t do a good job at what it claims it does, and it makes locating the original images harder unless you log in.
My experience with Pinterest is:
- Search for some recipes and you click a link to Pinterest it takes you to a meta page with a lot of pictures but no recipe.
- While image searching you find a nice picture click on the link to Pinterest and it’s gone, just use the cached image instead.
Looks like Pinterest is the reason for all these dying pixels.
They took an existing real-world idea, made it a website, and then tried to microsoft it by locking people in, refusing to let others play without paying, and generally making every interaction suck. It’s been quite a ride from “hey that’s interesting” to “oh god - them again”. I think the thrill lasted maybe the first six months they existed.
I actually find it invaluable. I am constantly designing new products so I need a lot of inspiration. Google image search is too focused and I need broad strokes to start. I can type in a few keywords in Pinterest, find one image I like and click on it, then get a large amount of similar designs. I’ve used it for lots of stuff from a variety of unique knurling options on dials to flower knolling layouts for ad shoots. It’s a better image search for my purposes.
When looking for something to paint it’s a good tool too.
I try to avoid the site like the plague, have never really attempted to use it, and when the internet inevitably dumps me there is my search for something I’ve never found any value in it.
But I think the idea is that it’s supposed to be sort of a brainstorming tool.
Think back to the days when physical magazines and catalogues were more of a thing. When you were planning or designing or working towards some goal you might gather up a bunch of clippings, pictures, articles, recipes, your own notes, sketches, and doodles, etc. and pin them up on a cork board (sort of a “vision board”) or maybe put them in a book or folder or something so they were readily available for you to look at for inspiration or reference as you go about your planning.
I think that’s what Pinterest was supposed to be. Sort of a place to save all your little inspirations and reference pictures for whatever project or goal you have in mind.
And I kind of suspect that for that purpose it does its job well enough (though I don’t really get what benefit it has over a folder full of pictures and word documents, spreadsheets, etc. saved to your computer or phone)
And I guess maybe having a platform where you can share that sort of virtual vision board and get feedback on it and see what others are planning is maybe useful for some people’s creative process.
But it’s also kind of like glimpsing into someone’s personal notebook full of their illegible handwriting, half-finished sketches and doodles, and made-up shorthand. It probably makes lots of sense to that person, but since you don’t know what was going on in their mind when they put it together and it was never edited for someone else to make sense of, it might as well be the ramblings of a mental patient.
And since most of the rest of us only stumble onto Pinterest in search of a source for something - a place we can buy something, the recipe for food, an article or the context for a picture, a how-to guide, etc. it seems like a total waste of time because most people only share the picture and a couple quick thoughts or hashtags or whatever, it’s basically useless.
It’s a social network version of browser bookmarks.
It gloms onto the mental capital around how the internet is supposed to be free and open. But if you make an account you can then download the images etc. When I did make boards and pin things it felt like I was just indicating to interested commercial parties the things I like. But it does show you a large amount of related images quickly which can be handy if you’re looking for something specific.
Oh man if you like images of aesthetic mood board stuff you have not lived until you’ve let the algorithm take the wheel and fallen into a pin hole. It’s quite stimulating.
I haven’t used it in a while, but when I did I used it sort of as an idea / vision board. For instance, when remodeling the kitchen I created a board where I just pinned a ton of kitchen pictures that had things I liked. Sort of a way to group images together based on themes.
Increasing shareholder value, of course.
It exists to abuse and profit off search engine optimisation. More than half of most image search results are polluted with their results which forces you sign up to do anything useful with them.
I use it for art insoiration and reference. Also recently inspiration for a new haircut