
<p>Yesterday night, Yahoo! took yet another step forward in the Flickr renaissance, although we doubt all photographers will see it this way. In a bid to make the service more share-friendly, Yahoo! has introduced new, cleaner embedding capability to the photo sharing site.</p><p>The purpose of the new embeds is to "make it even easier to add full-bleed Flickr photos and videos onto your personal websites, blogs and articles," while also making sure that proper attribution is given each and every time.</p><p>If you allow embeds (they are automatically enabled for everything but private photos, but you can go into settings and toggle the ability on or off) users will be able to pull an iframe code by clicking on the embed brackets under the share button.</p><p>Once inserted, that code will pop up a photo that looks something like this:</p><p><a href="http://petapixel.com/2013/12/19/flickr-introduces-cleaner-embed-feature-brace-photographer-outrage/">Keep reading...</a></p><p>Read also:</p><p><a href="http://techcrunch.com/2013/12/18/at-last-yahoo-introduces-flickr-embeds-to-formally-seed-content-outside-of-the-site/">Yahoo Introduces New Style Of Flickr Embeds To Seed Content Outside Of The ...</a> (TechCrunch)</p><p><a href="http://www.theverge.com/web/2013/12/19/5226740/flickr-adds-long-overdue-web-embeds">Flickr adds long overdue web embeds</a> (The Verge)</p><p><a href="http://thenextweb.com/insider/2013/12/19/flickr-now-lets-embed-photos-across-web/">Flickr Updates Photo Embedding on the Web</a> (The Next Web)</p><p>Explore: <a href="http://news.google.com/news/more?ncl=dC_iLMcWAPXZ4vMF6kkruFjnA9O6M&ned=us">17 additional articles.</a></p>