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How to upload photos to Instagram from your Mac

Instagram's social code encourages IGers to post photos shot on mobile, but now it's easier to cheat a little in the name of art. how to get real followers on instagram fastInstagram is a lightweight little Mac app that makes uploading to Instagram from your computer a dead-simple process that only requires a few clicks. The app blends less casual (i.e. non-smartphone) digital photography with the ease of mobile sharing apps, a breath of fresh air for those of us with a few months worth of un-uploaded DSLR photos sitting around.The best part is that Up for Instagram handles the compression and image processing stuff with aplomb, preserving the DSLR-level quality of your desktop image upload while porting it over to mobile. You can see my original photo (shot with a Canon 60D) on Flickr—the Up for Instagram version looks just as crisp.Up for Instagram will set you back $1.99 in the Mac App Store, but if you need this particular one thing done and done well, it's a small price to pay.

You wanna read the last sentence in that quote again

In other words, the people over at Instagram have their backs covered. They won’t waste a penny if you get in trouble. This is why you don’t want to get sued (other than, well, obvious reasons). how to get free instagram followers and likes entity that sues you decides to include Instagram in the lawsuit (which they probably will since it was their service you used), it is my understanding from this clause that you could end up paying for your lawyer AND Instagram’s lawyer. That is, in addition to any damages you owe for copyright infringement, should you be found guilty. Ouch? OUCH.Don’t take it from me, take it from Amanda of I Am Baker. She recently wrote a post on her blog about how she found accounts on Instagram who had taken photos from her website and posted them as their own. She didn’t get credit anywhere, and one of the pictures was even uploaded to an Instagram contest.The pictures got upwards of 24,000 “hearts” on Instagram. That’s 24,000 people that could’ve been directed to Amanda’s website so see her work, and were not. Long story short, she contacted both Instagram and the accounts that posted her picture to no avail. Instagram never responded, and l