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Social Media Overload - Sometimes Less is More

Posted by Micael Bogar on Jan 6, 2009

In December, fellow blogger on Social Media Today DJ Francis wrote a clever “Dear John” breaking up with his Twitter followers —or as he calls them “tweople.” While the letter was written in somewhat jest, the key theme was very much a valid issue that social media users face more and more. With Twitter in particular, as the site gets increasingly more popular, the utility of it wanes. DJ Francis points out the follow/follower volume ratio problem where the more people you follow, the more lost you become in the “noise” of it all. Fortunately, it is not all a… more

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Public Media 2.0 and the Obama Administration

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Jan 2, 2009

What should the Obama administration do to promote public media 2.0? One good idea, which the presidential transition team already appears to take seriously, is to vastly increase the broadband capacity of the country. The U.S. sadly lags many other advanced industrial countries in broadband, which is hampering a transition to a fully interactive media environment. Other good ideas surfaced in the transition team’s discussions, including some that we at the Center have passed on to the team. We strongly believe that tomorrow’s public media 2.0 will be fully interactive, and will be measured by its ability to generate publics… more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Public Performance Rights

Posted by Claire Darby on Jan 2, 2009

QUESTION Dear CSM: I’ve got a fair use question I’m hoping someone at the Center for Social Media can answer for me. We (the Gallaudet University Library) would like to purchase a DVD of the documentary The Greatest Silence: Rape in the Congo for our collection. Like most academic libraries it is not our practice to loan videos for public performances. We work closely with groups on campus (including dorm RAs) to ensure that they understand videos in the library collection are for classroom/education use only, and we monitor reserve use to ensure that students are not watching videos in… more

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Innovation in Focus Roundup

Posted by Micael Bogar on Dec 17, 2008

Over the past year, we have featured a range of innovative projects by public media outlets and their allies, including Link TV, PBS, PRX, ITVS, the Sundance Institute and the NBPC. Throughout this process, we have noticed that success in innovation comes when media makers take advantage of the disruptive nature of the transition to participatory media. Openness, inquisitiveness, and creativity have given them the chance to integrate new technologies and at the same time forge partnerships and collaborative projects in ways never possible before. In other words, we are seeing a movement to reinscribe the “public” in public media.… more

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Innovation in Focus: PRX 3.0

Posted by Jessica Clark on Dec 16, 2008

Each month, we highlight a forward-looking project by one of our partners in Ford’s Global Perspectives in a Digital Age initiative. This month, we’re checking out the new version of the Public Radio Exchange site, described by the Chicago Public Radio blog as “super swanky.” What accounts for such swank? PRX had already broken new ground by creating a convenient online marketplace that matches indendent producers with public and community radio stations across the country. The site also doubles as a community destination for fans and producers of cutting-edge audio. Now, PRX 3.0 offers new a set of new features,… more

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An interesting proposal for Obama’s CTO

Posted by Jessica Clark on Dec 12, 2008

In Politico Micah Sifry and Andrew Rasiej of the Personal Democracy Forum offer a series of suggestions for Obama’s forthcoming Chief Technology Officer, including this one: Citizen.gov: The CTO should be tasked with developing a government-wide online platform — call it Citizen.gov if you like — for civic engagement that connects Americans to each other to identify and solve problems. Citizen.gov would foster connections between all the public advocates, volunteers, community organizers and activated citizens who want to get to work rebuilding America. At a minimum, Citizen.gov would invite Americans to create their own “online citizenship account,” where they would… more

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We Media Game Changers Announced

Posted by Micael Bogar on Dec 11, 2008

We Media has officially announced its nine game changers. Congratulations to Twitter, Innocentive, The Knight Foundation, Ushahidi, Freewheelin, Zefrank, Yugo Nakamura, David Plouffe, and Social Vibe. From over 150 applicants, /wemedia.com/awards/judges/”>a panel of distinguished judgesnarrowed it down to 35 finalists and then chose the eight winners. They also gave the community a chance to decide and opened voting online for the special Community Award. The Community winner, Social Vibe, is an exciting opportunity to use social media as a way to raise money for good causes. They have created a new business model that brings together brand and cause marketing… more

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Have we reached the social media tipping point?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Dec 10, 2008

Blogger and blog analyst Peter Daou offers a postmortem of the role of participatory media in the ‘08 election on the Huffington Post: For the first time, we are thinking aloud unfettered and unfiltered by mass media gatekeepers. Events, information, words and deeds that a decade ago were discussed and contextualized statically in print or through the controlled funnel of television and radio, are now subjected to instantaneous interpretation and free-association by millions of citizens unencumbered by the media’s constraints, aided by the optional - and liberating - cloak of anonymity. This is transformative, not just because it is a… more

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The Masculinity Project

Posted by Micael Bogar on Dec 9, 2008

The National Black Programming Consortium has just released their Masculinity Project—a great new public media resource. The Website aims to redefine our notion of masculinity. It combines creative and provocative media with a chance to participate (via blogs, apps and a wiki) in a discussion about issues that profoundly shape and deform culture. There is a combination of professional and non-professional talents, and invites viewers to become part of the story. One short, Byron Hurt’s Barack and Curtis, makes unlikely connections between rapper 50 Cent and Barack Obama, which reveal common challenges facing African-American men. After viewing the film you… more

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Big shifts for public broadcasting on the horizon?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Dec 9, 2008

Steve Behrens and Dru Sefton of Current outline a series of proposed changes to the funding structure for public broadcasting in an article titled CPB Considers Expansive Options for Future of Public Media Funding. CPB board members are considering changing their name, possibly to the “Corporation for Public Media” APTS is working with CPB, PBS and NPR to “collectively define what public media is, and the services it can provide.” The National Federation of Community Broadcasters is joining up with groups like Free Press, Common Cause, the Media Access Project and the Media and Democracy Coalition to focus attention on… more

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The revival of “mass” media?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Dec 7, 2008

The Social Science Research Council has published an online forum on the role of communications studies in policymaking titled Making Communications Matter, which offers some interesting takes on the shifting context for public media. As the introductory essay notes, “There is manifest need for better understanding of changes in media and communications environments and the larger public spheres they structure. These dynamics are inevitably complex, and call into play relationships between old and new technologies, social practices, institutions, markets, and regulation.” Of particular note is an essay by Philip M. Napoli—an associate professor at Fordham University’s Graduate School of Business… more

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Our Role in an Open Government

Posted by Micael Bogar on Dec 4, 2008

Participatory Culture Foundation, one of our partners for our fifth annual Making Your Media Matter conference in February is working hard to create a new online infrastructure for producing and distributing public media called Miro. They are working to not only expand the field of open source video online globally through open source software creation and their translation service, they are also working to create local platforms to connect communities locally. Partnering up with Mozilla and Change Congress, their most recent project is a direct call to the new administration. In light of the recent elections, Americans have been promised… more

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UFVA Adopts Documentary Filmmakers’ Code of Best Practices in Fair Use

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Dec 1, 2008

The University Film and Video Association, which has endorsed the Documentary Filmmakers’ Satement of Best Practices in Fair Use, has now placed the Statement and language appropriate for course syllabi on its website. This not only makes it even easier for teachers in film programs across higher education to incorporate fair use into their teaching. It also offers the imprimatur of the national body representing film programs. more

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Burma VJ and Citizen Journalism: Pro-am Public Media

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Nov 30, 2008

One of my personal favorites at the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam was Burma VJ: Reporting from a Closed Country. It tracks the extraordinary work of Burmese citizen journalists who broke the story of the “Saffron Revolution,” as it is sometimes called—that is, the uprising against the generals of 2007. I wasn’t the only enthusiast, either. The film won both the IDFA awards 2008. The film, directed by Anders Østergaard, both shows you both the original material from which newscasts including at CNN and the BBC were drawn, and also explains how it was created. Through re-enactments of the… more

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Great Women at IDFA, Inspiring NextGen Public Media Makers

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Nov 30, 2008

For 21 years, the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam has been a place to watch an extraordinary range of documentary films, which are an item in most European cultural ministry’s budgets. More, it’s been a place to meet annually with far-flung colleagues, buy and sell both finished work and work in progress, and to learn about cutting-edge practices. So informationally IDFA has a drinking-from-a-fire-house quality, and we seek out themes to guide us through our experience. This year one theme stood out for me: great women, starting with the founder-director of the festival, Ally Derks. Derks is the unpretentious,… more

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European Filmmakers and Fair Use

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Nov 30, 2008

As U.S. documentary filmmakers have increasingly benefited from the copyright doctrine of fair use, European documentary filmmakers have cast about for how to similarly benefit. The trouble is, instead of the broad and flexible fair use doctrine, the many European nations instead have a variety of specific and inflexible exceptions and limitations. But even so, in November Europeans have figured out some first steps, showcased at the annual meeting of the International Documentary Film Festival in Amsterdam. With the assistance of the Center and the Washington College of Law, they participated in a European Union inquiry on exceptions and limitations… more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Using Found Archival Material

Posted by Claire Darby on Nov 30, 2008

QUESTION Dear CSM: I’m working on a movie that is part doc/part fiction, using the photos and letters of a man (who is now deceased) that were found in a photo album discovered in a second-hand store (like Goodwill). The photo album is not copyrighted, nor was it published. The man has been dead for about 14 years, and I’ve been unable to locate any of his family through a cursory internet search. Am I working with material that is usable? Thanks, John ANSWER Dear John, Everything is automatically granted a copyright if there is something tangible attached to it.… more

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Inflection point: investing in public media 2.0

Posted by Jessica Clark on Nov 29, 2008

The nation is in a moment of intense speculation, as the market enters uncharted territory and we transition from one administration to the next. It’s a window in which big, game-changing ideas might catch hold as both investors and policymakers seek new directions. In campaign speeches, President-elect Obama has expressed support for a “public media 2.0,” but so far has provided few details. Here are a few suggestions about the future of public media that I’ve encountered recently—I’d be interested to hear others: Toward a National Journalism Foundation: David Sasaki of Rising Voices—a training site for international citizen journalists attached… more

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Bruce Gilden’s Visit -A Night of Storytelling

Posted by Leena Jayaswal on Nov 28, 2008

On Wednesday November 19th Magnum Photographer Bruce Gilden spoke to a crowd filled theater as part of the Centers’ Camera as Catalyst lecture series. Topics included Coney Island, Fashion photography, Haiti and the beginnings of his next project- foreclosures. At first I did not know what to expect. I watched a clip of Bruce that was on YouTube as the camera operator followed him on the streets of NY while Gilden photographed. Gilden shoots with a 28mm wide -angle lens and does so purposely. Using the famous quote by Robert Capa, “If your pictures aren’t good enough, you’re not close… more

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The Good Sheet: Have yourself a hybrid media holiday

Posted by Jessica Clark on Nov 27, 2008

This morning, as we walked to Philadelphia’s Thanksgiving parade, we stopped at Starbucks (yes we should have stopped at the independent coffee shop, but the line there was too long.) There I picked up a copy of the Good Sheet, a weekly newsprint supplement produced by Good magazine and distributed exclusively at Starbucks. Printed on a single page that’s folded into a handy point-of-purchase-sized square, the Good Sheet is a clever and concentrated example of hybrid, public-minded media, combining commercialism and philanthropy, eye-catching design with hard data, print distribution with online resources. This edition, titled “Holiday Economy,” was the last… more

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Call for Papers: IP/Gender:  Mapping the Connections

Posted by Micael Bogar on Nov 27, 2008

6th Annual Symposium April 24, 2009 Special Theme: Female Fan Cultures and Intellectual Property Deadline for submission of abstracts: December 19, 2008 The 6th Annual Symposium on “IP/Gender: Mapping the Connections” seeks papers on female subcultures and their relationship to intellectual property and copyright regimes, with a particular emphasis on fan works and culture. Appropriate topics include: fan arts, including fan fiction, arts, music, filk, crafts, and vids; and fan communities: including clubs, forums, lists, websites, wikis, discussion groups, rec sites, and other creative, celebratory, or analytical communities. Introduction & Context Historically, the study of subcultures has been biased toward… more

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Who is doing social media training?

Posted by JD Lasica on Nov 17, 2008

A handful of us in the social media space are moving ahead with the idea of planning a series of Social Media Innovation Camps around the country. Two weeks ago Jessica Clark posed the question, Could “Social Media Innovation Camps” help power ground-up public media? We’re still at the stage of gauging reaction (positive so far) and garnering input on similar initiatives (sparse so far. So I thought I’d share what I’ve uncovered to date. The notion of increasing civic engagement through social media is not a new one, but it has taken on widely differing forms depending on which… more

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Where Hostile Governments Meet Public Media

Posted by Micael Bogar on Nov 14, 2008

How can public media develop in regions where governments are hostile to press freedoms? A look at emerging projects in the South Caucasus—a region of independent former Soviet countries linked both geographically and historically—offers some clues. We have created a list of five notable public media projects: Institute for Reporter’s Freedom and Safety, Caucasus Center of Peacemaking Initiatives, Internews, the South Caucasus blogosphere and lastly everyone’s favorite Facebook. Not quite initiated into the EU like the Baltic states, but not as far east as Borat’s Kazakhstan, the South Caucasus countries stand at the crossroads of capitalist western ideals and the… more

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Crowdsourcing the first 100 days

Posted by Jessica Clark on Nov 13, 2008

Now that the election’s finally over, all the energy that was poured into making social media for the campaigns is being redirected to citizen-driven agenda setting. Here are just a few current projects; expect this trend to escalate: The White House 2: Jim Gilliam of Brave New Films has struck out on his own to develop a site that allows citizens to “set the nation’s priorities.” Any U.S.citizen can join the site, suggest directions for the new administration, and endorse those submitted by others. Today’s top priority is “Invest in clean energy and create 5 million new green jobs.” ObamaCTO:… more

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Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Publication!

Posted by Micael Bogar on Nov 11, 2008

Here at the Center for Social Media, and in conjunction with the Program on Information, Justice and Intellectual Property, and the Media Education Lab, we are proud to announce our Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Media Literacy Education. Check out the article written by Jeff Young at the Chronicle for Higher Education and now you can get your very own copy here. Share it with any educators you know. This is a perfect tool to inspire and enable teachers and students to use copyrighted material in the classroom when it’s appropriate and necessary. more

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Vote on Every Human Has Rights Media Awards

Posted by Micael Bogar on Nov 10, 2008

Our friends at Internews have announced a great public media project titled Every Human Has Rights Media Awards, organized on the occasion of the 60th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UDHR). They have asked the public to vote on the Public Prize. Internews explains here: Vote online to select the most eye-opening report, from a selection of 30 winning stories from journalists and bloggers around the world. The Public Prize will be awarded on 6 December 2008 in Paris, France during a ceremony supported by The Elders, the EHHR campaign for the 60th Anniversary of the UDHR.… more

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What do “white spaces” mean for public media?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Nov 10, 2008

Over the past week, media and consumer advocates have been trumpeting an FCC decision to make so-called “white spaces”—buffer zones in the communications spectrum between broadcast TV channels—available for providing wireless broadband access. The newly available spectrum is being called “WiFi on steroids.” It would allow for higher transmission speeds, and because the signal is stronger, could reach rural and mountainous regions that are poorly served by current broadband technologies. What’s more, the spectrum will be unlicensed—which means that many more broadband providers could enter the market, lowering consumer costs, offering us the promise of wireless access via a range… more

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Did These Mashups Use “Fair Use”? You Decide!

Posted by Claire Darby on Nov 7, 2008

For filmmakers working in the digital era, understanding how to use fair use to incorporate online video and other sources into your work is a critical skill. In AU Professor Larry Engel’s Advanced Documentary Technique class, ten grad students used the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video to try to create mashup videos that uphold the Fair Use principles. Take a look at the videos and decide how well (or not) they did! Post your comments and thoughts below. more

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So You Think You Can Be President?

Posted by Alison Hanold on Nov 4, 2008

This campaign season has been lively, intense, and the inspiration for a wide array of online video. We’ve spent nearly a year tracking political remix online, and showing how online video creators are exercising fair use of copyrighted material in order to create powerful and innovative commentary on the political landscape. The evolution of online video has become nationally relevant with this election season, and to commemorate election day, we have one last video to share. Jonathan McIntosh’s So You Think You Can Be President? This video cuts together the presidential debates with commentary from the judges of the Fox… more

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Should Online Video Look More like Wikipedia or TV?

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Nov 3, 2008

A clutch of people concerned with the future of online video, including Center director Pat Aufderheide, met at Yale on October 31 to talk about what it would take to make creating an online video look a little more like, say, creating a text document to share on the Internet. Turns out that online video faces serious challenges, if it’s to become a tool for participatory public media rather than just more TV. Most online video software and related programs (such as editing programs) have been developed by companies as proprietary products for specific purposes, rather than in the open-ended,… more

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Twitter Vote Report: Dynamic Public Media

Posted by Jessica Clark on Nov 3, 2008

After reporting on the surge in crowdsourced poll monitoring efforts, I decided to track the development of the Twitter Vote Report Project more closely in a piece in The American Prospect. The project, which invites voters to “tweet” about their voting experiences, has come together with remarkable speed. It’s also notable that public broadcasters have been key partners in building out the project. NPR staffers have been collaborating directly on Twitter Vote Report development. “We only have so many reporters who are able to tackle voting irregularities, and they’re going to be working like mad,” explained NPR Social Media Strategist… more

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Innovation in Focus: Diversity Beat Election Reports

Posted by Claire Darby on Oct 31, 2008

As this year’s election has heated up, so has attention to how related issues affect particular publics. Nowhere has this been more true than at Native American Public Telecommunications (NAPT), where they have teamed up with National Native News (NNN) to offer special incentives to journalists to cover election issues in Indian Country. NAPT, the oldest of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s Minority Consortia, is committed to developing, producing and distributing radio, television and online programming that is created for and by Native Americans. They also provide training opportunities to develop the skills of American Indians and Alaska Natives to… more

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A media horror story for Halloween!

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 31, 2008

An interesting but ultimately creepy exploration into where social media trends are leading us… more

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Could “Social Media Innovation Camps” help power ground-up public media?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 30, 2008

Earlier this week, JD Lasica of OurMedia posted a request on our blog for accounts of how media makers and technologists are being trained to produce public-minded social media. He asked because there’s a gap—while there are lots of national conferences where researchers and media makers trade best practices, there aren’t many ways for that information to trickle down to communities. So, we’ve been brainstorming a concept with Lasica and others: creating a series of traveling Social Media Innovation Camps—a nationwide series of educational bootcamps focused on increasing civic engagement through social media. The effort would be undergirded by an… more

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Activating the Archive

Posted by Barbara Abrash   on Oct 30, 2008

Last week I visited Chimpanzee Productions for a sneak preview of an unprecedented experiment in marrying documentary filmmaking with multiplatform social networking. Through a Lens Darkly: Black Photographers and the Emergence of a People is a 2-hour documentary film and multimedia outreach project, Inspired by Dr. Deborah Willis’ path-breaking book, Reflections in Black: A History of Black Photographers, 1840 to the Present (Norton, 2000), that reveals the ways in which African American photographers – known and unknown – have constructed representations of themselves and their social, political, and aesthetic worlds. In what filmmaker and president of Chimpanzee Productions, Thomas Allen… more

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Public Anthro Conference

Posted by Micael Bogar on Oct 29, 2008

On October 31st and November 1st at American University the Anthropology department is hosting the more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Posting news clips on the internet

Posted by Claire Darby on Oct 28, 2008

QUESTION Dear CSM: In order to underline the importance a food safety issue, I’d like to highlight pertinent media coverage by posting tv news clips that cover the topic on our website. The source would have full credit and remain on our site only for 4-6 weeks - can this be done? Do I have to get permission from the tv stations? Thanks, Bronacos ANSWER Dear Bronacos: Context is everything in fair use. If you are repeating news in order to spread the news, you are re-using material for the same purpose that it was originally designed for. The owners,… more

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Civic media training

Posted by JD Lasica on Oct 24, 2008

Everybody is doing social media these days. But who’s doing social media training? More specifically, training sessions for public media—or if you will, public-spirited social media or civic media. Who’s holding workshops? What kind of information are you including that’s specific to the public interest, or civic action? Who are your primary target communities for these workshops? Please post your comments below, or email me at jdlasica[at]gmail[.]com. more

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Journalistic principles

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Oct 24, 2008

/www.american.edu/sis/” target=blank>American University’s School of International Service), was trying to imagine the entities that could issue and publicize standards; however, he said, the example of the Center for Social Media’s more

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Crowdsourcing poll-watching

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 23, 2008

As concerns about miscounted or undercounted votes have begun to swirl around, a number of groups are launching crowd-powered poll monitoring projects: On Twitter, Andy Carvin from NPR notes that he’s testing out a tag—#votereport—that Twitterers can use to report voting irregularities. (UPDATE: More information on this effort—which will include a map featuring real-time tweets re. voting problems—here.) Citizen journalism project The Uptake is planning to send reporters with live streaming camera phones to a number of battleground states to cover the polls for their Vote Chasers project. In this video they interview voters at crowded early voting sites in… more

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Campaign videos—fair use, not infringement

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Oct 20, 2008

Political campaigns have been busily clipping out snippets of news coverage and building them into campaign videos. And the TV networks have just as busily been sending demands to YouTube and other video sites to remove those videos as violation of copyright. Only problem: they’re not violations of copyright. They’re fully within the umbrella of fair use—the right to use copyrighted material without permission or payment in some cases. Learn more at the /www.eff.org/files/filenode/ip_freespeech/letter+to+YouTube.pdf” target=blank”> letters to the networks and to Youtube suggesting that they recognize the law and even use resources such as the Center’s Code of Best Practices… more

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Talking Points Memo: from participatory to public media?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 20, 2008

A transcript of Joshua Micah Marshall’s keynote speech at the inaugural symposium of the Park Center for Independent Media offers some interesting clues about how open online platforms allow individual media producers to serve public media functions. Marshall started his blog, Talking Points Memo in 2000, during the Florida recount. At the time, he was the Washington editor of The American Prospect, a DC-based liberal magazine of opinion—a job he soon quit to freelance. The blog had a personal tone and a partisan bent, and started out very much as a one-man shop. But by 2004, Marshall had learned that… more

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Torturing Democracy postscript: WETA to air controversial documentary tonight

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 17, 2008

According to PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler, after the New York Times covered the controversy, officials at WETA announced late yesterday that they’d run the film today. Getler explains: Normally, programs that are approved by PBS are distributed to all affiliates as part of the National Programming Service. The Times story pointed out, however, that PBS officials said that no national air date was available for this program until Jan. 21, 2009, a day after a new administration is sworn in, and that the film’s producer, Sherry Jones, had rejected that offer. Jones, the Times reported, was appealing to individual stations… more

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Public broadcasting stations pick up the ball on Torturing Democracy

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 17, 2008

Last night, a number of public broadcast stations around the country began airing Torturing Democracy, a documentary exploring harsh interrogation of prisoners in U.S. custody. But Current notes that PBS has not responded to inquiries about why they refused to run the film nationally until after the current adminstration leaves office. The controversy broke on Tina Brown’s new meta-media site, The Daily Beast, where Scott Horton writes: No one who has seen this dramatic documentary is likely to buy into the “rotten apples” narrative any longer. Which may help explain why PBS appears to be suffering from acute corporate indigestion… more

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Open debates: linking copyright and the new public media

Posted by Jessica Clark on Oct 16, 2008

Last night’s tense exchange between presidential candidates John McCain and Barack Obama marked the end of an extraordinary cycle of debates. The sheer number, combined with the unusual amount of public interest, forced organizers to innovate new forms and provide more openings for interaction. Now, a bipartisan coalition of newsmakers, media critics and bloggers are demanding permanent change to make the debates more “of the people,” in part by asking the networks to release debate footage into the public domain to be used for commentary and exchange on online platforms. In a letter to the candidates, the coalition proposed two… more

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Submit your film to the Media That Matters Film Festival!

Posted by Micael Bogar on Oct 10, 2008

Submit your film now for the chance to be one of the final twelve jury-selected films and become part of our outreach and distribution efforts to create social change through film. Following a New York City Premiere, Awards Ceremony and industry networking events in June 2009, your film will take part in the Media That Matters international, multi-platform campaign with DVD distribution, broadcasts, streaming and hundreds of screenings across the globe! We create accompanying discussion guides and screening materials to promote conversation and encourage educators, activists and organizations alike to Take Action around your film. All finalists will be awarded… more

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A Case of Selective Censorship

Posted by Micael Bogar on Oct 9, 2008

The recent pull of Saturday Night Lives’ Bailout skit has got us wondering — why did NBC choose to upload their popular Palin skits on several massive online video platforms (hulu.com, youtube.com) but in the same week, aggressively clean the web of this Bailout skit? Some have argued that this was done in fear that the Bailout skit would sharpen criticism of democrats and therefore hurt Barack Obama’s campaign. A closer look at the details offers the explanation of a potential law suit from “victims” of the bailout skit. The underlying issue for us at the Center, however, is the… more

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Wikipedia’s Town Hall on Sarah Palin Techn

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Oct 8, 2008

Some time ago, I argued that you could see Wikipedia as “the new town hall.” Wikipedia entries aren’t stable encyclopedia entries, even if they look like it; they are active, constantly morphing sites of public discussion about how to understand something. Others have made this point repeatedly, and probably Yochai Benkler has put the frame around the argument most authoritatively, in his Wealth of Networks. Now, take a look at the Sarah Palin entry on Wikipedia. Thanks to an analysis by Dan Cohen, the brilliant director of George Mason University’s Center for History and New Media, he shows 500 entries… more

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Blogosphere Blasts the Bailout Bill

Posted by Micael Bogar on Oct 3, 2008

So, it’s official, the House passed the bailout. It’s also official that the financial crisis has generated a groundswell of public media responses. These have ranged widely, from citizen initiatives to professionally produced tools from commercial outlets. According to Micah Siftry of the Personal Democracy Forum, the networked public sphere is rising and taking this bull by the horns. “Whatever happens with the bailout bill, I don’t think this genie can be stuffed back into the bottle. An old way of doing things is dying, and the new one being born isn’t quite in place yet,” he writes on an… more

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Fair Use Clip Discussion

Posted by Maura Ugarte on Sep 30, 2008

Over the course of three days, we are hosting a discussion on whether the clips posted below could be considered fair use of somebody else’s copyrighted material based on the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video. This clip was pulled from Kartemquin’s In The Family, a documentary film about one woman’s journey after learning she has the gene associated with breast cancer. Watch for audio clips and a CNN segment about Myriad Genetics. You may want to look at The Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use for a code that is more tailored… more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Do Cable and the Networks Even Accept Fair Use?

Posted by Claire Darby on Sep 30, 2008

QUESTION Dear CSM: If a filmmaker claims fair use for some material, what is the current state of affairs at the various broadcast/cable/satellite outfits on actually airing something with copyrighted material that has not been licensed? (i.e., can you actually get it on the air at PBS, ABC, NBC, CBS, HBO, History Channel, etc.?) Thanks, Rick ANSWER Dear Rick: Can you actually get it on the air at PBS, ABC, NBC, CBS, HBO, History Channel, etc.? There actually has been broad acceptance of the Statement of Best Practices for Fair Use in Documentary Film throughout the industry. PBS now uses… more

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Live from Main Street: Independent outlets band together to hone in on election issues

Posted by Jasmine Touton on Sep 29, 2008

Flip to a primetime news show or crack open a newspaper and chances are you’ll see a variation on the day’s news story surrounding the 2008 presidential election: Mr. Future President attends this church. Mr. Future President had that medical examination yesterday. Lipstick. But fifty independent media organizations and one popular radio host have banded together to shout over the ruckus of news media that have so little to say about so much, choosing instead to invite regular people onto the soap box to share their opinions about key issues. Host Laura Flanders, the personality behind GRITtv and author of… more

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Innovation in Focus: Link TV’s What Change Looks Like

Posted by Claire Darby on Sep 26, 2008

As the November 4th presidential election date nears, candidates on both sides have made a call for change their rallying cry. With gas prices going through the roof, the economy in turmoil and no end in sight for the war in Iraq, Americans and others from all over the world are clear that change is necessary, but less clear on how it will happen. What Change Looks Like, a new multi-media effort from Link TV, is examining people who are effecting change in their communities, revealing how they are implementing their ideas and how their actions will affect us all.… more

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Social Media Changes the Face of Debate

Posted by Micael Bogar on Sep 26, 2008

The presidential debates are coming! This year, they are sparking unprecedented forms of social media. Here at the CSM we’ve made a list of our top three social media debate initiatives. Check them out and get involved in one. 1. MYSPACE’s MYDEBATE: Just due to the sheer number of users (over 6,000 and counting) and beautiful design this takes the number one spot. This interactive program gets you prepped on the issues to be discussed, allows you to identify your favorite candidate and will have a live chat available during the debates for users to interact. 2. Debatepedia: This wiki,… more

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A Mosaic of Practices: Public Media and Participatory Culture

Posted by Claire Darby on Sep 23, 2008

Center Advisory board member Helen de Michiel has written a thoughtful meditation, in the latest Afterimage, from the viewpoint of a longstanding nonfiction filmmaker, on the possibilities of an ever-more participatory and interactive environment for her work. While finding it challenging, she also celebrates its opportunities: “Rather than feeling the panic of being caught in a riptide of change, nonfiction filmmakers have more to gain than ever before by working more deeply with collaborative and participatory models, and experimenting within th eprolieration of interactive, blurring, mobile and untamed places where media can now seep.” She heralds organizations such as Active… more

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Documentary Film + Direct Action = Social Media

Posted by Micael Bogar on Sep 17, 2008

What happens when you see a documentary film that moves you? Do you feel sad? Helpless? It is important to remember that social justice documentary films are a form of social media that require follow up to be fully effective. In order to take the leap from informed yet helpless spectator to empowered social media activist, it requires further investigation and action. At the Death House Door , one of the films chosen for our Human Rights Film Series , is a particularly poignant example of a way to take information from a film and act on it. At themore

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Harry Potter and Fair Use

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Sep 14, 2008

Once upon a time, a man named Vander Ark was devoted to the world of Harry Potter. He created an online reference source, often quoting or paraphrasing directly from J.K. Rowling’s books; the source was widely appreciated, including by Rowling herself. Then he decided to publish it in book form. J.K. Rowling sued, and he defended himself with the copyright doctrine of fair use. And he lost. The judge found that he had taken too much of Rowling’s creative work. The decision went against a fair user, but it wasn’t a decision that was all bad for fair users. In… more

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Total Recut Video Remix Challange Winners Announced

Posted by Micael Bogar on Sep 12, 2008

We were happy to participate in the Total Recut Video Remix Challenge. Just recently the winners were announced. You can check out their impressive work at TotalRecut.com First place winner DJ Le Clown from France will receive a laptop for his remix ‘Xmas in New York City,’ embedded here. Second Place winner Jata Haan from the Netherlands will receive a digital camcorder for her remix, ‘Composition.’ Third Place winner Ricardo Carrion from Switzerland will receive a digital media player for his remix ‘Remix Culture II.’ Here’s what Total Recut Video had to say about the event: Those who submitted videos… more

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Knight Batten Awards for Innovation showcase public media innovators

Posted by Micael Bogar on Sep 12, 2008

On Wednesday July 10th at the National Press Club, in collaboration with J-Lab, the Knight Foundation presented eight awards for excellence in media innovation. Center for Social Media staffers were awed by the hard work, creativity and innovation of the winners. Wikiscanner, which won the top award of $10,000, was launched in 2007 and allows users to review edits made on Wikipedia. The information available on Wikiscanner is vast, but if you’re simply curious to check out the /wired.reddit.com/wikidgame/?s=top/”> “most salacious edits” you can do that. Wikiscanner users who find strange edits are encouraged to write an article about it… more

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Public Media Prototypes: The I-Witness Video Example

Posted by Claire Darby on Sep 10, 2008

The I-Witness Video Collective, which records police actions at demonstrations, has made some real impact with its citizen-surveillance work. At the 2004 Republican National Convention, video that I-Witness shot of the interactions between protesters and police directly led to charges being dropped against hundreds of activists who had been wrongfully arrested on the false testimony of police officers. But at this year’s Republican National Convention, their mission turned personal when the house where they were staying was surrounded and eventually raided by police, who handcuffed them and searched their belongings without a valid search warrant. Here at CSM we’ve been… more

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Remixing the RNC

Posted by Alison Hanold on Sep 8, 2008

In June Stephen Colbert viewed McCain’s delivery of a speech in front of a green screen as a request for mashup artists and remixers to “make McCain exciting.” (A green screen for those of you less tech- savvy is a mashup-makers dream come true, allowing artists to add a backdrop of nearly anything they can dream up, or rather “mash up.”) The result was a collection of funny, poignant, and often critical videos drawing attention to how out of touch McCain is with online culture. It is no surprise then that remixers have risen to the challenge of remixing the… more

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Are you a public media “game changer”?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Sep 8, 2008

Just one week is left to nominate yourself or your favorite public media project for the We Media Game Changers Awards, which “recognize people, projects, ideas and organizations leading change and inspiring a better world through media.” Winners will be recognized at the annual We Media conference, which takes place in Miami in late February.The conference has become an annual hub for innovators from different sectors to meet and share ideas about how media can make change, and has spawned an online community that matches media makers and entrepreneurs from different industries across a range of skills and interests. As… more

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Innovation in Focus:  ITVS’ Digital Survey Report

Posted by Micael Bogar on Sep 2, 2008

New distribution technologies such as Snag Films and social networking tools such as Facebook and Twitter could help social-issue filmmakers reach viewers and build networks of public action. But will they? And if they do, does anyone still need public broadcasting? According to a recent survey, the answers are yes, and yes. Independent Television Service (ITVS), public broadcasting’s production entity for “innovative programming for underserved audiences,” has for years reliably offered filmmakers market information that helps them adapt to a changing marketplace (sometimes in conjunction with the Center: go to the New Deal report and the New Deal 1.5 report).… more

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Center for Social Media and the University Film and Video Association Conference

Posted by Maura Ugarte on Sep 2, 2008

We had two great fair use events at UFVA’s conference in Colorado Springs this year. The Center’s Pat Aufderheide and Maura Ugarte presented on the panel Copyright, Fair Use, and Production Teaching: What You Need to Know. Pat discussed the new Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video, and Maura presented information on incorporating a fair use module in the classroom. The other panelists included Michael Donaldson of Donaldson and Hart, and Peter Decherney from the University of Pennsylvania. Michael discussed how the Statement of Best Practices changed his law practice, and Peter talked not only about… more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Footage from a Video Game

Posted by Claire Darby on Sep 2, 2008

QUESTION Dear CSM: I am making a movie about massively multiplayer online role playing games (mmorpgs). The movie is an exploration and critique on their social and personal importance in today’s society. I have been trying to get permission from the game companies to use footage that I shot in the game (machinima). As of yet only one company has given me permission to use images from their game. The rest of the major game companies have not so much as answered a single one of my inquiries. So far we use a good amount of machinima from inside the… more

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Update: The Hurricane Information Center

Posted by Jessica Clark on Sep 2, 2008

Thankfully, Gustav has racheted down, but with more storms on the way, the extraordinary social media community that emerged over the long weekend to provide information to storm victims and volunteers has expanded its focus. Now dubbed the Hurricane Information Center, the network currently has more than 540 members, all creating and debating communications tools for disaster response. The network demonstrates the power and flexibility of using commercial Web 2.0 platforms for the public good. Built using Ning—a “white label” site for creating free customized social networks—the site includes a tailored news feed from Google News, a Google Map displaying… more

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Gustav Wiki: rapid-response social media for natural disasters

Posted by Jessica Clark on Aug 31, 2008

Finding it excruciating to watch Gustav creep ever-closer to the Gulf? Channel your anxiety into knowledge and action over at the Gustav Wiki, where volunteers are tracking the storm and aggregating resources for assistance, relocation, donations, volunteer housing, ham radio communications and more. The wiki was based on a similar shared resource built during Hurricane Katrina; volunteers are needed to help update info. While the Wiki hosts static content, real-time online discussions are happening over at the Gustav Information Center, a social network created by NPR’s Andy Carvin. Members are sharing strategies for tracking the situation on the ground, and… more

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NPR API: Open-Sourcing Syndication?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Aug 28, 2008

In late July, NPR took an unprecedented leap into open-source development by releasing its application programming interface (API), which enables users to create applications featuring content from an archive of NPR programs dating back to 1995. This move makes it much easier for NPR content to migrate across platforms—featured widgets based on the API include players for iPhones, Facebook, and Google’s Desktop Sidebar. It also offers developers the chance to search and display targeted NPR stories on their own sites through various widget-based interfaces. NPR is among a crop of news organizations—including Reuters and the New York Times—that are exchanging… more

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A Peek Under the Hood of the NPR API

Posted by John Tynan on Aug 28, 2008

Public broadcasting is in a moment of experimentation, moving beyond traditional broadcast platforms and structures and trying to reach publics where they live and work, through issues that they care about. Large structural innovations—like the release of the NPR application programming interface (API) in late July—are combining with experimentation by stations, staffers and audiences to create new uses for public media content. An open API is a wonderful thing for making content public: it provides a simple way to query an online database and extract things from it for display. An open API allows anyone to access, reuse, and “mash… more

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“Let’s Go Crazy” lawsuit results in fair use victory

Posted by Alison Hanold on Aug 27, 2008

In the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video,a team of legal experts and media scholars judged the incidental use of copyrighted material to be an eligible form of fair use. It seems that the courts agree. In a recent lawsuit filed by Universal Music against a woman who posted a video of her child running around her house while the Prince song “Let’s Go Crazy” played in the background, a federal judge ruled that copyright owners should consider fair use before filing any copyright infringement complaints. Below is more from Wired.com: The 10-page decision (.pdf) came… more

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A New Look for the Website

Posted by Claire Darby on Aug 25, 2008

You might have noticed that our website is looking a little bit different these days. In the next few months, we will be conducting a major re-evaluation and re-design of the website, but in the meantime, we’ll be making some small tweaks to the current layout and design. Please forgive the small shifts and changes, and we hope you’ll share with us your thoughts (in the comment section below) about how we can make the new site even more innovative, exciting and interesting! more

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Fair Use Muscle-Flexing in Academia, over Kids’ Fashion Ads

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Aug 20, 2008

Colleague Chris Boulton, a student of the moral implications of popular culture, is also a warrior for the copyright rights of new creators. He’s among the supporters of the SPARC Author Addendum; created by Creative Commons and SPARC, it’s a clause attached to the license academics sign with any publishing house that allows the authors to retain certain key rights (rights usually denied by publishers) and ensure a broader distribution of their work. Whereas usually these publishers are absolutely rigid, Chris and his fellow authors report that they just got the publisher of an academic journal to agree to the… more

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Snag Films Creates Broader Audience for Documentaries

Posted by Claire Darby on Aug 20, 2008

Documentary filmmaking has never been for the faint of heart. After a struggle to find funding to get your film made, countless hours of research and filming, and the painstaking process of editing your film to say exactly what you want, you still have yet to guarantee that anyone will ever see it. And with fewer documentary films successfully finding theatrical release, finding an audience for your film has never been tougher. Until now. Newly launched website Snag Films brings film distribution to the virtual realm and creates a world-wide audience for the documentary films it features. How it works… more

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Pubcasters and community engagement

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Aug 18, 2008

Whether you’re in public broadcasting or not, it’s worth it to take a look at the just-posted remarks of National Center for Outreach director Maria Alvarez Stroud on trends in community engagement (made at the Public Radio Development and Marketing Conference), are fascinating. She takes note of several hot trends, including corporate social responsibility, and says, “One of public broadcasting’s greatest assets is our foundation of rich and varied relationships with citizens. While corporations may be seizing community engagement as an opportunity to sell, it is our job after all is to keep it real, to keep it focused on… more

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DRP beta tests environmental public media for developing countries

Posted by Jasmine Touton on Aug 12, 2008

Newsflash: Swedish-based CleanCook designs a stove that burns on ethanol from molasses instead of gas. Scientists create an enzyme spray to harden a dirt road, eliminating the need for asphalt. Kids can now swing and spin on merry-go-rounds, generating enough power for an entire village. Sound like good news? All of these environmental successes are happening right now. A new project by Developing Radio Partners (DRP) hopes to bring citizens of developing countries this “news-you-can-use” via FM radio in order to improve quality of living and efficiency of resources. DRP is a nonprofit that seeks to better communities by helping… more

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New CSM field report: How well did “Why Democracy?” collaboration work?

Posted by Greg Fitzpatrick on Aug 7, 2008

In 2008, the Center for Social Media is producing a series of field reports analyzing innovative public media projects. This third installment in the series demonstrates the opportunities and challenges that come with engaging publics on a worldwide scale. “Why Democracy?” is an ambitious and ongoing international public broadcasting collaboration designed to spur a global conversation. The project was built around the coordinated broadcast of a core of 10 feature-length documentary films, each of which present views on democracy in various cultural and political contexts. Among these award-winning films is Alex Gibney’s Taxi to the Darkside—the 2008 Oscar winner for… more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Using Quotations

Posted by Claire Darby on Aug 3, 2008

QUESTION Dear CSM: We are currently putting together our first documentary. We have been very careful to get releases for interviews we have conducted and from people and locations we have filmed at. We have reviewed your website in this process and it has been very useful. We do have a question, however. We would like to make use of some text quotations in the course of the documentary. In most cases these are no more than one sentence. Many have been found on internet quotation sites - some are from sources that were written long ago and others are… more

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Innovation in Focus: PBS Vote 2008

Posted by Claire Darby on Aug 3, 2008

In one of the longest and most highly-anticipated build-ups to a presidential election in years, PBS has launched a website that aggregates and highlights the best public media coverage of the 2008 election. By gathering video, news, and online tools from national programs and local stations, PBS Vote 2008 can bring in-depth election-related content from PBS’ trusted news and public affairs producers to light in a new way. Drawing on a variety of news stories, video, online tools and user comments from public television and public radio sites across the nation, Vote 2008 is a collection of everything election-related that… more

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The “commentocracy” and the public

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jul 25, 2008

Reading an interesting piece on Politico about the struggles and successes that bloggers and online publications are having with their discussion boards. Reporter Daniel Libit writes: Across the Web, political sites (along with those dedicated to other mainstream distractions like music, culture and sports) are accumulating such a mass of reader responses that it is changing the very nature of the online exchange. Unique commenting communities, cultures and hierarchies have formed at various sites, distinguished from one another by the province’s ideology, protocol and professionalism. Web sites ranging from the smallest of blogs straight through to The New York Timesmore

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Beyond Broadcast: ripples in the pond

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jul 18, 2008

It’s been a month since Beyond Broadcast, and lots of positive feedback has been filtering in, both from public broadcasters and from cutting-edge makers of media for public knowledge and action. Current, which reports on the pubcasting industry, ran a long and thoughtful feature on the event. As the story notes, keynote speaker Larry Irving made a splash with his remarks on policy, diversity and innovation. We’ve since received requests for copies of Irving’s remarks to distribute within public broadcasting organizations. The research that Diane Mermigas conducted on public media business models for Beyond Broadcast has also made waves; Interim… more

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Political Remixers and Fair Use Best Practices

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Jul 10, 2008

I just had an invigorating talk with amazing New York remix artist Jonathan McIntosh, who is rapidly circulating the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video to fellow artists. (He was in Chicago working with high school kids at Mindy Faber’s Fair Use Remix Institute, who were the first–ever group to put the Code to use. I also got to speak with them, via Skype.) Jonathan, who curated a section on political remixes for the DIY conference, believes that political remixers badly need the Code of Best Practices, because they want their work to circulate widely as… more

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Announcing the release of the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video

Posted by Alison Hanold on Jul 7, 2008

Remixes, mashups, fan tributes and other creative work burgeoning in online video often use copyrighted material without permission or payment. When is it fair to do so? In many cases, creators can employ fair use, a key feature of copyright law. Today marks the release of the Center’s newest publication, the Code of Best Practices in Fair Use for Online Video. Our latest effort in promoting fair use practices among media makers, the code focuses on the still-evolving world of online video, and will help to protect creators from automatic censorship that results from copyright filtering. The Code of Bestmore

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Relive Beyond Broadcast with our Multimedia Rapporteur’s Report

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jul 5, 2008

Couldn’t make it to DC on June 17? Not to worry: the Beyond Broadcast ‘08 Rapporteur’s Report offers the high points from the day, plus audio and video of both speakers and multimedia presentations. Don’t miss it! more

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Fair Use Question of the Month: Incidental Use

Posted by Claire Darby on Jul 3, 2008

QUESTION: Dear CSM: I’m editing a documentary about an aspiring young football player. An interview occurs in a hotel room, where he happens to be watching an NFL game on broadcast TV. In referencing the Documentary Filmmaker’s Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use—in particular the section about capturing copyrighted media in the process of filming something else and the section on when the captured content doesn’t constitute the scene’s primary focus of interest—I feel comfortable that when the TV and the game appear in the background, it’s fair use. But when the filmmaker captured close-up material of the copyrighted… more

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Public engagement and documentary at Silverdocs

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Jul 2, 2008

Every year, there’s more to learn than you can absorb at Silverdocs, between the conference, which is organized by Diana Ingraham of US Independents, and the superb curating, by Sky Sitney. One of my conference faves was the workshop that Dennis Palmieri from Independent Television Service (ITVS) ran about outreach strategies. He linked goals (start a conversation, see action, change the world) with strategies, tactics and types of partners. If you didn’t make it, his Powerpoint is here. Also, over on the moviegoing side of the festival, my personal favorite won the top prize, the Sterling US Feature award. Scott… more

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Public TV’s Future at Silverdocs

Posted by Patricia Aufderheide on Jul 1, 2008

Will public TV survive into an era when everyone is a digital native? That was the question of the day at a panel I chaired at the conference the Silverdocs film festival (aka SILVERDOCS AFI/Discovery Channel Documentary Festival) hosts every year. Answer? Probably, with some work. PBS’s John Boland believes PBS is not only ready but in the forefront of change, with in-place deals for iTunes and other digital distribution for independent work. The Center for Asian American Media’s Steve Gong believes that public broadcasting’s so-called “minority consortia”—representing five federally-designated ethnic categories—are becoming essential interfaces to America’s emerging “majority minority”… more

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Keynote remarks from Beyond Broadcast

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jun 30, 2008

Widely credited with coining the term “the digital divide,” telecommunications consultant Larry Irving formerly served as Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Communications and Information under the Clinton administration. In his remarks at the June 17, 2008 Beyond Broadcast conference, he urged public broadcasters and their allies to craft a clear policy agenda for the next administration that reflects both technological and demographic shifts. He suggested that “new media” has now become simply “media,” and that public media makers will need to adjust quickly while maintaining a commitment to serving a diverse array of Americans through high-quality noncommercial productions. Read more… more

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Stephen Colbert makes McCain exciting with fair use

Posted by Alison Hanold on Jun 27, 2008

On June 3, 2008, the day that Barack Obama became the presumptive presidential nominee for the Democratic party, Republican presidential candidate John McCain gave a speech to a small group of followers in front of a green screen. The next day, Comedy Central’s Stephen Colbert declared this a challenge from McCain to edit the images on that green screen in order to “make him seem interesting.” Practically a national call to expand fair use. Colbert’s challenge sparked a quickly growing and often outstandingly creative meme, known as the “Make McCain Exciting” project. This meme offers a strong argument for fair… more

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Beyond Broadcast: Keynote Address: Larry Irving

Posted by Kate Schuler on Jun 17, 2008

“Move from a mentality of broadcasting, move to a mentality of media,” Larry Irving, President of the Irving Information Group, urged participants at Beyond Broadcast’s closing keynote address. As part of this transition, Irving made a case for public broadcasters to avoid commercial alliances and appeal to a broader demographic. “When I read about [PBS adding content to] Hulu.com, I read it with dread,” he said. “Generally people have an agenda when they give you money. It is a very slippery slope,” Irving said. “If we start letting commercial dictates get in front, we’re going to have a problem as… more

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Beyond Broadcast: Mapping the Money

Posted by Kate Schuler on Jun 17, 2008

As participatory media and user-generated content continues to grow, public media broadcasters need to move rapidly to find ways to monetize content and imagine new business models, panelists said at Beyond Broadcast’s afternoon session “Mapping the Money.” Diane Mermigas, Editor-at-Large, Media Post, said that public broadcasting and commercial media are all faced with the same issues and that public media must begin to take action. This might mean making moves such as putting content up on a major online clearinghouse site as PBS has just done with some of its content on Hulu.com –feeds that are bookended by 30-second commercials.… more

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Beyond Broadcast: Visualizing Public Media Futures

Posted by Kate Schuler on Jun 17, 2008

As the role of traditional news aggregators changes as technology emerges to allow ever-increasing numbers of people and communities to create their own media, Calvin Sims, Program Officer at the Ford Foundation and moderator of this morning’s panel “Visualizing Public Media Futures,” began the discussion by asking “Who will curate this new space?” Dennis Haarsager, Interim CEO at NPR, said that as more people create content, the goals and mission of traditional media outlets are changing. “We’re trying to envision a world in which everyone can be a producer, but thinking about how to visualize this new world can be… more

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Beyond Broadcast: Maps as Public Media

Posted by Kate Schuler on Jun 17, 2008

While traditional maps have often been a tool of colonialism and top-town government, maps are becoming a form of public media and a democratic tool, noted Future of Public Media Project Director Jessica Clark. With the emergence of free and open source tools that make mapping and visualization much easier, maps are a “rising and vibrant form of participatory media,” she said. The panel’s moderator, Jacquie Jones, President and CEO of the National Black Programming Consortium pointed out that maps are being used far beyond their traditional geographic purpose and that map interfaces now encompass social networks, media maps, and… more

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Recut at the NCMR

Posted by Alison Hanold on Jun 13, 2008

I had the great pleasure of presenting at the National Conference for Media Reform this past weekend, on a panel called “Copyright Wars: Will Filtering Censor Free Speech and Kill Net Neutrality?” Joining me on this panel were Alex Curtis of Public Knowledge, Robert Millis of Hudson Street Media, and Elizabeth Stark of the MIT Free Culture Group. We discussed the effects of filtering video for copyright infringements on the evolution of online video, and how net neutrality can protect its future. This culture of online video is explored in Recut, Reframe, Recycle, which demonstrates how new culture grows from… more

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Creating Public Media in Second Life: Virtual Bali

Posted by Kate Schuler on Jun 13, 2008

We’re excited to present the second in a series of field reports produced by the Center for Social Media as part of the Future of Public Media project, funded by the Ford Foundation. These reports examine innovative media projects designed to foster public knowledge and action. Virtual worlds such as Second Life are proliferating online, attracting millions of users and creating new spaces for creative public media experiments. Innovative non-profits have begun to establish a presence in these alternate worlds, hoping to build community and engage visitors in much more personal and visceral ways than websites, blogs, and discussion boards… more

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Community Media Hub: Community and Ethnic Media on the Map

Posted by Ann Williams on Jun 13, 2008

Beyond Broadcast’s stellar line-up of participatory public media demonstrations will include a community media hub – a showcase of community, independent and ethnic media maps, resources and interactive experiments. Many maps of community media are straightforward in that they primarily show where community media stations, makers or organizations are located. Mapping Access, an online directory of over 200 cable access television stations in 28 states, uses a Google map to help users quickly find the location, contact and affiliation information for their local PEG (public, educational, government) station. Prometheus Radio is a non-profit organization that seeks to build a strong… more

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Participatory Public Media: Mapping the Money

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jun 13, 2008

How can public media makers and outlets support themselves in an era of free access and user-generated content? This is the question that Diane Mermigas, editor at large of Mediapost, tackles for us in “Mapping the Money in Public Media.” Mermigas, who will be leading our final conversation at Beyond Broadcast, suggests that public media makers have plenty of opportunities if they can change their mindset. “Public media can build community where commercial media manipulates consumers,” she notes. “As such, digital interactivity can be a catalyst to reshape public broadcasting, create new forms of public media and develop new methods… more

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Mapping Global News: The end of “foreign” bureaus?

Posted by Jessica Clark on Jun 12, 2008

One of the signature roles that public media projects can play is to compensate for cuts in international news coverage by commercial journalism outlets. As noted on the Beyond Broadcast site, PRI President and CEO Aliza Miller uses maps to effectively demonstrate the paucity of global coverage in TV news: Distortions in coverage aren’t limited to the U.S., however. Check out these comparative coverage maps, a joint project of the Online Journalism Blog and L’Observatoire des Medias: So, how can readers interest