Quality/Control: Designing a new system for ethical media

Friday 17 October
Type: 
Symposium
Venue: 
State Library of Victoria
Latrobe Street, Melbourne
Time and Date: 
17/10/2008 - 9:00am
Contact Email: 
erennie@swin.edu.au
Contact Phone: 
03 9214 5303
Cost: 
Free

Where is your content going?

The internet has made it easy for us to create and distribute media. But have you considered how your information and creative works will be used? In the process of distributing your ‘user-generated’ content you may also be handing over your personal information. Even worse, you could be supporting corporations that seek to restrict the way we access information in the future.

In an ‘information society’ we need media organisations we can trust – and we need them to be clearly recognisable.

Many grassroots media organisations are working to achieve democratic and ethical alternatives. Such groups are protecting our rights, ensuring equal access to the media, developing open technologies and providing training. However, it is difficult to know just by visiting a website or turning on the TV/radio what kind of media we are participating in. We cannot know whom the profits go to, what they do with content and how they will treat the information we give them. Reading the privacy statements is time-intensive and confusing. There must be a better way.

This symposium will discuss how we label and certify Our Media. We will workshop a strategy to lift the profile of grassroots community media and assist producers to identify trustworthy organisations. Issues include:

• Do we need certification?
• What would it consist of?
• What is the new role for peak bodies?
• What kind of registries and directories are needed to make people aware that these alternatives exist?
• Can we unite online and broadcast community media into a strong and identifiable movement?

Australia has one of the strongest community broadcasting sectors in the world. These organisations are more important in the new media world than they have ever been. We need to ensure that existing community media groups maintain visibility and credibility so that audiences and producers can make appropriate, ethical choices when it comes to media use. And we need to extend the same guarantees into the online environment.

See Also: Creative Economy article on Quality/Control by Ellie Rennie

Visit: www.openspectrum.org.au for program updates and more info