Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Wikileaks. Show all posts

Saturday, December 11, 2010

FORA.tv 2010 Year End Playlist on YouTube features Adam Savage

Drum roll, please....announcing the FORA.tv 2010 Year End Playlist on YouTube! It's a compilation of YouTube videos on the people, issues, ideas that changed the world in 2010 and features a special introduction by FORA.tv favorite: Adam Savage of MythBusters.

"This year end playlist contains smart, engaging programs that capture the profound power of online video," says Adam Savage. "The power to connect directly with large audiences and unleash a torrent of emotion, connection, and response. 2010 was the year of being big."

We're thrilled to have been chosen by YouTube for the honor of producing this important playlist. And we're humbled by the generous help from Adam Savage who so kindly provided a special introduction. (Check out Adam's awesome site.) Thank you YouTube. Thank you, Adam.

The 2010 FORA.tv Year End Playlist can be found on YouTube's homepage tonight and in the site's playlists section. And while on YouTube, be sure to visit the FORA.tv channel and join a community of nearly 35,000 passionate, engaged members. (FORA.tv videos have been viewed more than 25 million times on YouTube!) YouTube has also featured playlists from the likes of grammy winner Natasha Bedingfield, talk show host Conan O'Brien and internet big thinker Vint Cerf.

Watch Adam Savage introduce our playlist:


Watch our playlist:


Thank you for watching FORA.tv

Saturday, December 4, 2010

An Appeal: The New York Times Should Rescue WIkiLeaks

As the campaign to shutdown WikiLeaks intensifies, mainstream media needs to get off on the sidelines and rescue the beleaguered site. The New York Times should take a bold stand and immediately offer to host the site and its leaked classified material.

A New York Times-WikiLeaks partnership would strengthen our democracy and give traditional journalism a much needed boost of relevancy.

When WikiLeaks began leaking classified information, notably horrific video of a deadly helicopter attack on journalists in Iraq, the site's founder Julian Assange was only modestly successful. He tried to go it alone in distributing the materials and had little luck with getting pick-up from the mainstream media. Assange was treated as an outsider and a perhaps illegitimate source of news; Assange viewed big media with similar mistrust.

However, Assange changed his tactics with the recent troves of leaked classified materials. WikiLeaks cooridinated each release with such top news organizations as the Guardian and the New York Times. Doing so elevated WikiLeaks' reputation and provided traditional distribution, two elements that have multiplied the impact of WikiLeaks' information.

In recent days however, WikiLeaks was kicked to the curb by two US web host companies -- Amazon and EveryDNS. And today PayPal announced on its site: "PayPal has permanently restricted the account used by WikiLeaks due to a violation of the PayPal Acceptable Use Policy, which states that our payment service cannot be used for any activities that encourage, promote, facilitate or instruct others to engage in illegal activity. We've notified the account holder of this action."

These moves by U.S. companies -- perhaps under pressure from the U.S. government, should alarm anyone concerned with protecting an open and transparent society. And who better to fulfill this role? The New York Times.

But is today's New York Times, in name the same organization that more than three decades ago published the Pentagon Papers, up to the task? In a messy online exchange with New York Times readers, Bill Keller, executive managing editor, declared that "WikiLeaks is not a 'media partner' of The Times."

Really? The New York Times, has more than benefited from privileged access (both direct and indirect)to the WikiLeaks material. Certainly the controversial stories have increased newsstand sales and traffic to NYTimes.com.

So, an appeal is in order:

Bill Keller, the time for bold action is now: Make WikiLeaks a 'media partner.' Move the WikiLeaks site and its classified information onto the New York Times web servers. Dare the U.S. government to challenge you on this. WikiLeaks, which has now fled to Sweden, is too easy an target as a stand alone organization.

Bill Keller, you've quoted Thomas Jefferson’s remark that he would rather have newspapers without government than government without newspapers.

Bill Keller, we soon could end up with neither newspapers nor WikiLeaks. Please act now.
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Watch Julian Assange describe his motivation for releasing leaked classified information.


Watch Amy Goodman describe reporting on the WikiLeaks video of a U.S. helicopter attack on journalists.