Thursday, May 24, 2007

Justin.tv—sousveillance personified

Jamais Cascio points us towards Justin.tv:

"Justin of Justin.tv [...] wears a live-streaming wireless camera on his hat all day, every day, recording everything he sees."

This guy is sousveillance personified! Not sure I can see hat-cam wearing catching on with the public at large, though—can you?

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Wednesday, May 23, 2007

Traffic wardens get video cameras

BBC News reports:
Traffic attendants in Salford are to become the first in the UK to record their work on video.

Some wardens in the area will start to wear head-mounted miniature cameras from later this month.

NCP, which supplies traffic wardens in the city, will use the film to resolve disputes over tickets and to prosecute motorists who assault or abuse staff.
Good grief.

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Thursday, March 29, 2007

Urban gymnastics

This eight-minute video will surely thrill and amaze you. A half-naked gymnast flings his body fearlessly across a jagged, concrete urban wasteland somewhere in Russia. It communicates volumes about the human spirit.

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Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Witness.org—persistent video narratives of human suffering

Bruno Giussani reports from the second day of the Skoll World Forum on Social Entrepreneurship, being held in Oxford, UK:

Witnessorg

Singer Peter Gabriel (of Genesis fame) tells about the almost-15-years-long experience of Witness.org, the non-profit he set up to encourage use of visual media (mainly video) and communication technology (Internet) to document human rights abuses (see here for his speech at TED2006). He tells about his epiphany meeting people that had been tortured and abused, "and what I found extraordinary is that people can suffer in extraordinary ways and then have their experience denied and forgotten. But it seems that when there is video and photo it is much harder to deny the story and for people's experience to be forgotten". Witness.org was started to give out cameras to local activists and NGOs helping them to tell their stories and raising awareness around the world -- "cell phone manufacturers did a pretty good job at that". Of course, he says, it isn't enough to get a camera out to a remote location, people need training and support. Fifteen years on, Witness.org still reaches small numbers of people. Now Witness.org is about to launch, in a few months, a Human Rights hub, "a sort of YouTube + Wikipedia for human rights", to allow anyone from anyplace in the world the chance of telling their story, have it uploaded and seen, and perhaps not forgotten nor discarded.

Gillian Caldwell, the director of Witness, gives some details on the site, as a destination for all kind of human rights-related media (audio, video, pictures) where everybody can upload, see, get educated, and act on it. This last point is crucial in the Witness.org approach, which she calls "video advocacy": use video as tool, as evidence, to raise awareness, to target key decision makers, to inflect policies, etc. There will be features on the site for organization, for activism (things like: print out 15 copies of this picture and get them delivered to members of Congress), for syndicating the content out to other sites, etc. Witness will also be organizing a "video advocacy institute" next July in Canada, bringing people together for training, with case studies, examples from all over the world, etc.

Hats off to Witness: giving people a chance to tell their own stories is a key ingredient of an Identity Society; just as important is enabling the reframing of those stories within overarching narratives that let us to feel our human commonalities—in this case, revulsion, anger and sadness at the suffering we blindly inflict upon one another, and a desire to do better. Hats off to Witness on both counts.

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