A synphony of Deptford

Deptford.TV presented on the 19th & 20th of May, 2006 the first version of the Synphony project at the made in deptford festival. A Synphony of Deptford, Laban Café, Creekside SE8, until 1510. A series of video features on Deptford. Deptford.tv is an audio-visual documentation of the regeneration process of the Deptford area in collaboration with SPC.org media lab, Bitnik.org, the Boundless.coop, Liquid Culture & Goldsmiths College. see soon www.remixdeptford.tv
As well as an open house at deckspace presenting the rough material on the Deptford.TV database.

Deptford.TV meets OpenStreetMap

Andrew wrote:

Sunday, May 14, 2006

OpenStreetMap locative Deptford

My friend Nick Hill (shown right) has just got back from the Isle of Wight workshop and is shown here with Adnan Hadzi of Deptford.tv and LiquidCulture. We met at Deckspace in Greenwich to discuss how the Deptford.tv database of user submitted video clips could be mapped geographically without infringing copyright map data. So I asked Nick to invite Steve (of OpenStreetMap) who has been working on Free The Postcode. Despite being very busy he kindly joined us before heading up to Mapchester.

It is becoming possible to create synergies between ‘offline projects’ (with little or no digital presence) and the Copyleft and Free Software movement, for whom continuous innovation is a driving force. Once the Deptford section of OpenStreetMap is complete, work can start to create an open ecosystem of locative media based on user submitted content, a whole system freed up of some commercial and legal restrictions. As the offline based user groups start to get involved, they will be able to start a discussion around Copyleft, the Creative Commons and the common creation and ownership of digital content. In return, case study material about users and creators experience can be fed back to software developers and system designers to help simplify and enhance the usabilty of the free digital platform.

Perhaps the sum total of such rich exchanges between various groups could extend the areas reputation as a creative hub and on into the realm of digital innovation.

Utrophia playing on the minesweeper

On the 22th of April Utropia had a gig on the pirate boat. Helen McCookerybook wrote:

Utrophia CD Launch

I went to the launch of the third Utrophia Compilation last night- on an old minesweeper parked in Deptford. Squeezed through the railings, sneaked through the car park, got shouted at by a man with a red face. Saw Hamilton Yarns and Dan Geeson play acoustic sets, drank pink wine and ate chocolate cake, it was a lovely sunny evening on deck, saw a tiny wader bird with huge feet that made giant footprints, and taking 2 hours to get there on the glorious Northern Line didn’t even make me stressed… Later went on to the Utrophia studios and yakked away to lots of friendly people, held a poor girl’s head while she threw up, heard more music. The compilation’s really good, there are about 32 tracks, and I have a track on it called ‘London’. I thought they were going to use another one called ‘The Word is Goodbye’ that I’d been going to ask the Mad Professor to remix, but they didn’t so I’ll put that version on Myspace whether or not it gets remixed. All the bands and artists on the CDs have played the venues that Utrophia puts things on at, and they are all very unusual. It costs £7 and you can get it if you email info@utrophia.netSATURDAY 22 APRIL 2006
BOAT:
5pm – we’re starting the night on a boat on the creek up the road. here there will be hamilton yarns and dan geesin playing, this will be incredible and due to the size of the boat you’ll have to get in touch with us about coming down we’ll tell you all the details

UTROPHIA PROJECT SPACE:
back down at the utrophia project space there’ll be fs_ion, serafina steer and sam and then shimmie rivers and and canals. we’ll be watching dan geesin’s films along with marching band and pillow fight club films and this will all be going on until people become bored with being awake dancing and listening to music.

for more information contact: info@utrophia.net
http://www.utrophia.net

Documentary Filmmakers’ Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use

from the center for social media:

Documentary filmmakers have created, through their professional associations, a clear, easy to understand statement of fair and reasonable approaches to fair use. Fair Use is the right, in some circumstances, to quote copyrighted material without asking permission or paying for it. It is a crucial feature of copyright law. In fact, it is what keeps copyright from being censorship. You can invoke fair use when the value to the public of what you are saying outweighs the cost to the private owner of the copyright.

Download this useful handbook, written by veteran filmmakers to help other filmmakers understand some instances where using copyrighted material without clearance is considered fair use.

Statement Authors

Statement Endorsers

Initiation of the Freeculture UK constitution

On the 8th of April the FC UK constitution passed unanimously at the FC UK general assembly at the Limehouse in London. As Deptford.TV is publishing the content under the Creative Commons License and the Art Libre License the discussion around the rights issue on digital media is a main focus of the research into new forms of film-making.

the creative commons license should
also be looked at critically. creative commons looks at culture as
rough material whereas the artlibre license, see http://artlibre.org
or the general public license see http://gplv3.fsf.org/draft where a
new version is just writen are looking at culture as work of art - i
prefer the phrasing of the artlibre people. but, on the other side cc
is much more a "standart" worth going for...

if talking cc, it should be made clear about which license your
talking, because clearly not all of them are as open as they assume to
be (with taking a parallel approach to the free software movement) -
my prefered licence is by-sa as it is similar to the general  public
license or  artlibre license.

regarding the discussion about non-commercial - i think it is not a
good idea to say that documentaries are non commercial. in my eyes
they shurely are - what makes it interesting for doc filmmaker to use
by-sa, which allows commercial use, is that a pool of material is
generated out of which doc filmmakers can bennefit - and at the same
time taking away the power of the big media players over their
archives - similar to the free/open software movement sharing their
source code, benefiting the community and givin microsoft a hard time...

please see also some thoughts in the next two hidden posts on why not
nc from the free culture network see http://freeculture.org.uk

also look at: http://people.debian.org/~evan/ccsummary.html
an email exchange regarding the non-commercial issue with
rufus pollock from the open knowledge foundation:
First, a by-sa license is clearly 'freer' than a by-sa-nc in that it
places fewer restrictions on the use of the work. In general this is a
good thing since it means fewer occassions on which people have to
/ask permission/. In fact I would go as far as to argue that a nc
license is not really an open license (as defined in the open
knowledge definition: http://www.okfn.org/okd/)

Second is all commercial usage bad? I have a friend who made a very
alternative documentary about Chavez and distributes it for free. At
the same time he has received payments when it has aired by commercial
tv stations (they often pay even when they don't need to). This would
make his work 'commercial' but it seems a far cry from, say, use in a
coca-cola advert. Do you really want to prevent that kind of usage? If
you do you've just cut out most of the main avenues for 'serious'
reuse of your work -- ultimately most documentary makers would like to
see their stuff get out to a wide an audience as possible and that
means broadcast on a commercial network.

Third for the types commercial usage that I imagine you would most
object to (e.g. adverts) the makers would probably not want to have
'sa' their work. Therefore they would need to come and relicense from
you and at that point you are in the same position as with an nc license.

Thus overall I think there are significant gains in terms of greater
freedom for reuse, the benefits of being truly 'open' and its
consequent benefits for making the content commons, while the downsideis minimal.
answer from saul albert from the living archives
project on the open knowledge foundation mailinglist:
Robert Altman calls the GPL a union - I don't think it's a union. I
think it's a guild. High value labourers can form guilds within which
they share their labour and knowledge and guard it from uninitiates
and potential exploiters. They can do this because the high value of
their labour and knowledge is capable of generating a surplus that is
of most use to the guild as a community if it's shared.

Unions came into their own as organised groups of low-value labourers
whose only real leverage with bosses was/is the refusal of their
low-value labour.  There's no surplus to go round, no 'regulation' of
labour, just the start-stop button of a strike. Information proles
don't own anything - and we are all information proles. Even the
CC-using musicians are information proles when they go to the
supermarket and get their clubcard scanned, or their information is
shuttled around and cross-referenced by various semi-privatised
government services. But we're not organised in a union of information
proles with this understanding of the relationship between the
information we create and the information we excrete - all of which
has value. Were we're sold the idea that we can have a 'piece of the
action', but I think it's misdirection.

With CC-BA-NC-SA or whatever other combination of CC licenses, I think
they do little more than gentrify the debate over the iniquities of
global copyright law, and have nothing *whatsoever* to do with 'commons'.

about 'freedom' in CC/NC discussions that I think are best dealt with
by leaving the detail out and focusing on material movement of value
through systems of ownership. That is a class issue, and it's really
not very difficult to explain or understand.

In the interest of moving the discussion somewhere more useful, I
think the best argument for dropping NC in most contexts is the
packaging issue. Debian works *really really well* because it deals
with packaging exquisitely - formally and legally. If you're running
debian or a derivative, try 'sudo apt-get install anarchism' for a
great practical demonstration of knowledge packaging.

Anyway, I don't need to start on that old chestnut. It's pretty
clearly argued here:
http://people.debian.org/~evan/ccsummary.html

Media Artist & Social Housing Forum

At the 31st of March Deptford.TV’s outcome of the March workshops was presented at the Media Artist & Social Housing Forum:

Inspired by Vital Regeneration’s recent collaboration with the City Of Westminster and CityWest Homes to create FreqOUT! (www.freqout.blogspot.com), this will be an opportunity for media artists to find out more about the expanding employment and commissioning opportunities in the Regeneration and Housing sector.

Invited speakers from housing and regeneration agencies, and media artists who have experience of the field, will explore housing associations’ objectives when commissioning arts projects. The forum will also explore barriers that artists experience to working in this arena.

Artists attending will leave with an understanding of the skills and capabilities needed to work in this context, and the challenges of working with young people, who are often the main beneficiaries of creative regeneration schemes. This will be an opportunity for both perspectives – arts and housing – to share their experiences and increase their likelihood of participating in successful arts and regeneration partnerships in the near future. For more information please contact Amy Robins at arobins@cwh.org.uk

Takeaway Festival 29th – 31st March

After having finished the Deptford.TV workshop some of the participants gathered together at the Takeaway Festival which was held at the Dana Center to take part in two workshops. Dynebolic & Hivenetworks. Dynebolic is the media plattform used for producing content for Deptford.TV. . Hivenetworks is linked to the Boundless.coop network in Deptford which is the distribution channel of Deptford.TV. Xavier made a small film for Canal + in France.
quoted from Takeaway:

Jaromil: dyne:bolic

dyne:bolic – Held by Jaromil
29th March 2006

The new 2.0 release of the free multimedia operating system dyne:bolic GNU/Linux will be presented and introduced with its functionalities for streaming and producing audio/video materials employing only open source software, for the freedom of speech.

In the panorama of existing operating systems we see that there are a great number of possibilities to listen: all kinds of “free to download” players for audio and video, but no easy way for everybody to speak out loud and spread their words.

The way communication is structured follows a hierarchy of well established powers and, worst than ever, money is the main requirement for making a voice spread and possible to be heard by others.
About the lecturer:

Jaromil the Rasta Coder is a Mediterranean GNU/Linux programmer, author and maintainer of three free software programs and operating systems: MuSE (for running a web radio), FreeJ (for veejay and realtime video manipulation), HasciiCam (ascii video streaming) and dyne:bolic the bootable CD running directly without requiring installation, a popular swiss army knife in the fields of production and broadcasting of information. All his creations are freely available online under the GNU General Public License (Free Software Foundation).

He is a featured artist in major new media art exhibitions and publications, from CODeDOC II (Whitney Museum Artport), to Read_Me 2.3 (runme.org software art) and Data Browser 02 (engineering culture). Jaromil has been artist in residence at makrolab (Venice Biennale), medien.kunstlabor and the Nederlands Instituut voor Mediakunst / Montevideo Time Based Arts where he is now in charge of several open source research and development projects.

Alexei Blinov: Hive Networks

Hive Networks – Held by Alexei Blinov
31th March 2006
HIVE Networks – wireless networks of things, built and owned by users, using open source software and cheap disposable appliances.
Alexei Blinov of Raylab and a group of collaborators have set out to create an exciting project, HIVE Networks, which promises to change the perception of ubiquitous or pervasive computing.

HIVE combines the virtues of free software, free networks and open hardware to generate a framework for virtually any type of networked media application on small and cheap consumer devices. In this workshop he will show how HIVE devices can be customised to a range of applications.
About the lecturer:

Alexei Blinov is a Russian born artist/engineer living and working in London. He was and is strongly involved with wireless community networking. His areas of expertise include sensors, lasers, hardware design and programming. He has created his own projects as well as working with many artists and groups such as Take2030, audiorom, Tanaka, Hobijn and others.

Jamie King: Copyright and the new technological environment

Two recent technological developments – the digital format and the network – are starting to make the old model of distributing and paying for cultural content based on copyright protection seem antiquated.

Copyright – the right of a creator to exert control over the reproduction of a work and to sell others this control – is a legal device which was designed for an earlier social/technological moment.

Digital copies – whether of text or anything else – can now be produced almost infinitely at next to zero cost.
We need to examine new models for funding creative works – to address the central question of how cultural producers will survive under the new paradigm. Where many in what is loosely referred to as ‘industry’ regard the challenge to copyright as essentially hostile, others see it as positive, and potentially socially transformative – seeking first and foremost to explore positive models for creativity in the new technological context.

Jamie King is a writer and activist. He is involved with projects such as Open Business (www.openbusiness.cc), Pretext ( www.pretext.org) and Creative Commons UK. He lectures contemporary studies at Ravensbourne College Postgraduate Programme.

and Rama was chilling on our couch…

Rama/Platoniq.net: Burn Station

Burn Station – Held by Rama/Platoniq.net
30th March 2006

Burn Station is a mobile copying station which – as it travels through suburban spaces – supports the free distribution of music and audio. Above all it is a social event which congregates people together for listening, selecting and copying net label and net radio audio files with a Copyleft Licence. Burn Station is an open-source, non-commercial project involving the new means of free networked distribution. It is based on the Burn Station software which was developed by Platoniq and Rama as a 100% free software. Burn Station aims to establish links between the media space and the physical space of the city.
About the lecturer:

Rama (Ramiro Cosentino) is an internet and PureData developer exiled from Buenos Aires (Argentina) during the last economic crash. Previously based in Barcelona as main headquarter, he moved to Graz (Austria) for a residency at the Medien.KUNSTLABOR; currently based in Vienna, he is further developing media/art distribution platforms. (i.e. Burn Station and R23.cc)

Rama is member of several mediahacktivist collectives: hackitectura.net, riereta.net, platoniq.net bcn, straddle3.net bcn, developing open source systems for global communication, developer and administrator of media streaming servers/applications; user-friendly PD works for video (based on PiDiP) and audio mixing, processing and streaming.