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[Fsfe-uk] Fwd: Creative Archive - Next Steps
From: |
Tom Chance |
Subject: |
[Fsfe-uk] Fwd: Creative Archive - Next Steps |
Date: |
Tue, 1 Jun 2004 02:12:12 +0000 |
User-agent: |
KMail/1.6.1 |
I'd suggest this is something that everyone in the FFII, AFFS and UKCDR should
be signing, as well as the organisations themselves.
Regards,
Tom
---------- Forwarded Message ----------
Subject: Creative Archive - Next Steps
Date: Monday 31 May 2004 23:42
From: David Tannenbaum <address@hidden>
To: Tom Chance <address@hidden>
Dear Tom,
We regret that you were not able to attend our "Friends of Creative Archive"
event last Wednesday. It was a success, with over thirty artists, educators,
archivists, activists and students. We knew we had done some good when the
BBC Archive's project leader told us that until that night she had
experienced no input from the British public on how the Archive should be
implemented.
The next step is to more publicly express our collective support for a fully
implemented archive that goes beyond the BBC's current plans for 3-minute
nature clips. We have written a "sign-on" letter, attached and below,
explaining our standpoint and the current issues related to the project, and
requesting a meeting. The letter will be sent to BBC executives, public
officials involved in the charter review, and the press.
Can we count on you as one of the signatories to this letter? The more
organisations and people we have, the more likely it is that our concerns
will be taken seriously.
We would like to send out the letter quickly, and would very much appreciate
your response either way by Friday, June 4th. Please do not hesitate to
contact me if you have any questions, and please do not hesitate to pass on
this letter to colleagues who might be interested in signing on. The best
way for us to build our group and create a public force is by word of mouth.
Thanks for your help!
Yours,
David Tannenbaum, for Friends of the Creative Domain
07816 392 758
P.S. We have set up an e-mail list to keep everyone in touch and up-to-date.
You can subscribe at
http://lists.essential.org/mailman/listinfo/creative-friends. We have set
this up as an announcement list, so it will be low-traffic. Please encourage
others to join. And, if you know anyone who might be willing to donate web
site hosting services to this effort, please get in touch with me.
-----------------------------------------
Friends of the Creative Domain
<Date>
<Name>
<Organisation>
<Street>
<City>, <Post Code>
Dear <Name>
We write to express our support for the BBC Creative Archive, and our
concerns relating to how it will be implemented.
As TV licence holders, citizens concerned about access to our national
heritage, and artists and students who have witnessed the shrinkage of the
creative domain, we strongly supported Greg Dyke’s August, 2003 commitment
to take “a massive step forward in opening our content to all — be they
young or old, rich or poor.”
There are many obvious reasons for taking such a step. Digital technology now
gives us the chance to unlock and democratise an otherwise inaccessible part
of our national culture, an opportunity of immeasurable educational value.
An online archive of past and present BBC material could give artists and
students unprecedented ways to build creative works, and making material
available for non-commercial use would open new markets for our nation’s
artists and the Corporation. In short, the Archive has the potential to
ignite a “digital campfire” for the nation.
However, we have become concerned that the BBC will not ultimately implement
the Archive in a way that is conducive to these social goods. Some
commercial broadcasters have already expressed opposition to an accessible
archive of free material for non-commercial use, even while asking the BBC
to “seed” the market for digital content. We worry that the BBC will face
political pressure from these broadcasters to pursue commercialisation above
access.
We also worry that the recent changing of the BBC guard places the original
vision of the Archive in jeopardy. The BBC’s new chairman, Michael Grade,
has said that a top priority of his is creating a commercial plan for the
archives. Recent reports that the Board of Governors will take more control
of the BBC’s policy and planning division suggest that champions of the
Creative Archive may not be able to overcome pressures to limit access.
We do not object to a commercial plan in principle, as long as it does not
unreasonably impede non-commercial use by licence holders. However, the
latest reports about the initial implementation of the Creative Archive
indicate that only short three-minute clips will be available. Although we
are confident that the BBC management has more ambitious long-term plans,
the lack of concrete proposals or public discussion of these plans stokes
our fears that the Archive will not go beyond a shop window for content that
TV-licence holders have already paid for.
We believe that the stakes for the Creative Archive are high enough to merit
a public discussion on how to achieve the project’s fullest potential. This
discussion should bring in all the relevant stakeholders, including TV
licence holders, digital video artists, actors, musicians, producers,
librarians, archivists, historians and students.
Now is an ideal time to open this discussion and to update the BBC Charter to
allow the BBC to fulfil its public mission in the digital age. We support
new charter language that would:
* Make the Creative Archive one of the primary objectives of the Corporation,
with an emphasis on access and creative use. * Specify prospective licensing
of content for online use in a way that allows licence holders to get their
best value for money. * Specify the conditions of retrospective licensing of
content for online use in a way that would maximise the educational and
cultural value of the archives.
We respectfully request a meeting with you and your staff so that we may
discuss these concerns and proposals.
Thank you for your consideration.
Sincerely yours,
Friends of the Creative Domain:
Damian Tambini, Director, PCMLP
Annabelle Littoz-Monnet, PCMLP
David Tannenbaum, Union for the Public Domain
<additional signatories>
-------------------------------------------------------
focdsignon.pdf
Description: Adobe PDF document
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