Showing posts with label Blogs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Blogs. Show all posts

Friday, July 13, 2007

About Copyright, ownership and privacy


Who steals from whom? If you post a screen cap, videos or photos taken from the internet, does it make them yours? If you use a transcript or a rundown from Anderson Cooper 360 is the content your brain child or from CNN's producers? To whom all the screencaps, videos and photos of Anderson Cooper 360 belongs? Without doubt the screencaps and videos are the property and copyright of Time Warner, Turner and CNN. They hired a crew, invested thousands of dollars a minute just to produce that single shot you claim its yours without any effort from your part....That they don't mind people use it, at least for now, well what the heck its free promotion.

On the other hand. If you take your own camera, video recorder or paper pad and produce something all by yourself... then you can claim ownership. But if you care about it, don't make it public. Because once its out there its considered for "Fair Use" or it might become raw material for Digital Arts.

The fact is that Blogs don't play by the rules... just ask Perez Hilton... when we started this blog we went all the way to contact professional photographers that have worked with Anderson Cooper in order to beg them to give us some take outs or unpublished materials. We were lucky that at least one of them sent us a couple of images that were from a magazine that they never used. We were bursting with pride, until one blog lifted it and sent a copy to another one who gave all the credit to the blog that lifted it without our consent. When we rightfully wanted to clear up the situation, we were told that we were the ones who stole the image from "her friend". And the official anti Freaks campaign began... we became the blog that shall not be named, linked nor referenced. But even them don't have any problem lifting info from us.

I came across this article that addresses some issues we have seen in the recent past, for those of you who doubt companies screen super secret or public online communities, personal blogs and websites, reality is THEY DO. So be careful with your information and remember, that online is a VIRTUAL REALITY NOT LIFE. DON'T TAKE YOUR ONLINE PERSONA ( OR PERSONAS) TOO SERIOUSLY. And if you do, then its time to get a real life.

Private' online photos really aren't

By WAYNE PARRY, Associated Press WriterThu Jul 12, 7:16 PM ET

It's not just Jersey girls who get tripped up by embarrassing Internet photos.

Whether trying to become the next American Idol, Miss America, or just get an office job somewhere, people are starting to take steps to ensure that photos and personal information they post on the Web doesn't end up coming back to bite them.

The latest high-profile victim is Amy Polumbo, who was named Miss New Jersey last month, only to be hit with an alleged blackmail attempt by someone hoping to make her resign by threatening to release embarrassing photos of her.

The pageant board decided Thursday that the photos — which were in poor taste, but none featured any nudity — did not warrant stripping Polumbo of her crown.

"This was meant to be private," the 22-year-old told NBC's "Today" show on Thursday. "It was supposed to be between my friends and I."

But there's no such thing when it comes to photos posted online or e-mailed to others. Fellow Jersey girl Antonella Barba became worldwide news earlier this year when racy photos of the "American Idol" contestant surfaced during the competition.

"I used to say 'Cover your tracks,' but it really should be, 'Don't make tracks that need to be covered,'" Barba said Thursday. "Once anything is online, it's free rein.

"I feel so bad for her," said Barba, who has returned to college in Washington, D.C. to make up classes she missed while on the TV show. "I've been in the same situation she's been in. It disgusts me, people's interest in the dirt and trying to bring somebody down."

Polumbo's mother, Jen Wagner, said her daughter was just like millions of other young people who thought that just because their Facebook or MySpace page was set to "private," their photos would remain that way.

"They don't realize how many people can eventually see these photos," she said.

The photos of Polumbo came from her Facebook page, which has since been taken offline.

Embarrassment isn't the only consequence of personal photos surfacing. Many employers troll social networking sites like My Space, Facebook and others when checking out a job applicant or keeping tabs on employees.

Steven Jungman, director of recruiting for Houston-based ChaseSource LP, told of a young woman his firm helped land a job with a company working on a sensitive project.

"This was a project that had to be kept secret, that if the competition found out about it or the media wrote about it before it was rolled out, it would be very bad for business," he said. "It even had a secret nickname.

"Every day, twice a day, the company did a ... search for that title, just to make sure nothing was getting out about it," Jungman said. "One morning, an interesting link came up, to someone's My Space page. It went, 'My name is so-and so, I'm working on such-and-such for so-and-so.' And right next to that were photos that would make Anna Nicole Smith blush, and Paris Hilton go, 'Whoa!'"

Two days later, the woman was fired.

Other tales abound of job applicants getting passed over because their online pages showed them smoking marijuana, passed out after drinking, or flashing too much skin.

Theresa O'Neill, a career counselor at Rutgers University-Newark, urges students to take down their online photos while looking for a job.

"Think of it as being in a very large, public place like Yankee Stadium, taking the microphone and broadcasting your personal information to 50,000 people there," she said. "If you don't want everyone in the stadium to know the details of your personal life, then keep them to yourself."

At least some people are listening. A survey last year by the Web site CollegeGrad.com found that 47 percent of recent graduates had changed or planned to change their Web pages because they were looking for a job.

Barba survived on "American Idol" for a time after the photos of her began circulating, before being voted off by viewers.

She has steadfastly declined to speculate on how the photos of her became public and says she's not planning any legal action.

"I don't have the time and energy to go after someone the way they went after me," she said. "We just want to prevent this from happening to someone else."

Sunday, December 10, 2006

Anderson Cooper and Other News...

I can't believe it's Sunday again already! That means back to the grind tomorrow and I was just getting used to the weekend. All right...here we go...

Do you have plans for New Year's Eve? Well, I think we have a date with Anderson Cooper. Trust me, that's better than what I have to choose from around here, but that's another story. I pulled this from the "360" site:

"Keeping them honest" has been a 360° mission in 2006. For Anderson's New Year's Eve special we want to know how you're "Keeping them honest." If you or someone you know is trying to right a wrong in your community, tell us about it and we may feature your story on the New Year's Eve special.
Me, Anderson on television and a bottle of champagne on NYE. What makes this different from any other night? The champagne, of course ;)

Moving on...

Did you read about the Andersighting in D.C., this on Wonkette?
  • Anderson Cooper Sighting! That’s right. I was sitting next to the ambiguously gay and very sexy “360” reporter last night [12/6] in the Jury’s restaurant/bar in Dupont Circle. He appeared to be on a date with a rugged looking young man with a goatee. I believe the date heard me say as Anderson walked out, “Look! Anderson is so hot he walls like a sex machine”.
  • Anderson Cooper totally “360’d” a group of Democrat press folks (plus one Republican) at Biddy Mulligan’s just now [12/7]. He’s with an unidentified Spanish man.
Me thinks poor Cooper can't meet any member of the same sex for anything without speculation. Shame on you Wonkette. After all, it is the D.C. version of Gawker and we know they make up crap all the time.

And the love of Anderson Cooper extends around the world! Anderson has a fan in Japan, check out her site, Addicted to Anderson Cooper, and welcome her to the family.

Sunday, September 24, 2006

To Post or Not to Post

Censorship on blogs--what's your take?So where should the admin draw the line? In the name of good taste or out of fear?Naturally I agree that as an admin you have a responsibility to your audience and you hope no one is offended by your blog's contents or tone. But where does free speech end and blog security (for lack of a better word) begin?Should I be able to go to a blog and post rumors about someone with no consequences? Are these rumors still protected as free speech? And what are the motives in spreading these rumors?Things to ponder.
Posted by courtney

MANIFESTO

Don't think for me. Don't assume what I want to hear or read. Give me facts. Give me reasons. But not yours. Bring me debate. Enlighten me. Today, accountability is masked behind anonymity; bylines are hidden by zeros and ones. Everyone publishes; everyone is "in the know." Ethics are non-existent. Speculation is king. The truth is masked and a hostage. Empowered by our minds, WE ARE THE FREAKSPEAKERS!

FAIR USE NOTICE

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If your obsession against us and our content endures, you might find more information at: Law.

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