Derek makes a great point. Of course, this point has been made before, only now we have an alternative phraseology (that no doubt will be corrupted all the same at some point): "authentic media". I dig it, but perhaps we could go a step further and make it totally off limits, calling it "amateur content", in the nothing-is-worth-doing-unless-you-love-it kind of way. Think about it this way: friends don't let friends monetize friends. You've gotta be an amatuer to do it for something other than the benjamins. I mean, who wants to create "professional" content? Exactly. Still, let's use "authentic media" for now and see how it goes. And we can all be happy amateurs creating authentic media together.


💬 Comments from the original post

Kevin Marks · 2006-04-05 16:59:23
I retranslated 'amateur' into english before, and you made a shirt - Lovingly created media.
sean coon · 2006-04-05 19:27:59
yeah, that's fine in our own domains, but when mainstream media outlets start to *leverage* our content, we need a micro-cut of the pie. if not, power structures will stay the same. i'm not down with that.
FactoryJoe · 2006-04-05 20:16:50
Agreed. Proposals for avoiding that (which I agree could be inevitable)?
sean coon · 2006-04-06 12:06:17
simple. build kickass aggregation and distribution models that leverage mainstream content *and* authentic media with a shared advertising model. something that is sustainable and pulls a critical mass audience that *makes* the mainstream shift paradigms. like newsvine. if you post there, you get a default 90% return on the CPM advertising revenue for the page. that's residual cash. then, for every referral you make to the service, you receive a 10% cut of the next "reporter's" advertising revenue. if we keep our eyes on the business and revenue angle -- just as much as we focus on tagging, social apps, "authentic media" opportunities, etc. - -we'll flip this power structure in no time flat.
User-generated discontent... "coalbarge" This is a barge full of coal, one of many each day that float past Pittsburgh and down the Ohio River....
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Powazek said it best