I don't imagine that many, if any, people will opt out. But I think the
process is important: How do you say yes when you don't know what you're
agreeing to? And how do you know if you have the option to opt out,
unless asked?
Thanks everyone,
Tara
On 2015-01-26, 5:17 PM, Tom Johnson wrote:
Thank you, Tara and Ranti for taking this on. I'm sure even many speakers
who have no problem being filmed will appreciate being notified and given
the opportunity to opt in/out.
- Tom
On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 4:26 PM, Ranti Junus <[email protected]> wrote:
I agree that streaming crew should be free from doing the paperwork. Tara
has volunteered to be the "paperwork" person and I'm volunteering to help
her out.
I think streaming crew, Tara, and I can discuss separately on things that
are need to be done or information we should provide (e.g. list of those
who opt-out, their talk schedule, etc.) to the streaming crew.
thanks,
ranti.
On Mon, Jan 26, 2015 at 7:07 PM, Cary Gordon <[email protected]> wrote:
To be clear, what I said or tried to say is that the streaming crew needs
to know if he presenter does not wish to be shown, or if they do not want
their presentation shown before they start presenting. At least one full
minute before would be great. They can take our word that we will honor
their wishes.
I think that it is fair to say that nobody involved with the video wants
anything to do with paperwork, and if anyone has the time and energy to
do
that, their time would be better spent actually working on the video
crew,
which at this point is virtually nonexistent.
Every presenter should know that we will be putting up video of their
session or talk on our YouTube channel with a CC license, unless they
demure. We should have a small sign to that effect at the podium, as
well.
--
Cary Gordon
The Cherry Hill Company
http://chillco.com
--
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