My biggest concern is incidental art. There have been numerous times
where I've caught music in a car or outside in my videos. 

This is why I'm a strong proponent of reforming copyright law, and
cementing net neutrality into place. 

--- In videoblogging@yahoogroups.com, "Brook Hinton" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> I share Chris's concerns regarding the effect on potential audience.
> 
> I am also concerned about this causing internet cafes and other public
> access points to limit the use of video and audio. As a maker, I want
> to reach people who DON'T live most of their lives online and may
> primarily access the web at such places, or who don't have the
> economic means to necessarily even have DSL if they have their own
> computer. And I want those people to be MAKING the stuff as well.  If
> video and audio are going to be part of the cultural conversation and
> / or the means for artistic expression on the web, they have to stay -
> or more accurately, become MORE - economically accessible at the
> making and viewing level.
> 
> But then I'm a crazy old lefty who thinks we need free wifi all across
> the land paid for by our tax dollars. Oh, after we fix health care and
> poverty and all that. So I may be ideologically too far out of the
> loop to even consider this.
> 
> Brook
> 
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________________
> Brook Hinton
> film/video/audio art
> www.brookhinton.com
> studio vlog/blog: www.brookhinton.com/temporalab
>


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