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    Susan Crawford

    Susan is a communications scholar and former Obama adviser. Read more…

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    Lance Weiler

    Lance is a story architect and founder of the Workbook Project. Read more...

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    The Yes Men

    Come meet the Yes Men at the Shared Film Festival. Read more...

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    Gabriella Coleman

    Gabriella is a free software anthropologist. Read more…

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    Michael Wesch

    Michael is a cultural anthropologist. Read more...

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    Damian Kulash

    Damian is the lead singer of the rock band OK Go. Read more...

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    Jamie Wilkinson

    Jamie is an internet culture researcher and hacker-entrepreneur. Read more...

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    Jonathan McIntosh

    Jonathan is a pop-culture remixer. Read more...

Conversation with Susan Crawford: part 1

September 7th, 2010

In part one of our video interview with Susan Crawford, we explore whether the open internet is in danger. Between the proposed Comcast/NBCU merger and a tonal shift in the debate about net neutrality, it seems as though the stakes have changed.
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VIDEO: a peek at our interview with Susan Crawford

September 1st, 2010

This week, a Wall Street Journal story on the proposed Comcast/NBCU merger brought concerns about media consolidation back to the fore. The U.S. Department of Justice is reportedly studying how the merger would affect the emerging internet video market.

Critics of the merger—including former Obama adviser and law professor Susan Crawford, a keynote speaker at this year’s Open Video Conference—say that the merger would hurt competition in the online video space.

Combined with anxieties about a shifting landscape for net neutrality, many are convinced that big changes are in store for the Internet as we know it—and by extension, the development of a rich online video medium that encourages user participation, creativity, and innovation.

We sat down with Ms. Crawford this week to hear her thoughts on the proposed merger, the FCC’s role in protecting net neutrality, and much more.

We’ll be releasing the 20-minute interview in three parts starting this week. It really captures the urgency that many are feeling about this critical time for the internet—a sense that we’re deciding new rules for the network and the web, and writing the the next few years of media history.

If you are passionate about the future of the open web and open video, we invite you to join us this October 1 & 2 at the Open Video Conference in New York City. Please register today.

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