[New-imc] IDAHO (decision deadline 18:00 GMT, October 19)
Jay
jay at tao.ca
Sat Oct 19 17:30:04 PDT 2002
Hi New-imc, Martin (and please pass this around the idaho imc),
The deadline for dissent to Idaho's new-imc information has passed the
new-imc working group. Next, it goes to the imc-process list (with a cc to
the imc-communication list). The information sits for a week on that list,
then if no one expresses dissent, you're part of the network. I'll pass
along your information right away.
Jay
***
IDAHO IMC introductory_statement:
The IMC's have become the most important new form of communication for
activists around the world. Idahoans have been working since the
inception of Indymedia to bring this resource home. In Idaho, politics
are more unrepresentative than in many other parts of the US and the world
(as represented by the gulf between public opinion polls and the
composition of the Legislature). A major reason for this is an extremely
closed media system. In Idaho, the major outlets are either owned by out
of state interests, or by very powerful local interests. We believe Idaho
Indymedia will become one of most effective tools in bringing activists
together, and in challenging the media and political monopoly in our
state. We will be proud to uphold the ideals and further the mission of
Indymedia\'s global network.
Below and attached are a statement in response to the IMC Networks
Membership Criteria, and a Mission Statement and Editorial Policy for Idaho
IMC.
IDAHO INDEPENDENT MEDIA CENTER NETWORK APPLICATION
IMC MEMBERSHIP CRITERIA:
Idaho Indymedia, having organized and established a committed membership
substantial enough to sustain a functional IMC, and having held a number of
open and public meetings over the course of a year, has agreed in spirit to
the NIMC Mission Statement and Principles of Unity, and has adopted a
Mission Statement consistent with that of the IMC Network (see below).
We have established and published a democratic, transparent editorial
policy consistent with IMC policies and practices. We are committed to the
use of Open Publishing as described in the NIMC Editorial Policy, have
adopted a consensus-driven decision-making policy that is open, transparent
and egalitarian (see below).
We have appointed two spokespersons willing and capable of participating in
the global decision-making process and meetings as rotating liaisons and
representatives, with a clear understanding of the responsibilities that
come with this role. We intend to participate in the key IMC Network
Communication Methods that pertain to the health and vitality of the
Network and that contribute to the work of the IMC, and will assure that at
least one person from Idaho Indymedia participates at any given time on the
IMC-Communications list.
Idaho Indymedia has no official affiliation with any political party, state
or candidate for office and shall in no way engage in commercial for-profit
enterprises. We have displayed a "local version" of the IMC logo on our
website and literature, and have included a current IMC Network "Cities
List" on the front page of our site.
Our site is complete, and is available for inspection at
http://208.39.216.125/. We are immediately ready and look forward eagerly
to participating in the IMC Network.
IDAHO INDEPENDENT MEDIA MISSION STATEMENT:
The Idaho Independent Media Center (Idaho IMC) is a non-commercial,
democratic collective of Idaho independent media makers and media outlets,
and serves as the local organizing unit of the global Indymedia
network. Our mission is to encourage a world where globalization is not
about homogeneity and exploitation, but about diversity and cooperation, to
cover local events that are ignored or poorly covered by corporate media,
to provide edited audio, video, and print stories of the above on the
internet for independent media outlets and the general public, to
facilitate the networking and coordination for the coverage of local events
as well as gather information about events to cover, to provide links to
alternative media, activist, and research groups, to seek out and provide
coverage underscoring the global nature of people's struggles for social,
economic, and environmental justice directly from their perspective, to
offer community classes for training in internet and media skills, and to
encourage, facilitate, and support the creation of independent news
gathering and organizations.
IDAHO INDEPENDENT MEDIA EDITORIAL POLICY:
Idaho IMC provides an un-moderated, open-publishing newswire in accordance
with our Mission Statement.
Idaho IMC maintains the newswire and website as a community space, and as a
safe environment for users especially members of marginalized groups.
Idaho IMC serves to create a medium that respects people's rights to engage
in free and open dialogue.
Idaho IMC works to preserve the quality of the website as a useful media
resource.
Postings to Idaho IMC are un-moderated. Members of the editorial
collective will regularly monitor the newswire, looking for particularly
significant, informative contributions to add to the front-page
center-column feature section. From time to time there will be a call for
articles around specific issues.
While committed to maintaining the open nature of the newswire, as noted
above, in circumstances contrary to the editorial policy of Idaho IMC the
editorial collective may reclassify news postings as comments, or remove
them from view. In most cases, postings are reclassified or hidden because
they are empty or duplicate posts, or because they consist of advertising
or other inappropriate content. You can monitor decisions made by the
editorial collective by viewing the hidden article page. The procedures by
which the collective makes such decisions and the details of Idaho IMC
policy are spelled out below. If you disagree with the content of a
particular article that someone has posted or can provide further relevant
information, you may comment on the article through the "add your own
comments" link at the bottom of each post.
In accordance with Idaho IMC's mission, the online newswire is designed to
give people the tools to become independent journalists by providing a
direct, un-moderated forum for presenting media including text articles,
audio and video recordings, and photographs to the public via the
internet. Within that general framework, we specifically encourage
individuals to publish:
Researched and timely articles
Eyewitness accounts of progressive actions and demonstrations
Coverage of local regional, national and international issues and events
Media analysis
Investigative reports exposing injustice
Stories about events affecting under-represented groups
Media produced by under-represented groups
Local stories with national or global significance
Stories about people or projects working towards social and economic justice
The views expressed and content of postings to Idaho IMC are the
responsibility of the authors.
EDITORIAL PROCESS FOR HIDING NEWSWIRE ARTICLES:
This policy explains the process by which postings to Idaho IMC may be
hidden, or removed from view, by members of the editorial collective under
certain conditions. These conditions are divided into four groups, each
described below along with the corresponding process for hiding a posting
from the newswire.
A. Problems For Immediate Action:
1. Posts containing no content
2. Duplicate carbon copy posts
3. Profit Motivated advertising or job descriptions
Process for hiding posts containing problems for immediate action:
1. An empowered editor (active member of the editorial collective)
identifies a posting as a problem and immediately hides it.
2. The editor appends a signed comment to the hidden article explaining why
it was hidden.
3. The editor addresses an explanatory letter to the author of the posting
(if email is given), and sends the letter first to the editorial collective.
4. If no objections are raised by the editorial collective within 1 day,
the explanatory letter is then forwarded to the author.
B. Problems Requiring Discussion:
To be dealt with on a case-by-case basis. Maintaining openness is a
fundamental goal of the policy. Where consensus is not achieved within the
editorial collective about the removal of a post, the post remains unhidden.
Potential problems identified so far include:
1. Content that is borderline profit motivated advertising
2. Clearly off-topic postings
3. Copyrighted or other illegally duplicated content that exceeds the
bounds of fair use.
4. Racist, sexist, homophobic and/or pornographic comments unrelated to or
contributing no substantial value to the topic under discussion
Process for hiding posts containing problems requiring discussion:
1. An empowered editor identifies a posting as a problem and alerts the
editorial collective, recommending that the post be hidden.
2. At least two additional editors must concur with the first editor's
judgment, and none express disagreement, or, 24 hours must pass without any
editor expressing disagreement.
3. The editor hides the posting.
4. The editor appends a signed comment to the posting explaining why it was
hidden.
5. The editor sends the author an explanatory letter (if email address is
given), also forwarding it to the editorial collective.
C. Spam Attack Procedure
A spam attack is defined as a pattern of abuse of the newswire by a
particular poster. If the editorial collective reaches consensus (at a
meeting or on the listserv) that a specific individual is launching a spam
attack on Idaho IMC, the spammer's post(s) may be hidden from the newswire
by a member of the editorial collective. Each instance of recognized spam
will be considered individually, and the reason why the editorial
collective perceives the post(s) as spam will be stated on the editorial
list, as well as in a comment on the hidden article itself. When a member
of the editorial collective hides a post, (s)he shall immediately notify
the editorial listserv.
D. Unanticipated Problems
This category accommodates the evolutionary nature of our editorial policy;
future postings containing unforeseen problems may require editors to
intervene, and then to further refine our policy.
Process for hiding posts containing unanticipated problems:
1. An empowered editor identifies a posting as a problem and alerts the
editorial collective, recommending that the post be hidden, and carefully
articulating specific reasons why editorial policy should be changed to
restrict the problem in question.
2. At least two additional editors must concur with the first editor's
judgment, and none may express disagreement, or 24 hours must pass without
any editor expressing disagreement.
3. The editor hides the posting.
4. The editor appends a signed comment to the posting explaining why it was
hidden.
5. The editor sends the author an explanatory letter (if email address is
given), also forwarding it to the editorial collective.
6. The new restriction becomes, provisionally, part of editorial policy. As
soon as possible, the editorial collective should critically discuss the
provisional policy change, deciding whether and how to alter the written
policy.
7. Online policy documents are altered to reflect changes in policy.
resources:
350MGHZ - 16gig drive - 256K DSL; Programmer with 21 years experience
including HPUX, AIX, Linux, DOS, Windows; Members of working group have
extensive experience in organizing, activism, web journalism, photography,
and law.
outreach:
The Idaho Indymedia working group has held a number of public meetings,
and invited members of human rights, women\'s rights, minority rights,
GLBT, disability and other groups to participate. We will redouble our
outreach efforts once the site is active.
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