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Hearken is changing the way local journalism is made. I love this team. Fast Company has the story: http://www.fastcompany.com/3047736/innovation-agents/hearken-aims-to-help-media-gain-traction-with-r...

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Gimlet just introduced premium accounts. Would you pay $5 a month for early access? https://gimletmedia.com/join-gimlet/

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The future of media has to be in giving everybody a voice. Audiences should not be consumers; journalists should be listeners.

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Some interesting comments on this HN thread about open source projects and social media pressure: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=9873125

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"Podcast" is a terrible word. They are often beautiful, sometimes hilarious, always unconstrained by traditional rules. Media for us.

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"Monumental discoveries often come from places where practical application is not immediately apparent." +1 https://medium.com/essays-by-kern/don-t-drop-out-ed0e8d14e22d

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"There is also a very interesting opportunity to build a truly decentralized media platform." http://avc.com/2015/07/the-decentral-authority/

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Let's expand the Second Amendment to include encryption.

The German media is up in arms today because both German politicians and journalists were surveilled by the United States. Meanwhile, Germany is being sued by Reporters Without Borders this week for intercepting email communications. Over in the UK, Amnesty International released a statement yesterday after learning that their communications had been illegally intercepted. (Prime Minister David Cameron also declared his intention to ban strong encryption this week.) France legalized mass surveillance in June.

Everyone, in other words, is spying on everyone else. This has profound democratic implications.

From Amnesty International's statement:

Mass surveillance is invasive and a dangerous overreach of government power into our private lives and freedom of expression. In specific circumstances it can also put lives at risk, be used to discredit people or interfere with investigations into human rights violations by governments.

Furthermore:

We have good reasons to believe that the British government is interested in our work. Over the past few years we have investigated possible war crimes by UK and US forces in Iraq, Western government involvement in the CIA's torture scheme known as the extraordinary rendition programme, and the callous killing of civilians in US drone strikes in Pakistan: it was recently revealed that GCHQ may have provided assistance for US drone attacks.

It has been shown that widespread surveillance creates a chilling effect on journalism, free speech and dissent. Just the fact that you know you're being surveilled changes your behavior, and as the PEN American Center discovered, this includes journalism. Journalism, in turn, is vital for a healthy democracy. A voting population is only as effective as the information they act upon.

Today is July 3. It seems appropriate to revisit the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States, which was passed by Congress and ratified by the States in two forms:

A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.

A well regulated militia being necessary to the security of a free state, the right of the people to keep and bear arms shall not be infringed.

The Supreme Court has confirmed [PDF] that this has a historical link to the older right to bear arms in the English Bill of Rights: "That the Subjects which are Protestants may have Arms for their Defence suitable to their Conditions and as allowed by Law." The Supreme Court has also verified multiple times that the right to bear arms is an individual right.

In 2015, guns are useless at "preserving the security of a free state", and cause inordinate societal harm. Meanwhile, encryption is one of the most important tools we have for preserving democratic freedom. We already subject encryption to export controls on the munitions list. It seems reasonable, and very relevant, to expand the definition of "arms" in the Second Amendment to include it. Let's use the effort that has been put into allowing individual citizens to own firearms, and finally direct it to preserving democracy.

While this would protect the democratic rights of US citizens, it would not impact the global surveillance arms race in itself. It would be foolish to only consider the freedom of domestic citizens: Americans are not more important than anyone else. However, considering the prevalence of American Internet services, and the global influence of American policy as a whole, it would be a very good first step.

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If you're a media entrepreneur - anywhere - you should consider applying to Matter. The network alone is amazing. http://matter.vc/apply/

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If anyone was unsure if podcasts were a sidenote or a real, permanent part of modern media, I give you: http://potus.wtfpod.com/

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@njyo If the media was state sponsored, would we hear about, eg, state surveillance or police brutality? The answer isn't obviously yes.

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@mapkyca in the case of public media, we've seen that grants can help, but aren't the complete solution.

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@mapkyca Of course it's a choice! But the ability to have that choice should be built into any system that supports media.

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@mapkyca Absolutely true. Regardless: single-payer media (or Internet!) scares the shit out of me. Needs to be cross-border, cross-interest.

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@kevinmarks I think it's great as a model, and I love the BBC of course - but I doubt you can support all of media that way.

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@njyo I'm not anti-tax, and I love, eg, the BBC, but I don't think all of media can or should be state sponsored..?

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Talk of @mattervc - which is a fantastic intersection between tech entrepreneurship and values-based media.

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So cool. is a digital media lab for SF youth - at the public library. http://bavc.org/event/mix-sfpl

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"It's cool to think that our audience might be the rest of the world." @BayMediaNetwork giving young people a voice.

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Replied to a post on werd.io :

Even my beloved Edinburgh Festivals don't have anything quite like @BayMediaNetwork. So cool.

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Bay Area Youth Media, including its festival, is exciting. I really want to get involved. http://www.baymn.org/

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8.4% of students in K12 education have special needs, but they're typically not represented in digital media and learning work.

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Replied to a post on werd.io :

How to help homeless youth? "Media can educate and build empathy, which can influence politicians."

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In a world where we are all publishing online, "we are the media". YES.

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A great example of an institution getting on top of anonymous abuse on its campus: http://gimletmedia.com/episode/9-yik-yak/

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