YouTube Copyright Law Video

YouTube Copyright Law Video

If you don’t understand Copyright law, one way to learn about it is on Wikipedia. But a better way to have the concept “stick” is through this excellent YouTube video (thanks for pointing it out, Dennis)
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CJn_jC4FNDo]

Disney is one of the most aggessive defenders of copyright; in this video Professor Eric Faden of Bucknell University shows that copyright isn’t a blanket protection, but that there is a space for fair use.

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“Cheers” for Medical News

Cheers medical news

Imagine a medical news community where journalists aren’t bombarded with irrelevant story pitches. Where they don’t receive the dreaded “Did you get my email?” phone follow-ups from PR practitioners. Where journalists have quick and easy access to sources they trust. Where public information officers and PR staff understand each other’s needs and interests, and come together in a common space of mutual respect. “Where everybody knows your name…
“People say I’m a dreamer, but I’m not the only one…”

Well, I am the only one right now, but I’m dreaming that might change. In an earlier post, I mentioned that I had created a new group in Facebook for Health & Medical Journalists and PIOs. But having listened to part of Made to Stick (highly recommended; my review is forthcoming), I was compelled to change the group’s name to: “Cheers” for Medical News.

Journalists have the Association of Health Care Journalists. PIOs have PIONet through Newswise. These are fine organizations, but they have their limits. Though journalists can be collegial, they naturally compete with each other to get the story first. Likewise PIOs and PR practitioners have an interest in pitching their stories and getting their subject experts featured.

“Cheers” could be the place where individuals from both groups come together to meet. Sometimes it would be a public conversation, much as the ones Norm and Cliff had when they left their bean-counting duties and their appointed postal rounds. Other times journalists working on enterprise stories, and PIOs “pitching” ideas, would be like the countless, nameless others on the show having private conversations at the side tables and in the anteroom.

Journalists are exploring how they can use Facebook, and a group called “Journalists and Facebook” has grown to over 900 members in about a week. Here’s the story behind it. With 31 million members, and growing 1.2 million per week, Facebook has both critical mass and privacy flexibility that could make it a Commons for medical news.

I believe the “Cheers” for Medical News group in Facebook could bridge the gap between news media and public relations by creating a community of mutual respect and trust.To join the group, a person would need to be approved by an administrator, either as a medical center PIO or a journalist. ( I’m looking for other administrators to help approve new members, by the way.)
medical news facebook

When a big story is breaking, a discussion of angles and sources could take place out in the open on the discussion board, “around the bar” in the Cheers metaphor. Everyone could chime in. If a reporter is enterprising a story, on the other hand, she might send a private message to PIOs at certain institutions asking for sources.

Likewise, a PIO with an embargoed news release could send a notification and link to the release through Facebook (although EurekAlert works fine for this right now), or could pitch an exclusive to a particular producer or reporter through a Facebook message.

Messages would come by email. If you think someone is spamming you with irrelevant pitches, you could block his messages through your Facebook privacy settings. People who continually behave badly could be banished from the group. The result is you could reclaim the value of email; you would know the messages you get through your Facebook groups and friends would be worthwhile.

Journalists are legitimately frustrated that they are overwhelmed with story pitches from people who don’t take the time to know their beats or what kinds of stories interest them.

Media list companies exist to build distribution and pitching lists for news releases, and often hype their services with phrases like, “We’ll show you how to score big coverage…” as if media relations was some kind of predatory dating game, and we were a bunch of Sam Malones.

facebook medical news journalism
Through the web 2.0 service Facebook, people in the health and medical news community can set a higher standard. PIOs and journalists need each other and have mutual interests that could be achieved by coming together in one place:

  • Journalists who are part of the Cheers commons could also establish their own secret Facebook groups, and could send source queries just to those individuals, quickly and easily. By putting their beats, interests and how they prefer to receive story pitches in their Facebook profiles, they would get more worthwhile story ideas from PIOs.
  • Academic centers could put their news release distribution lists in Facebook, in a similar secret list. They could even distribute embargoed releases this way, and would be sure that only credentialed journalists would have access. If someone broke an embargo, they could be removed from the list. And unlike PR Newswire and other services, distribution through Facebook would be free. It’s Wikinomics at work.

ProfNet is a good service that enables journalists to cast a wide net, to send out an All Points Bulletin in the search for sources. Facebook would be a way to create more helpful, meaningful relationships.

I know about meaningful relationships formed through Facebook; my daughter met her husband there. They were both in college in Wisconsin, and he was searching for people with an interest in Theology. They met in December 2005, and I walked Rachel down the aisle on December 30, 2006.

We’re not talking anything that meaningful with our version of Cheers. But if there’s interest, we could create a digital health journalism “watering hole,” which would, I think, be a worthwhile thing.

What do you think?

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Mark Steyn on Conrad Black

Mark Steyn is a delightful writer whose continuous blog posts from the trial of Conrad Black and his co-defendants were must-read material for me for the last several month. I had to be careful each day not to be eating or drinking while reading Steyn’s dispatches, lest my sustenance do a sudden U-turn and come back through my nostrils.

As Steyn points out in his Maclean’s manifesto on Chicago’s biggest miscarriage since the 1960 election, there wasn’t anything funny about the trial’s outcome. But it does help to explain why defendants so routinely cop a plea: it’s like a really high-stakes game of “Deal or No Deal?” As Steyn puts it:

Lord Black of Crossharbour is now a convicted felon. And those of us who believe he’s innocent of any crime have to acknowledge that reality. Whether the felon himself does is another matter. In the 48 hours after the verdict, he sent multiple emails to friends and members of the media: “This war has gone on for nearly four years and the original allegations have been worn down to a fraction of where they started,” he wrote. Of the 13 charges against him, he was found not guilty of nine. “We got rid of most of them,” he said, “and expect to get rid of the rest on appeal.”

And if this was a soccer match he’d be right: Crossharbour 9, Northern District of Illinois 4. A cracking victory.

But it’s not soccer. With multiple counts attracting long jail sentences and severe financial penalties, the government only needs to put one ball in the back of the net to ruin your life.

Lord Black had originally been accused of fleecing shareholders of $400 million; in being acquitted on 9 of 13 charges, he finally was found guilty of diverting less that 1/100th of that amount.

The old saw says those who love the law and sausage shouldn’t watch either being made; seeing Chicago’s federal prosecutors put away Black & Co. wasn’t particularly appetizing, either.

Do yourself a favor and read Steyn’s whole article. You will not see finer writing this year.

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Toward a Medical News Community

Amen to this from Steve Rubel:

Further, the lines between old and new media are blurring. Community is becoming a river that flows through virtually every web site, The media is adding social networking features while also embedding itself into big horizontal hubs like Facebook or Twitter. They have embraced changed faster than we have.

To thrive in this new distributed environment, the PR community must step out in front of the curtain, become a bit more technically adept and participate transparently as individuals in online communities. We will have to openly collaborate and add value to the network and help the companies we represent do exactly the same.

You can read the whole post here.

I’ve been thinking along those same lines, and I believe Facebook has tremendous potential for building community among journalists and the news sources with whom they work. That’s why I created a Facebook group called Health & Medical Journalists and PIOs. In a future post I will give more of the rationale. Meanwhile, if you’re interested in joining the group, I’ve set it up as closed, requiring that an Admin approve any new members. But just click here to join, and if you’re either a PIO for an academic medical center or a journalist, I’ll be glad to add you. I also will want to invite others to become Admininstrators, so let me know if you’re interested in that, too.
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Integrated Web Marketing Tidbits and Tips

A continuation of this post on integrated web marketing, with some interesting tidbits and tips:

  • 75 percent of viewers can’t remember a URL from a TV spot, so you need to make it easy to search for and find you once you’ve piqued their interest.
  • It makes sense to buy misspellings of keyword searches, too…these go really cheap. Also incorporate buzz words from TV spots. And if you bid on longer and more descriptive phrases the cost for each will be lower, too…and you’re more likely to get people who are more pre-qualified for your product or service.
  • Kristine pegged search engine share at 62 percent for Google, about 20 percent for Yahoo, perhaps 10 percent for MSN and minimal for Ask.com
  • One interesting idea used in the distilled spirits industry was buying keywords to drive searchers to an online news story about a given brand of vodka winning a NY Times taste test. Google won’t sell to hard liquor sites. So just because you buy the ads doesn’t mean you have to send the traffic directly to your site; you can send to a site that speaks favorably about you.
  • comScore has a panel of 2 million people worldwide who have agreed to be continuously and passively observed when they are on the net.
  • 83 percent of the sales impact of search is latent or offline. In other words, people may not buy right at that minute, but search does affect their eventual decisions.
  • 31 percent of internet users regularly delete cookies. You can get the comScore cookie deletion white paper here.
  • In calculating the ROI on search campaigns, you need to remember that for every $1 spent directly online, another $1.20 is spent latently online within the next 60 days, you should factor in $.40 for cookie deletion, and $4.00 for offline sales.
  • Incorporate keywords/creative supporting PR, viral, word of mouth efforts and regional events
  • Make images part of press releases, with appropriate tags
  • Closed captioning for video makes it searchable. You may want to put this text in the metadata.
  • The example Kristine gave for Engagement was Dexter on Showtime. Among other things, they created an on-line game. Fox did something similar with Drive, not a great show, but the director Twittered his comments and insights during the debut.

Again, I wish I had been able to stay for the whole presentation, but maybe others who attended can fill in more details.

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