

a video that explains why discrimination on the Internet is a problem and will continue to be as long as net neutrality rules are not enforced.
Please! Spread this video! Cut & paste it into your own blog, a bulletin, your profile, your myspace or facebook page... really it can go almost anywhere. The three R's: re-edit, re-distribute & resources! This documentary is open-source. What does that mean? It means anyone can burn it to a DVD, or put it on their iPod and show it to their friends, even put it on tv! It means that anyone can take it and alter it... add their own clips to it, scrap 90% of it and start over, whatever you want. Do you think it's too long? Then download the source-files from Four Eyed Monsters and cut a shorter version. Think it's not long enough? You get the idea. There are countless clips out there on net neutrality - search YouTube, Google, Blip.tv, or make your own, etc - take those and help this documentary evolve. Help it stay current, help it speak to as many people as possible. Seriously - I hope to see this video (or different versions of it) popping up all over on my favorite sites. Anyone who is reading this post right now has a stake in this - you have something to loose. What will the internet look like in 10 years? Well that all depends...
In cool “Mars attacks” fashion, the video outlines how everyday Internet users and grassroots organizations can actually WIN this battle against the phone and cable giants for net neutrality. With the 109th Congress now over, Ted Stevens’ “tubes” bill has died on the vine – and we now have an historic opportunity.
Net Neutrality and the history of communications technologies etc. Save the World Wide Web!
Humanity Lobotomy - what will the internet look like in 10 years? Spread the word by copy this code and paste to a blog, bulletin, your profile or comment. All are welcome to do anything they would like with the above edit or any future edits you make. Put it on you web page, burn a DVD to show at a gathering, show it in a theater before another movie, play it at a cafe, show it to friends on a portable player, or even put it on television. We?ve (Four Eyed Monsters + Caliblog) put a creative commons license on the video so that you don?t have to ask permission, but it is cool to hear where it?s showing and that knowledge is part of the feedback loop, so let us know in a comment. If people start showing it all over the place on their own accord, then we?ll know the edit is really concise, if that happens on a smaller scale, it?s possible the edit might be something only certain people have the backround to understand. Net Neutrality needs all t
Amy Goodman at the 2007 NCMR13 min 58 sec - 24-Jan-2007Journalist Amy Goodman speaks at the 2007 National Conference on Media Reform.