EM Southeast Asia Tours Down Under: Screen, Chat, Plane, Train, Bus and Friends
Southeast Asia Editor Enrico Aditjondro (me) and Indonesian Content and Outreach Coordinator Yerry Borang traveled down to Melbourne in late February to join the whole EngageMedia team and board members to do a mishmash strategising of the media and organization. The meetings were held in a nice little town called Warburton. Little internet and plenty of wildlife was surprisingly good for discussions and planing ... for a little while at least. After three nights, the team returned to Melbourne and we did our first screen and chat for the EM Southeast Asia in OZ Tour at the Gertrude's Brown Couch, Fitzroy.

On the dawn of Monday, 7/3, Yerry and I flew to Sydney, and on Wednesday, 9/3, screened and chatted with students at the University of New South Wales (UNSW). The event was co-organised by the Sydney based Indonesian Solidarity Forum. The talks ranged from Papua, licensing, security and journalism. The class featured quite a number of Japanese foreign exchange students, along with Southeast Asian studies and human rights activists. Aside from Yerry and I, EngageMedia's Communications Coordinator Alexandra Crosby also joined the chat. Ali is also one of the writers of Videochronic.
On the next day, the duo took the train up to Newcastle. This time the screen and chat was organized at the Renew Newcastle Headquarters. The host of the event was the group Kanuguba though its artist Fern York, and long time Timor and women's activist and author Jude Conway was at hand getting people to come and engage. The audience was a mix of Newcastle Uni students, artists, activists from the climate action group Rising Tide, and Newie's film and documentary fans. The chat was intimate but inspiring. The coal town film 'A Step Back in Time' was particularly well received as it was a comparison to Newcastle's coal history. Activists from the Rising Tide were also preparing for that weekend's coal ship blockade, while the Newies were bracing for the various debates over the town's development and rise of artists movement. And oh, by the way, Newcastle was voted one of Lonely Planet's Top 10 Cities for 2011.

After the evening's event, Yerry and I were back on the train to Sydney to catch the morning's train to Canberra. To our surprise, the train only went halfway to Gosford, so from midnight to 3am, we enjoyed the Gosford's breeze while I caught up with Jude's new book on Timorese women. Finally, the train arrived and we hopped from one train to another to a taxi to the Australian National University.

The screen and chat at the ANU was organized by the School of Island Southeast Asia, and some heavyweight academics and Indonesianists like Ariel Heryanto, Amrih Widodo, Margot Lyon, and other academics. The seminar type space was very inviting for questions as we we tried as much to discuss issues in the limited time.

The big question from Ariel was, "Are you still confident that you can make change in this day and age?" Well, with your help, Oom Ariel, we sure are.
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The films screened throughout the trip were 'A Step Back in Time' by Indrani Kopal, 'A Short Portrait Of Mamdouh Habib' by Serge Stanley, 'Gaharu: Save the People and Forests of Papua' by SKP-Kam, and 'Adidas: Stop Wearing Us Out' by Sarah Rennie.

Aside from doing screenings and chats, we also managed to touch base with old friends and make new ones. We were inspired by the determination of people like Marni Cordell of New Matilda, intrigued by Sarah Hunt of Hidden Documentary, enjoyed the brief encounter with the Bill & George, and many many more. Of course the Melbourne greens, Newcastle beach, Bondi and Canberra’s National Archive helped completed the tour. Oh yeah, we also bumped into some naked bike riders along the way.
Stay tuned for the videos!
Video Vortex #6, Amsterdam
On the 11/12 of March I attended the Video Vortex #6 event at the Trouw in Amsterdam. The conference was the latest in a series that started in Brussels in October 2007. In the intervening period interest in the world of online video, particularly critical discourse, has certainly grown, and much more is needed.
There was a large number of topics at the event, highlights included
- Holmes Wilson's presentation on Universal Subtitles - a great tool and something we hope to have running on EngageMedia in the next 3/4 months. {video}
- Ben Moskowitz on the new possibilities of html5. {video}
- Evan Roth of the Graffiti Research Lab and his unique take on .gif mashups. {video}
- Mel Hogan's take on the failure of several online video art archives in Canada - interesting to hear about projects that didn't work, and why. {video}
- Natalie Bookchin and her amazing online video documentary deconstructions/creations. {video}
- Sam Gregory of WITNESS and his take on remix video, aggregated video and Human Rights activism {video}
I also spoke along with Sam on the Online Video as a Political Tool panel discussing the corporatisation of online video and online media in general, and the current state of activist initiatives to create free and open online video. {video}
All the videos from the conference can be found here.
The Video Vortex reader was also launched. A lot of great content in there. I'm currently getting through David Teh's take on video in Southeast Asia.
I was expecting a little less art and a little more activism from the event, basically more focus on the social change angle. We only really hit this in the last session but I think there is so much more to discuss. I look forward finding a forum for this in the future, we just seemed to be getting into the meat of the debate regarding the political economy of web 2.0 and what the role of the media activists is in such a dramatically changing landscape.
A future Video Vortex event is planned in Yogyakarta Indonesia, mid this year. EngageMedia is hoping to participate in that. There are also plans for a future event at the Museum of Contemporary Art in Zagreb in April or May 2012.
APC meets in Bohol
This years meeting was particularly special. Not only was it the first member meeting in Asia, the APC celebrated 20 years since its founding in 1990. The issues that stirred its founding members to create a global network of computer connected social justice organisations are still are the forefront of the APC, though many have been in recent times eclipsed by the need to sustain access to the internet as a fundamental human right along with the protections the UN Charter of Human Rights affords.
The need for a strong coalition of advocates for such rights online are more pertinent now than ever and it was with this, and recent environmental catastrophes and the political upheavals in North Africa and the Middle East in mind that we set about to learn, share and support each other over the first two weeks of March, 2011.
Network Learning Forum
The APC convened a research, learning and collaboration forum that preceded the member meeting. The objectives of the Network Learning Forum (NLF) were to:
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Build a common understanding of what an open, fair and sustainable internet means to us.
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Look back as activists and advocates on what we have achieved in the last 2 years in the NLF’s thematic areas.
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To learn from one another, share skills and strategies among APC members, partners, research networks and project teams.
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To plan and collaborate for an open, fair and sustainable internet.
The NLF was based around poster presentations, World Cafe facilitated working groups or “clusters”, conversational clinics presided over by experts in their chosen fields and open discussions based on television talk show formats. The most successful session, and the one most folks sought more time for, were the poster presentations.

It was clear people wanted to know more about participating organisations, their work, methodologies and possible future collaborations. In short, how can we learn from each other to strengthen our overall united social impact goals.
The poster session I presented was titled The media is nothing without the message, the message is meaningless without an audience, an audience is dis-empowered without a meaningful message.
The session described project design and implementation methodology towards achieving tangible social impact with video and video distribution. It drew substantial numbers of forum participants and no end of questions. So much so that I'd not had a chance to attend anyone else's presentations. In anycase, after three days of input, outputs and over-coffee conversations the following points stood out:
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Get a communications strategy designed during project design and planning. Don't wait till the project's finished. Kind of common knowledge, but often over-looked.
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Collaborating with organisations that have strong communications / media campaigning skills is key to successful social impact goals. EM's strategy, described by Privacy International founder, Simon Davis as a “federated approach”, of collaborating with groups such as Human Rights Watch, was seen as exemplary in both getting “gripping the media tiger by the ears” and protecting our sources, staff and online services.
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There wasn't enough time to dig deeper. Many organisations wanted to know more about EngageMedia, and I wanted to get to know others better too. The opportunities for networking in a meaningful way were too few.
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Social entrepreneurship works. Well, it does in India and the Digital Empowerment Foundation, one of APC's newest members, is a leading example for how few resources can be put to significant use towards measurable social impact.
Digital Empowerment Foundation
I don't know how these folks do it. They manage to run an unfathomable number of initiatives to “uplift the downtrodden and to create economic and commercial viability using Information Communication and Technology as means.”
I was particularly moved by a project in which they had taught a single piece of software to weavers of Chanderi in Madhya Pradesh, a project described as a “fusion between history, culture, technology, art and ancient skill.” Weavers with a tradition going back some 600 years are now using computers to design their own weaves, breaking their dependency on an exploitative mercantile chain that saw them earn less than USD$40/month from which they would support their entire families.
Founder of the Digital Empowerment Foundation, Osama Manzar, talked with great enthusiasm about this project, describing the changes in the weaver communities of Chanderi, the significance a single piece of software in the improvement of people's lives. Read the full story.
APC Council Meeting
Aside from the reports to members on program work, the outgoing boards final report and an update on finances, we broke into working groups to discuss options for possible changes to APC's membership policy.
We discussed whether the fees were too high or low, whether individuals and partners, mostly large international organisations, could participate as members and if so, to what extent.
In 20 years the APC barely changed its membership policy. Is it time to broaden the membership base and if so, how do we do this?
Working groups returned with a series of options that would be taken up by a subcommittee to draft into a proposal for review by the incoming board.

The Council Meeting concluded with the board elections which saw two ties, two additional ballots and eventually, a new board!
- Danijela Babic, ZamirNet, Croatia (APC Chair)
- Valentina Pellizzer, owpsee, Bosnia-Herzegovina
- Andrew Garton, EngageMedia, Australia/Indonesia
- Julian Casasbuenas, Colnodo, Colombia
- Shahzad Ahmad, BytesForAll, Pakistan
- Graciela Selaimen, NUPEF, Brazil
- Liz Probert, GreenNet, United Kingdom
Hearty congratulations to all new board members and a special thanks to all members who put their trust in faith in me to enter a third term on APC's board.
Rapid Response Network meeting
The following day of the meeting a small number of us, in collaboration with representatives from Tactical Tech and Access Now, we huddled over notes and plans towards a new look Rapid Response Network for the APC. We reviewed options to address the immediate needs of our Tokyo based, Japanese member, JCafe, hosting around 400 NGOs many providing critical post-disaster information and under constant threat of power outages and Government intervention. We were told JCafe members are publishing much information contradicting that made public by the Government on the nuclear threat.
By the end of the day we agreed that a proposal wold be prepared based on our deliberations that could see us respond to internet threats in a much more effective way than had been possible. That said, it should be noted that in spite of any formal policies and procedures, APC members have, and continue to respond to threats and potential technical hazards when ever possible and fast! There's palpable, unwavering support amongst its members and our peers. APC is most certainly still, 20 years on, truly on the side of good!

And with the formalities at an end I spent my remaining days, before returning to Dunmoochin, on Panglao Island in life-changing under-water experiences and casual horizon gazing. It never ceases to astound me just how many different things there are to marvel at on planet earth.
Launching the EM-micro tour
The medium is nothing without the message and the message last Friday, at our first public appearance in Melbourne for some years, was that public engagement is everything when it comes to mobilising communities to change the behaviour of elites.
EngageMedia celebrated a week of project and strategic planning with a launch of its first screening and video for change discussion tour taking in Victoria, Canberra and NSW.
Gertrude's Brown Couch was host to about 50 of Melbourne's social change media makers, from radio to video producers, activists and representatives from various Southeast Asian communities that have sought refuge here.
I'd opened the evening with a short history of activism and computer communications, from modems in 1990 to mobile devices and video over 20 years later. The needs are the same, the injustices greater, the technology more accessible and yet remote communities remain hard to reach and in many parts of the region, more at threat now than ever.
Andrew Lowenthal introduced our full team and an over-view of our work from 2005 to the present. Enrico talked about our work from an editorial and Indonesian perspective paving way for the films we screened.
On the program were:
- The Unreliable World / Producer and Director Ellen Roberts
- Adidas: Stop Wearing Us Out / Produced by Oxfam Australia
- A Short Portrait Of Mamdouh Habib / Produced by Serge Stanley, Directed by Sara Kid
- A Step Back in Time / Produced by Indrani Kopal
As we closed the evening I was approached by some one who had heard me give a very similar introduction in 1993 at an event I'd co-produced, FIERCE-InterRave. We were raising funds for modems to be sent to Sarawak. In 2011 we're still finding ways to improve communications for remote communities there, particularly those defending their forest homes and their native customary rights.
Another visitor to our event, a stalwart of Australia's progressive movements for decades remarked that having come to our event had given him some heart that the good work continues, that it does so in-spite of diminishing funds and a culture of denial in Australia for Indonesian cultural studies in particular, that produced a generation of bi-lingual Australians adept at Bahasa Indonesian.
Major updates to EngageMedia.org
We've just upgraded EngageMedia.org to Plumi 4.1.1, the open source video sharing platform we produce in collaboration with Unweb.me and other developers.
The release includes a swag of new features, including...
- Bittorrent: when you upload a video a bittorrent file is automatically created, great for users with slow connections that break mid-download and also for sharing to bittorrent networks.
- Plays/downloads on videos: videos now show the number of times they have been played and downloaded.
- Low resolution version of video player: you now have the option to watch streaming video in a lower resolution, good for slower connections.
- Other videos by this member listed on video pages: thumbnail links to other videos you have contributed to the site.
- Video listings now link prominently to member profile pages.
- Paypal: you can now add your Paypal account to your profile page to accept donations.
- Facebook/Twitter etc. accounts can be easily linked to from your profile page.
- Profile page shows the most recent comments you have made.
- Number of comments on an item are shown on video listings.
For the geeky, fuller announcement please go here.
Sejumlah Pembaruan Besar di Situs EngageMedia.org
Kami baru saja memperbarui situs Engagemedia ke Plumi versi 4.1.1. Plumi sendiri merupakan perangkat lunak untuk berbagi video yang diciptakan melalui kerjasama kami dengan Unweb.me dan sejumlah pengembang lain.
Pada rilis terakhir ini fitur-fitur utamanya antara lain:
- Bittorrent: saat anda mengunggah video video ke situs ini, sebuah file bittorrent akan tercipta. Bitorrent sendiri memampukan pengguna dengan koneksi internet lambat agar tidak terputus saat mengunduh. Sebagai perangkat lunak Bitorrent, juga baik untuk sistem saling berbagi file.
- Plays/download: Video saat ini telah dibekali dengan catatan soal jumlah download dan pemutaran.
- Low resolution/video beresolusi rendah: saat ini anda telah diberikan pilihan untuk memainkan video dalam resolusi yang rendah, yang sangat baik untuk koneksi internet lambat.
- Video lain dari anggota: terdapat link ke sejumlah video lain yang diunggah masing-masing anggota.
- Daftar video saat ini tersambung secara tetap di dalam halaman profile anggota.
- Paypal: anda dapat mencantumkan akun Paypal anda di halaman profil anda untuk kemudahan penggalangan dana.
- Facebook/Twitter dan sebagainya: akun jaringa sosial anda saat ini dapat direkatkan di halaman profil anda.
- Halaman profil: halaman ini juga menampilkan komentar terakhir yang anda sumbangkan ke situs EngageMedia.
- Banyaknya komentar diperlihatkan juga di dalam daftar video.
Untuk penjelasan yang lebih teknis masuk ke halaman berikut ini.
EM's Southeast Asia Crew Travels East
Following the annual team meeting, EngageMedia video activists will be visiting Australia's East Coast in March. If you are based in Melbourne, Canberra, Sydney or Newcastle and would like to hear more about our projects or discuss possible collaborations, please contact us.

Melbourne
In Melbourne, the complete EM squad will walk from its Fitzroy office on Napier St to Gertrude's Brown Couch to chat with friends and collaborators.
| When | Friday 4 March / 6 - 7.30 pm |
| Where | Gertrude's Brown Couch, 30 - 32 Gertrude St, Fitzroy |
Newcastle
In Mulubinba (Newcastle), EM collaborates with Kanuguba in inviting Novocastrians to watch films, share stories on video activism, open licensing in Indonesia and Southeast Asia, and asking for your participation in making videos as the tool for change.
| When | Thursday 10 March / 7.30 - 9 pm |
| Where | Renew Newcastle HQ, 3 Morgan St Newcastle |
| Contact | Jude Conway - 0409-193242 |
Sydney
In Sydney, EM collaborates with the Indonesian Solidarity forum in screening and chatting at the University of New South Wales (UNSW).
| When | Wednesday 9 March / 3 - 5 pm |
| Where | Civil Engineering 701, University of NSW, Kensington |
Canberra
| When | Friday 11 March, 12.30 pm - 2 pm |
| Where |
Hedley Bull Seminar Room 1.04, Australian National University |
Screeners and Speakers
Enrico Aditjondro has lived and worked in Indonesia, West Papua, the US, Australia and Timor Leste. He started his journalism career in 1998 when he joined THE MARITIME WORKERS’ JOURNAL in Sydney, reporting on labor issues and shipping industry. Seeking for more excitement, he moved to Jakarta and joined the Southeast Asia Press Alliance in 2000, while also traveling and working in Timor Leste with UNESCO and UNTAET. Enrico also campaigned around corruption issues for Transparency International-Indonesia and in 2005 he was the Southeast Asia Representative for the International News Safety Institute. The same year he co-founded and became managing editor for PARAS INDONESIA, one of the country’s leading bilingual social-political website during those years. He was a fan of EngageMedia before joining the group in May 2009. He is now based in Jakarta, writing, producing films and maintaining the Southeast Asia content for EngageMedia.
Alexandra Crosby is a writer, researcher, designer and arts worker committed to developing relationships between communities. She has worked with a wide range of groups and individuals, primarily on creative approaches to environmental issues such as forest and water management, and particularly with groups in Indonesia and Australia. In 2005 and 2008, Alexandra was co-director of the Gang Festival with Rebecca Conroy, an ongoing creative exchange project between Indonesia and Australia. In 2008, Gang Festival published an anthology titled re:Publik, Indonesia-Australia Creative Adventures. She recently received the Kirk Robson Memorial Award for Leadership in Community Cultural Development. In 2007, Alexandra returned from a position in Yogyakarta as a Visual Arts Officer for the Australian Youth Ambassador for Development program. In 2004, she worked on the project Beyond the Factory Walls, living on the outskirts of Jakarta and producing digital storytelling and live performance with the group Teater Buruh Indonesia. She is now completing a phD researching the visual culture of activist communities in Java. www.alimander.com
Yerry Niko Borang is an independent journalist based in Jakarta. While studying at university, he joined the student movement and created several propaganda bulletins in 1998. From 1999, working with publishers in Yogyakarta, he helped translate several English books on politics and literature into Indonesian, including Orwell's Animal Farm. In 2004 he participated in early meetings to rebuild Indymedia Jakarta. He worked as a radio / web / video journalist for more than six years at vhrmedia.com. During that time, he also worked with community radio and media networks.

Plumi 4.1 Beta Released
Plumi, the video-sharing web application which runs engagemedia.org, was recently updated to be based on Plone 4, the latest version of the open-source content-management system upon which Plumi has been developed.
Since then, EngageMedia and Unweb have been working on some exciting new features focused on improving video sharing and playback, including BitTorrent video-sharing support, high/low resolution video playback, video-analytics and template improvements.
BitTorrent file-sharing of videos will enable Plumi sites to distribute videos over torrent networks. This in turn will let many users, or "seeders", choose to share between them the download of those videos to new users. This distributes the bandwidth load and data usage, and BitTorrent also allows people to resume downloading a file if it is interrupted by a bad internet connection.
This opens up possibilities for video sites located in areas without reliable internet connections to make videos available to download over longer periods of time, without fear of downloads failing due to interruptions. For example, EngageMedia plans to work with some community TV groups in Indonesia for whom this way of sharing video may be very useful.
Another useful new feature for areas without high-quality broadband access, is the ability to switch to a low-resolution, low-bitrate version of the video file. This allows people who may previously had to wait a long time to watch videos in the player, to have a smoother more viable viewing experience.
Video-analytics is another major new feature. Users of video sites have come to expect the ability to see the number of people who have viewed their videos. A new Plumi feature based on the open-source stats application PiWik, gives us this functionality, as well as the ability to see how many people have downloaded the video file itself.
Finally, some template improvements have been made, making the user-interface simpler for ordinary users, and also to make it easier to view the author of a video in listings such as latest videos.
This release is a beta version, designed for development and testing purposes. When a final version is released in the coming weeks, it will be available for EngageMedia and other organisations to install on live production websites, at which point you'll be able to enjoy these great new features.
In the menatime, you can read more about this Plumi release on the Plumi blog.
EngageMedia at VideoVortex, Amsterdam
If you happen to be in the Amsterdam area on March 11/12 drop on in to the Video Vortex, Beyond YouTube conference. EngageMedia's Andrew Lowenthal will be speaking on the Online Video as a Political Tool session about The Public, the Private and Media Autonomy, exploring the political economy of the online video landscape and newly rediscovered contradictions that our public online spaces are increasingly controlled by corporate entities.
EngageMedia, along with Kunci Cultural Studies Centre also have an abbreviated version of our VideoChronic study in the Video Vortex Reader 2, to be launched at the event.
Plumi 4.0 Final Released
We are pleased to announce the release of the final stable version Plumi 4.0 based on the latest Plone 4.0. Plumi is a package of Plone products and customisations that enables you to create your own video-sharing community, out of the box. Plumi is an open-source free software project maintained by EngageMedia since 2005, and used to run the EngageMedia.org website.
Moving to Plone 4 is a major step forward for the Plumi project, which includes all the improvements available inside Plone 4. Plone 4 is faster and easier to use than ever, you can read all about it here:
http://plone.org/products/plone/features/
This new final version of Plumi 4.0 includes bug fixes and improvements to ensure a stable release primarily focused on rebasing Plumi on Plone 4. Other improvements include updating the caching system to create a faster site, clean-up of installation and architecture to ensure forwards-compatibility, updating of third-party software modules, and inclusion of codecs required by the transcoding framework to make installation easier. Developers now also have the option to install a lighter development site for testing purposes, or a fully-featured production website.
You can read more about Plumi 4.0 on the Plumi blog or on the Plone website.
This release has been produced by Unweb (https://unweb.me) in conjunction with EngageMedia (https://www.engagemedia.org).
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