Proof that news will eat itself
Users sent in their pictures of the Airbus A380 when it made its first flight to the UK, and many of those pictures were featured on the ´óÏó´«Ã½ News website and on ´óÏó´«Ã½ News 24. One of them recorded the appearance of the photo on the TV, and has now posted that recording to YouTube. So to complete the circle, it's only proper that we should in turn link to that posting.
Comments
If this was a public blog, it would only be a matter of time until the person who took the picture would link to this entry.
Is there an official ´óÏó´«Ã½ line on the replication of news on sites like YouTube, and is this trickier when the content includes material generated by the public (presumably for free)?
You can imagine a lawyer's letter going out at some point to YouTube or a blog which would be entirely by-the-book, but which would look extremely uncool.
Waits to be told that a steering group is discussing this...
and so would I ;-)
quotes :
"The big media companies shouldn't worry that people will post their copyrighted material on YouTube. They should worry that people will post their own stuff on YouTube, and audiences will watch that instead."