A Good Step: House Oversight Committee Puts Hearing Archive Video Online
from the nicely-done dept
The House Oversight Committee in Congress has done a cool thing that pretty much every committee in Congress should have done long ago: put a ton of its archived video of Committee hearings online. You can see them all on YouTube. The actual project was done by Carl Malamud — and as we’ve noted in the past, if Malamud is involved in a project, it’s almost certainly a good thing. Malamud is a leading force in terms of open government and government transparency, and it’s great that Rep. Darrell Issa and the House Oversight Committee worked with him on this project. All in all, they put up 1,139 videos, ranging back as far as March of 1993 (and right up to December 16th of 2011). This is a “pilot project,” so hopefully it means the same thing will be done with other Congressional video as well.
Filed Under: carl malamud, congress, darrell issa, government, open access, oversight committee
Comments on “A Good Step: House Oversight Committee Puts Hearing Archive Video Online”
Are there transcripts too? Is there an easy way to create a transcript?
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There might be transcripts of what they talked about, we just need to lobbyists to turn over their talking point memos.
anyone know when the RIAA/MPAA are going to force youtube to take this lot off line over copyright infringement issues?
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more than likely if/when one of their signed artists (or someone whom they think but won’t bother to actually ensure, is signed to them) just so much as appears standing in the background silently.
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You mean like the MegaVideo where they claimed an artists who was not actually involved in the final product was being abused? Then they went on and behaved like the artists had no right to have contracts independent of them and claimed ownership over their work?
I mean they are paying for alot of Congresscritters, so they could just use their special secret takedown channels with YouTube.
And then it hit me…
The reason none of the Congresscritters didn’t object to this is…
They think the internet is just a fad and so few people actually use it. YouTube is just a massive front for stealing money from their corporate sponsors, so this worked on 2 levels.
No real people would see the petty bickering videos, and they are flooding that den of piracy with boring content which will force all pirates to give up and run out and buy more movies.
How long until they have an Oprah AHA Moment?
Perhaps someone (or some group) will go through the footage and compile “highlights” videos of the most childish and petty behavior for various congressmen. Then we can all have a laugh as DMCA takedown notices show up and the videos just get reuploaded anyway.
Quick question.
Will any of these representatives be interacting with amusing and/or extremely cute cats?
Followup question: Were the Megaupload videos removed to make room for these Congress videos?
They need to use the web to show what the government is doing …while they still can.
Another question
Is there any chance that the oversight committee has old decisions made by the FCC? The reason that I ask is because Michael Powell made a decision that was disagreeable in the 90s that comes back to haunt us in the form of consolidation in the broadband marketplace.
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reply
This is a “pilot project,” so hopefully it means the same thing will be done with other Congressional video as well.I hope it will be a well-developed beneficial to the people!
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