8 Comments Already

commenter
October 23rd, 2008 @9:33 am  

Yes, I agree!

No, I disagree!

Such a pickle we are in today with digital recorders, cell phone cameras, PDA’s & Crack-berries.

On the one hand you’ve worked hard on your content, as you point out, and you don’t want anyone to steal it.

On the other hand, you want this information to get out to the wider world, right? And maybe this person has just found a great high tech way to take notes!

It’s a dilemma. We want protection and yet we want connection in this Web 2.0 world.

I eventually come down on the side of…connection. On the side of an abundance viewpoint.

Heck, maybe you should just post your slideshow. The whole enchilada! Right there for the world to see…and steal!

Because you WANT the world to know this information. Yet, information alone is lifeless.

Information is brought to life by YOUR wisdom. YOUR examples. YOUR stories. YOUR unique and uncopyable (hey new word…steal it) point-of-view.

commenter
October 27th, 2008 @5:09 pm  

Chris: I agree that content is king. Since we all live in the 21st Century, I really don’t think that there is any good way to keep your content “secure”. Instead, I think that all speakers need to keep moving forward and developing new content and new ways of presenting it. Basically, let the bottom dwellers capture “yesterday’s” info and let our clients request the more current “tomorrow’s” info.

- Dr. Jim Anderson
The Accidental Communicator Blog

commenter
October 30th, 2008 @7:46 pm  

Hmm. Is this something conference planners are going to have to add to the list? And how to enforce it?

“Please, no cameras, videos, or cell phones during the presentation.”

But how to stop a pirate with a cell phone? I know I’ve seen speakers and presentations on YouTube that look like pirate video!

commenter
docwhat Said,
November 7th, 2008 @2:14 pm  

IANAL, but I play one on the internets.

If you are in a public setting, you have no expectation of privacy and photos can be taken.

In a private setting the rules are different; unless you have specific signs up saying “no photos” you don’t have much of a leg to stand on.

There is no violation of copyright if I were to record your whole presentation. Copyright only comes into play if I start to distribute it.

Remember, it’s fair use to show parts of your presentation if it is an insignificant part.

If I were you and I was concerned, I’d ask them politely not to take pictures since it is your lively-hood. I would retain a lawyer if I caught anyone using my material verbatium.

Ciao!

commenter
chris Said,
November 7th, 2008 @6:46 pm  

Here is my thought after reading the comments:

If you want the slides, just ask. It annoys me because I feel that they are taking pictures because they are a) too lazy to take notes, b) too anti-social to ask for the slides after the presentation, or c) they want to steal the content of the presentation.

Whatever the reasons, it still makes sense to ask. I remember a number of my college professors denying taping of lectures because they deemed it lazy or they didn’t want people producing derivative works without permission (note packs, lectures for sale, etc.)

I am surprised that this started quite a debate.

commenter
John Said,
December 25th, 2008 @2:02 am  

I agree with Michael. You want this content to get out there. If you are at all unsure, check out Seth Godin. In one example, he wanted all of his books (he is a bestselling author) available on the Amazon Kindle for free! His books are the total content too - not just a part of a presentation.

So, give the slides out. Let people know ahead of time. Make the content that is downloaded better than digital pictures somehow to get your real content with your branding into the hands of people that care.

Besides, the slides are not what people go to see, it is the presenter ;-)

commenter
John Said,
December 25th, 2008 @2:03 am  

Chris: Mistyped my URL. Correct one above.

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