FCC Considering Video.gov
BY Nancy Scola | Wednesday, March 3 2010
One of the projects that might be a part of the upcoming national broadband strategy, reports NextGov, is a video repository:
A proposal in the draft of the government's imminent broadband plan would create a YouTube-like online archive called Video.gov to preserve agencies' Web content and possibly information provided by the media, an official with the Federal Communications Commission said on Monday.
The planned national digital archives for the 21st century would expand upon the government's Data.gov Web site, a warehouse of downloadable federal statistics, and be maintained by the National Archives and Records Administration, the Library of Congress and other agencies, said Eugene Huang, FCC's director of government performance and civic engagement for the national broadband plan.
It's not entirely clear from NextGov's reporting what exactly would go in a Video.gov archive (and why "agencies' Web content" would be something that would be housed there). But you could imagine this being a useful institutionalization of the sort of thing that citizen archivist Carl Malamud has been doing with FedFlix, where he converts and stores some of the many government and government-related films that exist out in the world.