Spotlight

  • Spotlight on Board: Ira Gladkova on Elections

    By Jintian on Wednesday, 8 August 2012 - 2:15pm
    Message type:

    Spotlight on Board: In this general bi-monthly series, individual OTW Board members will talk about their work, goals, and ideas from a more personal perspective.

    This is Ira Gladkova, 2011 Elections Officer, making one last post in that capacity.

    As election season approaches for the 2012 term, I want to show where the current election workgroup's process started by sharing the report I submitted to Board earlier this term. As Elections Officer for the 2011 term, I put together an extensive report on the strengths and flaws I saw in the process during my tenure, the areas that caused confusion and those that were clear, and the needs I saw going forward into future terms.

    I am posting this report publicly as a way to personally and officially pass on the torch into excellent and capable hands. This document was shared with Board on March 23, 2012. It formed the basis for discussion on how to begin structuring elections work for the 2012 term. Since then, we appointed Jenny Scott-Thompson as 2012 Elections Officer, and authorized the Elections Workgroup. Jenny and her group have since been hard at work on developing the elections process and addressing many of the concerns outlined in this report. The Elections Workgroup has already begun posting about the 2012 elections, and you'll be hearing all about the awesome work they've done and the great plans they have.

    This report reflects only my opinion as 2011 Elections Officer, and is not intended to be reflective of the Board's opinions as a whole. It is intended only to show the basis Board used for discussion early in the term, not to reflect adopted policy for the 2012 election. You can see action on some of these items already, such as the formation of an Elections Workgroup; an introductory post with FAQ updates and a timeline is already up. To hear more on the 2012 election, stay tuned!

    If you have any questions or would like to raise a concern that was not covered in the report, please feel free to submit comments here. You can also contact the new elections officer through the elections contact form.

    There is a summary of the report below. The report is duplicated in full after the summary, and can also be found attached to this post as a PDF.


    2011 Elections Report: Table of Contents and Summary

    • Transparency of Process
      • Transparency is a continuing issue, and if an elections process is not transparent, it is not sustainable. Problem areas include:
        • Elections officer: selection, qualifications, duties, purview, and powers. An essential role for voters to understand. Lack of definition in this area is huge concern, transparency impossible without clear definitions.
        • Candidate Q&A: Questions submission process, kind/number of questions submitted, similar questions, process for candidate responses
        • Voter accounts: explanation of voting accounts and separation from OTW membership, AO3 user, and other accounts. This persistent confusion is another deeply concerning issue.
        • Election results and publication: who sees results and why
      • Overall process is ill-defined and not always well-communicated.
    • Elections Officer: Purview and Power
      • Elections officer (EO) has a lot of responsibility (executing the election, supporting candidates, providing voters with means for informed decision), but very little authority. This is toxic to the officer, the candidates, and the process, and cannot be made transparent or sustainable. In particular, EO lacks any way to penalize candidates who do not follow the process.
      • Elections process itself is also poorly defined: when ability to enforce a process is questionable, the results of the process become unpredictable. However, current process is not fair or enforceable in the first place.
      • Possibility of disqualifying noncompliant candidates? Standards of timeliness and compliance are reasonable given other Board/candidate requirements. Well-constructed elections process necessary for this.
      • Elections process includes work from many committees; essential to delineate boundaries of duty and authority vis-à-vis elections officer.
      • Forming elections workgroup may be good workload/purview solution.
      • Is it necessary for EO to be a Board member?
    • Structure of Q-A and Chats
      • Chats and Q-A are current elections centerpiece: two one-hour chats for asking questions, with spillover questions in email.
      • Have great potential but current process unsustainable and inefficient due to growth in candidate spread and number of candidates/questions.
      • Both chats and Q-A should be retained in some form to give candidates variety of ways to showcase strengths, and give voters a broader view. Process should be built around individual strengths of each activity.
      • Candidate Chats
        • Goal is to ask/answer questions in an on-the-spot manner and see candidates interact.
        • Provide unique opportunity for voters to observe candidates interacting with each other similarly to Board work. Could be repurposed to focus on this.
        • Possibilities include casual get-to-know chats at beginning of elections, using chats only for question followup, and chats centered on candidate interaction rather than with voter questions.
      • Candidate Questions
        • Current emphasis is on short, off-the-cuff responses.
        • Longer turnarounds/responses privilege candidates with bigger chunks of time and may lead to information overload for voters. Chat format privileges candidates who work best in high-pressure social situations.
        • Current 24-hour turnaround a decent compromise, but would work better with email questions period scheduled into timeline.
        • Procedure for question batching and ordering is unclear, should be defined and publicized. Sending questions in order received is simplest, but can lead to repetition of similar questions.
        • Possible options for how to do questions are offered.
        • Can candidate statements be translated?
    • Timing and Drives
      • Link between fall membership drive and elections timeline should be examined. Timing of candidate announcements/statements (knowing who's running) affects drive donations.
      • Pace and length of season: bad lag between candidate announcement and chats if too spread out, voter/candidate fatigue if too fast or long. Simply having a well laid out process may help.
      • Board should consider the role, length, and power balance of the rollover/overlap ("lame duck" syndrome). Predefined activities may help, could be encompassed in elections timeline.
      • Voter eligibility cutoff should be examined and explained. There is slight eligibility overlap between elections; reasoning and details not clear to most voters.
    • Elections Website
      • Elections officer should consult with Webmasters to improve both elections website information and the voting interface.
      • The cutoff for voting eligibility should be clear and prominent on the donations page.
      • Easy way to find most important info besides news: current-year candidate statements, chat transcripts, Q-As; question submissions; how voting works; and about your voter account. Information structure was overall hard to navigate.
      • Information on past elections.
      • Voting accounts and voting site were particularly confusing for many. Details and reasoning should be more transparent, and difference between voter accounts and all other OTW accounts should be made clear.
    • Overall good potential, with great voting system; strengths could be highlighted. Chats and Q-A good opportunity but have not been optimized. General structure of election and EO role need to be better-defined and more transparent, and all this information should be easier to find on the website. We have a strong base, but a lot of work to do.

    OTW Elections Report

    - Ira Gladkova, 2011 OTW Elections Officer

    The 2011 election showcased many facets of OTW's elections system, including both strengths — such as our voting system — and flaws — such as a general lack of clarity in the process. Overall, however, it has become evident that, with the current size and growth of the org, and as elections become more contested more often, current elections procedures are unsustainable.

    As the elections officer for 2011, I here focus more on identifying problem areas rather than proposing specific solutions, though I do strive to offer multiple suggestions where possible. While I would be happy to make myself available to the 2012 elections officer, I prefer to minimally impose my own plans and preferences on whoever fills that role. Moreover, I feel much of the material here warrants full Board discussion/debate. As such, I would prefer to work on and advocate for specific solutions in the equal and collaborative space of a Board discussion, rather than on the basis of my rather expired role as elections officer.

    Transparency of Process

    Previous elections officers (and those acting in their stead while we drop off the face of the internet on leave) have done a great job with elucidating the process and posting early and often on how things will work. However, there still seem to be many lingering transparency issues.

    For example, as evidenced by comments made to me in question submission emails, I don't think people really know what happens to their questions for the candidates when they submit them to the elections officer. Do the candidates get to see them right then, or not until the chat? What order will questions be presented in? What happens if you submit the same or a very similar question as someone else? How would you even know if that happened? What, if anything does the elections officer do if candidates don't respond to questions on time? For that matter, how is the elections officer chosen? Overall, there seems to be a lot of confusion among voters as to what goes on behind the scenes during elections — some of this confusion on very crucial points pertaining to the basic foundations of how the election is run.

    These are just some of the areas that I feel are unclear to voters. And for an org like the OTW, if it's not transparent, it's not sustainable: every transparency issue is also a sustainability issue.

    Future incarnations of this process should strive to eliminate as many of these issues as possible. Problem areas based on my experience include:

    • Selection of elections officer
      • How is the officer chosen? When?
      • What are the qualifications?
    • Duties, purview, and powers of elections officer (See section: Elections Officer)
      • What does the officer do?
      • What areas does the officer have authority over?
      • What is the officer's power in the elections process and with relation to the candidates?
    • Questions submission process
      • How many questions have been submitted?
      • What kinds of questions have been submitted?
      • When will the candidates see them?
      • What happens to similar questions?
      • How long did each candidate take to answer questions?
    • Voter accounts
      • Difference between: (See below)
        • OTW membership
        • AO3 user and related account
        • OTW staff and related account
        • Elections voter account
      • Why the voting site and voter accounts work the way they do (See: Elections Website)

        This caused a lot of confusion and is difficult to break down into specific points — overall, people weren't sure how the whole system worked in terms of setting up the anonymous accounts, how to use the accounts, why we have such a convoluted method, etc. Some of this can be cleared up with more explanatory text, but this is one back-end process that is really important — it preserves voter anonymity and voting account security — that voters themselves have very little understanding of.

    • Election results and publication
      • Where do the results and other sensitive election information go? What does the officer do with them?
      • Why don't voters "see the numbers"?

        I want to note that this in particular speaks as to a basic misunderstand of the aims and methods of our elections process — namely, we strive to elect an equal cohort with equal mandates, rather than a ranked set of individuals

    One of the most concerning areas for me — besides the lack of definition around the position of elections officer — was the confusion, as usual, of OTW membership and AO3 user status. This is a persistent communication problem and speaks to an ongoing and enormous misunderstanding of overall OTW structure; the addition of the very opaque voter account process during election time furthers the confusion. The voter account process can definitely be explained more and in advance; I strongly suggest that all explanations also mention membership and AO3 account differences.

    Overall, transparency has been a major weak point. This is not to say that our process is completely opaque, but it is ill-defined and not always well-communicated. Last year's election team did a tremendous amount of work in trying to elucidate the process, and overall I do feel the election is relatively accessible. However, there is clearly work to be done here, and I believe one of the most essential areas is working out clear definitions of the election process and the election officer position. Without an internal understanding of how the process and office work that is consistent, well-defined, and thorough, we cannot pass that clarity and detail in turn to the public.

    Elections Officer: Purview and Power

    In terms of both transparency and ability to execute the elections process, this is the biggest issue I encountered as an elections officer: what, exactly is the purview of the elections officer? What authority does the officer have? What responsibility?

    My experience indicates that the position is weighed with tremendous responsibility — that of seeing to the execution of the entire election — but comes with very little authority. This puts the elections officer in an untenable position, which in turn erodes their ability to support and guide the candidates and also their ability to answer to voters. The role is toxically ill-defined; and where the role is ill-defined, we cannot hope to make it transparent.

    Concomitantly, the elections process itself is also poorly defined — where the position that sets and enforces policy and procedure is poorly defined, the process is then also poorly-defined: with questionable ability to enforce the process, the results of the process become unpredictable, obviating much of the purpose of having a process. And likewise, an ill-defined, unenforceable process is neither transparent nor sustainable.

    In particular, the elections officer lacks any authority to enact sanctions on non-compliant candidates; in effect, there is no real penalty for candidates who do not follow the established process. However, this issue presupposes an elections process that is fair and enforceable in the first place; this is at best questionable for the current process.

    For example: When one candidate gets more time on a question, or has an opportunity to see others’ answers before writing their own, then it is not fair to the other candidates. But if the elections officer cuts off submissions and voters don’t see any late responses, then that’s not fair to the voters, because that question was asked and it needs an answer. At the same time, being able to see which candidates are chronically late or chronically on-time is also valuable information for voters to have. And yet, the tight turnaround time required by the current process is not equally fair to all candidates. Were a Q-A period clearly set out in the timeline such that all knew in advance the kind of time commitment required during that period, then that turnaround would be enforceable — but this is not currently the case, and so strict enforcement is itself unfair.

    However, assuming a well-constructed elections process, the elections officer must have not only the duty to carry it out, but also the authority to enforce it — and perhaps, within reasonable limits, adapt it. I want to put forward the possibility here of candidates earning disqualification through non-compliance. This is something definitively impossible given the current setup; it would, given the ill-defined process, be unfair and outside the current vaguely defined authority of the elections officer. While we as an organization must strive to be welcoming to fans of varying backgrounds and needs, the election of Board officers is a matter that touches on our bylaws, the trust members have in us, and our professionalism. We have other requirements for candidates (membership, length of service), and the position candidates are running for requires a serious commitment of time and responsibility; it would not be unreasonable to hold candidates to certain standards of timeliness and general compliance in accordance with an elections process.

    It is also essential to keep in mind that the elections process includes contributions from many committees, and so any intersection in duty and authority between the elections officer and those committees should be clearly delineated. Committees who contribute to the elections process directly include Comms, DevMem, Finance, Systems, Volcom, and Web.

    Given the availability of well-defined workgroups, one solution to the workload and cross-committee demands of running the election could be to have an elections workgroup form every year. The necessity to carefully define the role of the elections officer — presumptively, the leader of the workgroup — would be even greater in this case.

    Another question to consider is when and where the election officer's duties end. Is the elections officer responsible for mediating the transition of new and outgoing Board members, such as scheduling chats and the transfers of access/powers? Should a debrief/report be required at the end of the officer's term, and simultaneously signal the end of said term? What is the deadline in a given year for choosing an elections officer?

    One more idea to consider in connection with election officer authority is who fills the position: currently, it is a Board member chosen by the Board. I believe that it is important for the elections officer to at least have experience on Board, as one of the officer's current duties is to talk to candidates about what the role of Board member entails. However, this also intersects with the election officer's power: how much of it comes from being a Board member? Where are the intersections and limits? I feel this question needs to be considered.

    Finally, setting and communicating the powers of the elections officer especially in cases of procedure non-compliance is particularly important for transparency — this is one of the least transparent and most problematic aspects of elections, and is an area I feel is essential for voters to understand. In the end, I want to emphasize that the election officer's duties stretch in multiple directions: the officer is responsible for seeing to the execution of the election, for supporting the candidates and communicating with them about the process and the positions they're running for, and for providing the voters with everything they need to make an informed decision. The ability of the elections officer to execute all three in tandem is currently stymied by ill-defined roles and processes, a lack of authority, and a general lack of transparency.

    Structure of Q-A and Chats

    Currently, chats and Q-A form the centerpiece of the elections process in terms of giving voters a chance to get to know the candidates and elicit their positions on various issues. Technically, Q-A and chats are currently supposed to be synonymous: the primary purpose of the chats is to ask and answer questions in an on-the-spot manner, with a secondary goal of getting to know and observing the candidates in a semi-formal situation. The goal is to ask as many questions as possible during the chats, with the rest being "spillover" and relegated to email. As the number of both candidates and questions increases, a smaller proportion of questions make it to chat, and more and more questions are asked over email.

    In theory, this is one of the strengths of our process, but it has become more cumbersome and difficult to navigate. The chats and Q-A are still a fantastic opportunity for both voters and candidates, and I do think this remains a strength, overall, of our process. However, I think it is worthwhile, at this point, the reconsider the purposes of the chats and Q-A and likewise consider new possibilities for their structure and timing.

    Candidate Chats

    We currently schedule two one-hour candidate chats every election. However, the more candidates we have, the harder it is to schedule these chats or to make the chat length longer, especially as we get candidates from many places around the world. And the more candidates we have, the harder it is to cover more than 2-3 questions per chat, especially as questions have grown in complexity/depth. Then, too, we run into issues of fairness when not all candidates can attend a given chat — the voters are deprived of or delayed in receiving information from/about the absent candidates, and/or the absent candidates get an entirely different and longer opportunity to answer questions.

    At the same time, I think it’s important to preserve the opportunity for voters to meet with the candidates and — importantly — to see the candidates interacting with and playing off each other. This is another purpose to the chats that I believe is currently overshadowed by other aspects, but could and should be important: the opportunity for voters to witness the candidates interacting with each other. There are other opportunities for candidates to interact with voters, both officially — in the form of Q-A at the very least — and unofficially, in the candidates' own spaces at their choice and leisure. However, the opportunity for voters to see candidates interacting with each other in an environment roughly approximating the very work they would be doing on Board is limited and unique. So how can we preserve this opportunity while keeping it sustainable and fair?

    I think one part of the answer may be to try and repurpose the chats to something more casual and less driven by grueling questions. Of course, the grueling questions — and the opportunity for the askers/voters to query further and interact to a limited degree — should still be preserved somewhere. Would it be possible to run something like this without it getting out of hand? I think the key to something like this would be to make time for the questions that doesn’t intersect with the time the chats are scheduled.

    Possibilities (not necessarily mutually exclusive) along these lines include:

    • Chats at the beginning of the process framed as casual get-to-know sessions
    • Having chats only for Q-A followup, not for initial question-asking
    • Chats centered specifically around candidates interacting among themselves

    In any case, the structure of the chats depends on how Q-A is handled. Detaching the Q-A imperative from the chats gives much more flexibility in terms of chat timing, purpose, etc.

    However, one argument for retaining some actual Q-A in the chats is that it gives candidates a variety of arenas in which to showcase their strengths. Some candidates may work best in chat, some over email, and the variety of opportunities to showcase strengths is an important factor to consider in designing a new chat and Q-A structure. This not only gives candidates a variety of opportunities, but also gives voters a broader range of information on the candidates.

    Candidate Questions

    Currently, the procedure around questions is not very clear. In the past, it didn’t particularly need to be, as there were fewer questions, and they could all easily be covered during the chats. But we had over twenty questions last election: an impossible number to handle in chats and a lot of questions to answer in the short elections timeframe.

    One element of the Q-A process currently held as important is the off-the-cuff nature of the responses, rather than giving the candidates time to make polished essays. This is supposed to be accomplished in chat, and an attempt to approximate the conditions over email is the source of the 24-hour turnaround for overflow questions. Longer turnarounds and longer answers privilege those candidates who have the time and ability to craft polished answers and perhaps even run them by a beta; it’s also more likely to create information overload for voters if every question comes with a thousand-word answer. But the chat format also privileges those who think most quickly and clearly on their feet, in highly social and high-pressure situations.

    In this sense, sending out questions with a 24-hour turnaround is a good compromise, forcing quicker, more distilled answers without as much social pressure. In this case, it seems smart to schedule in a week (with a second just-in-case week) where the candidates know to expect batches of questions every 24 hours. The elections officer can then arrange the questions into batches and send them out. The candidates will know in advance that, during that week, they’d need 20-40 minutes each day to work on questions.

    Batching and ordering is itself something I was asked about and something that could be more transparent. The course of least resistance (least work for elections officer, least opportunity to accidentally muddy the waters by arranging questions in some specific way) is to just send things out in the same order they came in. But what happens if two or more very similar, or very closely related questions are asked? It doesn’t seem helpful to make candidates feel like they’re answering the same thing over and over again. The process for batching should be publicized, at least; if possible, we should try to think of a process that minimizes the number of similar questions.

    Moreover, all this presupposes a Q-A structure fundamentally similar to what we already have. There are other possibilities that may be explored — even variations that do not preserve the "off-the-cuff" nature. My inclination is not to go down that road, but depending on what needs we have, it may end up being the more reasonable choice.

    One possibility that would preserve tight turnaround would be, rather than sending all questions to all candidates at the same time, to send questions as candidates have time, but still have the same time limit, and release answers from all candidates together at the end of some time frame like a week. Assume all questions (or all for a specific session) are gathered in advance. The candidates collectively have one week to answer them. Over that week, each candidate notifies the elections officer when they are ready for a batch of questions. The batch is sent, and that candidate has 24 hours to respond. They can't have the next batch until they have answered the previous set. All answers to all batches are due at the end of the week, with the number of batches designed to give a day or two without questions assuming a rate of one batch per day. If a candidate wants, they can answer all the batches one after another over the course of a single day, or spread it out over a week. The voters will still get timely responses, while the setup would be more flexible to accommodate candidates' varying schedules.

    Other options to consider include giving voters some way to know what questions have been submitted, which should help with having the similar questions submitted. Is there some way to do this such that candidates cannot see the questions? It's something to think about.

    Finally, it may help to give candidates some space for an official statement centered more around issues — like a position statement — rather than the current style, which focuses on "get to know the candidate" over giving the candidates space to give their vision of the org and their priorities. It may help to focus the subsequent Q-A period if we explicitly split those two apart.

    I also want to note a question: is there a chance that candidate statements could be translated?

    --

    In the end, my overall suggestion is to think carefully about the individual strengths and purposes of chats and Q-A, and to build an election process centered around those strengths. Chats are difficult to schedule, but it may serve us best, in the end, to try to have more of them serving a variety of purposes. As the cornerstone of the election process — for voters, at least — it would not be unreasonable for chats and Q-A to take a significant amount of time. As such, the timing of the election process should be considered with this factor in mind.

    Timing and Drives

    In this section, I want to go over a few points related to timing of the elections process, in whole and in parts. Unfortunately, it is difficult to go into specific suggestions without a more concrete idea of how the new process will shape up; I therefore mostly cover issues I feel need to be considered in the timing rather than specific timing ideas.

    Traditionally, the fall membership drive has been a keystone in the elections timeline. I want to suggest opening this tie for examination, looking at the ways in which the two depend on one another. Elections provide a great motivator for/reminder to join, but it sounds worthwhile overall to examine what DevMem wants out of the drive, what needs the elections officer has, and see if the relationship should be adjusted.

    Overall, as the org and elections grow, it may be necessary to expand the timeline of the elections season, particularly if large changes are made to the elections process, e.g. how chats/questions are handled. From my view, the two biggest anchors in terms of actual dates for election timing are: (a) enough time at the end for appeals as well as a small overlap period (but that overlap should indeed be small) and (b) the fall drive. In terms of large chunks of time, the two big factors are the drive and the chat/question process.

    In relation to the drive, there are several key questions to consider. One of the most important is the timing of candidate announcements — and possibly some initial "get to know the candidates" activity — relative to the start/end of the drive. Not knowing who the candidates will be can cause a lot of frustration for potential voters during the drive — last year, there was significant consternation when the candidate statements were not available until after the drive. Knowing the candidates — and therefore likely also having some idea as to the elections issues and dynamics — can be a huge motivator in a membership drive. However, this also puts a lot of pressure on both the elections officer and on DevMem, as it would require that elections activities start before the fall drive.

    Another factor to consider, particularly in the 2012 election cycle, is the possibility of tying the fall drive and the willing to serve drive to the five-year anniversary. This would further impact timing of the election activities; in either case, careful consultation on the matter of timing is necessary with DevMem and Volcom.

    Aside from the drives, there is the general question of the timing and pace of election activities. There has often been lag between candidate announcements and the chats, which can make voters lose interest in the process; it may be beneficial to arrange an elections schedule regularly punctuated by significant events (chats, drives, Q-A sessions). On the other hand, a lengthy and active election season can give rise to both candidate and voter fatigue. Last year, significant candidate fatigue ensued after the solid weeks of chats/questions. This may be ameliorated by starting election activities earlier and giving the election events more room to spread out, as well as by structuring individual events to be more friendly to candidate schedules. However, voter and candidate fatigue remain an issue even in this case. I believe simply having a structured and well-defined process and schedule would help with both: just knowing what's coming and when it all ends can help people get through the process. And while the position candidates are running for is difficult and time-consuming — making an election process of similar difficulty not unreasonable — it is also important to remember that by the same token that qualifies our candidates in the first place, they will all have significant other duties within the org.

    One item I would particularly ask Board itself to consider is the rollover/overlap period at the end of the election. What purpose does it serve? How long should it be? Importantly, I want to point out the issue of power during the interstice: we have a mild case of "lame duck" syndrome among standing Board members, while newly elected Board members are generally eager to get to work and begin enacting their goals. It might help to have a pre-defined set of activities that happen during this time, to give the time more structure and a commonly understood purpose. This could include activities for standing and newly-elected members separately and together. While some amount of normal Board business must continue during this time, the transition between Boards is hugely important in terms of transferring knowledge and fostering continuity; I believe it would be beneficial to encompass this under the elections timeline aegis and give it the same sort of well-defined structure and timing as I hope will be given to the rest of the elections process.

    Finally a note about the eligibility cutoff: it is currently not obvious that our cutoff periods overlap slightly. The cutoff for voting eligibility is generally a month before the election, rather than the election date itself, to give all the appropriate parties (the elections officer as well as the Finance, Development and Membership, and Webmasters committees) time to prepare and review the voter rolls; in addition, there's often a small overlap in eligibility periods between election years around the cutoff dates. Last year, the election was 16-18 Nov 2011, so the cutoff date was a month prior to that: 17 Oct 2011. There's no timeline yet for an election next year, but it would be similar to this year's: at a guess, next year's eligibility timeframe would be something like 1 Oct 2011 to around 17 Oct 2012. Generally speaking, if you donate too late for one year's election, you'll be qualified to vote in the next year's — there are no blackout periods for eligibility. The small overlap does let someone who donated during the overlap vote in two years (though the actual number of people who qualify this way is quite small — less than half a percent of our membership). There are several reasons for this overlap. The election requires that all voters be OTW members in good standing as of the cutoff date, and OTW memberships are calculated on a monthly basis (this is why we send out membership reminders for soon-to-lapse memberships monthly rather than daily). So if you donate on 1 Oct 2010, your membership will last until the end of Oct 2011 — it actually expires on 1 Nov 2011. This means that people who donated between 1 Oct 2010 and 16 Oct 2010 were still in good standing as of 17 Oct 2011, even though it's a few days more than a year past the day on which they donated.

    There are a few additional reasons for the overlap. On the whole, as an organization, we prefer to try to enfranchise rather than disenfranchise, within reason — practicality and time constraints demand that we give the creation and review of voter rolls the necessary time, but outside of that we try to be generous. We know it can be a little confusing, and we try not to penalize people for it, especially given the international nature of the org where timezone differences can make strict deadlines difficult. We also have a membership drive in October, and the dates for that often vary, so we try to work around the drive dates to make sure that people who donated so they could vote do indeed get a chance to do so.

    This overlap period came up with at least one member who asked me about the timing. If we keep the overlap period, then I think this is one part of election timing where we need to communicate clearly and carefully and be maximally transparent.

    Elections Website

    Another major issue encountered repeatedly during the last election was people having trouble with the elections website. This includes both the informational site and the voting interface. It is my impression that the entire site would benefit from a redesign, but this is a project that would need to be executed in collaboration with the Web committee. I suggest that the next elections officer and I consult with Web on specific issues and proposed changes. For now, I will note the issues I saw:

    Lack of clarity on the donations page wrt eligibility cutoff

    Many people had trouble with this: the relevant button used to say "Donate to Vote", which confused people who donated after the cutoff, as they thought they would be able to vote. This was changed so that the button was less confusing, but this continues to be one page that is in need of serious clarification. The eligibility cutoff should be very clearly visible — if possible, it may be beneficial to change the central donations page to also mention the cutoff during the elections period. This was overall the most persistent and damaging website problem.

    Easy way to find most important info besides news

    Some people had trouble finding basic elections information because it was linked only from FAQ or subpages. A sitemap would help overall, but there is also a general lack of links available directly from the landing page and throughout the site. Potential suggestions for such links include:

    • Current-year candidate statements
    • Compiled transcripts/Q-A
    • Submit a question to candidates (there is a general contact link, but it may be good to emphasize this particular function)
    • How voting works
    • About your voter account

    Overall, many people had trouble navigating the information structure of the website; putting the most important links up front/everywhere only addresses part of this issue.

    Information on past elections

    I've heard reports that this is very difficult to find, and I do think this is valuable information that people demonstrably want to be able to look up. Currently, there isn't really an intuitive way to find transcripts, Q-A's, and candidate statements from previous elections (it's under "Policies").

    The voting accounts and voting site

    Many people found this part of the process particularly confusing. Each voter is given an anonymous, secure account on the voting site. The username is a random string of numbers, and voters are asked to set their passwords before the ballot opens (so there's time to iron out any problems, etc.). Many voters were confused about the difference between having this account and all other OTW-related accounts; there were a number of login problems surrounding this. Once properly logged in, many were confused about the ballot not yet being available.

    The process and reasoning behind these voter accounts should be more transparent, particularly for something that plays such a key role in how we run elections. The voting site would also benefit from more informational text, or possibly a restructuring. Very importantly, the difference between the voter account and all other OTW accounts — particularly AO3 user accounts — should be made as clear as possible.

    --

    A lot of the process behind the website in general was recounted in this election news post: http://elections.transformativeworks.org/2011-otw-elections-voting-people . Overall, I believe that a lot of the information that was included in news posts such as this one and the IRV post last year ( http://elections.transformativeworks.org/2011-otw-elections-voting-process ) should be made available earlier — for the entire election season — and be more closely integrated with the rest of the website.


    Overall, I feel our elections process has great potential. I believe our voting system is spectacular, and this is one of the strengths I believe could be really highlighted, for both transparency and to show what a great system it is for our purposes. Our chats and Q-A provide a great opportunity, but have not really been used to maximum advantage. The general structure of the election could be better-defined and more transparent, as could the role of elections officer, and all of this information could be made easier to find on the elections website. We have a strong base to start from, but there is a lot of work ahead towards optimizing our elections process to fit our needs and strengths.

  • Spotlight on Board: Julia Beck on Committee Liaising

    By Claudia Rebaza on Sunday, 22 July 2012 - 8:52pm
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    Spotlight on Board: In this general bi-monthly series, individual OTW Board members will talk about their work, goals, and ideas from a more personal perspective.

    Hi, my name is Julia Beck, and I joined the OTW Board of Directors in November 2011. I'm pleased to kick off this series, which will be more informal than our usual OTW blog posts. That also means that all views and opinions expressed in this post are subjective, not representative. Subsequent posts by Board members will help round out the picture, I'm sure.

    Today, I wanted to describe my take on one central, but particularly invisible aspect of Board work: liaising. I'll describe what this work looks like first, and will then touch on some inherent problems.

    Board appoints members as liaisons to each committee and workgroup. (Here's a short overview of our committees.) The idea is that the committee has an advocate that they can trust in their liaison, someone to back and represent the committee's interests in Board.

    The liaison for a committee is selected through a mix of personal affinity, familiarity with the committee, and chair preference. You'd assume that if a Board member is on a committee, they make a natural liaison, but I disagree; and we do try to switch things up in practice in order to prevent lock-in, to help with knowledge transfer and forge fresh alignments.

    I’m currently liaison for the following: Volcom (Volunteers & Recruiting), Comms (Communications), Wiki (Fanlore), Survey Workgroup, Translation and I&O (Internationalization & Outreach). Luckily Survey Workgroup and Translation don’t need much Board involvement, and Ira will soon take over liaising I&O.

    Here's my approach to liaising in practice:

    • As a starter, I try to attend the committee's meetings, or read transcripts when that's not possible (Volcom's meetings usually take place at 2am my time.)
    • I'm also usually on the committee mailing lists and try to at least skim.
    • I'm advising on any proposals or drafts, where requested. An example would be discussing the Category Change workgroup proposal with its lead Sole (it grew out of I&O, so was my purview then, but now Ira is Cat Change liaison. ...yes, we seriously do call it "cat change" internally.) A counterexample would be the Code of Conduct, where Volcom need trust and space to work on this and to only present to Board and other committees when they're ready.
    • I try to catch the chairs in particular in chat, where possible, and am generally available for all committee members – rainchecks, confidential issues, moral support, heads up, or just generally tossing around ideas.
    • I report back to Board about developments inside the committees that aren't in the internal newsletter, and vice versa, and alert the committee of any upcoming developments that might concern them.
    • I try to procure whatever the committee needs from the Board, whether that is approval for new staffers or money for screencasting software.
    • I connect people and efforts, where I can, as a sort of communications conduit, using our internal tools. An example would be inviting interested staff to the Board's open session to share their perspective on meta on the AO3, after Comms chair and Support staffer Lucy had flagged a chairs discussion on the topic with me by email.

    It's important to note that I understand the current liaising practice I've just described as a sort of stop-gap. Board members act as mentors, facilitators, and support to committees, but those are all tasks that could be externalized and delegated to a large degree in order to free up Board for more strategic and high-level work. In other words, we're aware that our current practice is pretty micromanage-y. But the simple fact is that we largely don't have these supportive systems and structures in place yet, and my position is that we can't abandon chairs and staff to fend for themselves in that environment.

    Relatedly, that's why I'm so invested in Volcom's work: they're absolutely central to this reform effort, and Board needs to have their back while they do vital work like revising the intake process (how we sign up and assign volunteers) and drafting a Code of Conduct.

    But even though I do believe that liaison work is necessary, it's also true that six roles at once (temporary or not) is way too many. First, there's the fact that the chain of command is muddled by my being my own superior, in a way. Then, some roles will inevitably conflict, and I have to prioritize a lot, making me feel guilty for not being as available as I should for "my" committees, nevermind that I always fall short of some essential bit of work. (And I don't actually like feeling stressed and guilty. I'm not hero material.)

    As an example, when survey workgroup negotiates a posting schedule for their Survey blog posts with Communications, I'm actually in three roles: survey lead, survey Board liaison, and Comms Board liaison. As Comms' liaison, I should prioritize Comms' interests. As survey liaison, I should push for survey's interests. (If you're German, please hum the melody of "Jein" by Fettes Brot now.)

    Maybe that makes it clearer why I voted for expanding the Board by two seats. Liaising, unsustainable as it is in its current form, is still work that needs doing at the moment, and we need to be able to untangle roles. Spreading them out on more people is only one response, and neither the only nor the best one; mostly, Board members also need to stop chairing committees, but that's a complicated topic that deserves a post of its own.

    In case this post has raised more questions than it has answered, please let me know in the comments section and I'll do my best to elaborate. I also irregularly post on OTW matters at julia-beck.dreamwidth.org.

    And if you're interested in another perspective on liaising, Ira Gladkova also talks some about this topic in her personal journal.

    Thanks for reading!

  • Legal issues in the news

    By Claudia Rebaza on Saturday, 28 April 2012 - 9:48pm
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    2012 is becoming the year of legislation and legal actions regarding Internet use. Earlier this year, proposed U.S. legislation known as SOPA and PIPA were shelved as a result of public outrage. Other actions were taken around the globe to protest ACTA, an international treaty still veiled in secrecy that also threatened to curtail the general public's activities and usage of online services.

    The latest controversial piece of legislation on this front is the Cyber Intelligence Sharing and Protection Act (CISPA), which was introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives on November 30, 2011 and has just been passed. Numerous groups are opposed to the bill such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the American Library Association, Free Press, and Canadian Internet Policy. The bill is also opposed by various politicans from President Obama to Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul, but is supported by companies such as telecom carriers Verizon, U.S. Telecom, and Sprint, and tech companies such as Facebook, Symantec, IBM and Oracle. The U.S. Senate has its own version of the bill which was previously endorsed by the White House, so it's still unclear in what form the bill may pass the Senate and whether or not that might be signed by President Obama.

    The Center for Democracy and Technology, which is opposed to CISPA, lists various problems with the legislation as it's currently drafted:

    1) CISPA has a very broad, almost unlimited definition of the information that can be shared with government agencies and it supersedes all other privacy laws.
    2) CISPA is likely to lead to expansion of the government’s role in the monitoring of private communications.
    3) CISPA is likely to shift control of government cybersecurity efforts from civilian agencies to the military.
    4) Once the information is shared with the government, it wouldn’t have to be used for cybersecurity, but could instead be used for other purposes.

    Given the Internet's current infrastructure, anything that affects Internet traffic in the U.S. can have implications for Internet freedoms around the globe. While some in the U.S. have decided to protest CISPA by drowning legislators in personal content, those who oppose the bill can also take a more traditional approach.

    A more encouraging story about online regulation has come from Australia, where their High Court refused to hold ISPs accountable for illegal downloading done through their services. The AFACT v. iiNet appeal was unanimously dismissed, with the court deciding against the case brought by movie companies including Australian branches of Hollywood studios Universal Pictures, Warner Bros. and 20th Century Fox.

    Holding providers liable for content posted or transmitted through their service has been a common tactic by content creators, whether of films or music. During the past week YouTube lost a court case in Germany where it was sued for royalties, and the court decided it "had not done enough to stop copyrighted clips being posted." Such cases are likely to continue around the globe in an effort to stifle consumer posting and transmission of content that music and film industry associations consider to be in violation of their ownership rights.

  • Saving Fanworks with the Open Doors Project

    By Kristen Murphy on Tuesday, 24 April 2012 - 12:23pm
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    Fanworks come in many shapes and sizes, including fan art, fan video of all flavours, fan fic, fan craft, and more! And many fans' work is the labour of love of collecting fanworks and giving them a home. Some collections of fanworks are themed and moderated, others welcome all comers, but they're all special and represent lots of work on the part of their mods and maintainers. Zine editors, vid librarians, archive mods, and all the other wonderful people who give homes to collections of fanworks so that other fans can share in their delights, we value your endeavours!

    One of the things that makes fandom special is the way that it makes a home in all sorts of diverse places. We love the diversity of fannish homes, from small town zine collections stored in a dedicated fan's bottom drawer, to vast online archives filled with a variety of different fanworks. But sometimes fannish collections need a new home — and that's where our Open Doors committee comes in.

    When the code for an online archive is stuttering and dying, or a zine collection has grown too large for one fan to house, or the maintainers of a much-loved archive have moved on to a new fandom, or left fandom entirely, or left this life, Open Doors steps in (on request, of course!) to save fanworks and collections of fanworks from disappearing.

    Sometimes this means opening our doors to physical fanworks. In collaboration with the University of Iowa, our Fan Culture Preservation Project preserves fannish ephemera such as zines, fannish flyers, paper memorabilia, and con programs. Among the collections we've preserved so far are the Fanzine Archives and the Morgan Dawn Fanzine and Fanvid Collection.

    And sometimes it means opening our doors to digital fanworks. For online archives which need a new home, our Open Doors Special Collections Project imports at-risk archives onto the Archive of Our Own. We successfully ran our first test case for our mass importer in early 2012: we're proud to preserve the legacy of the much-loved fan Minotaur by giving the Smallville Slash Archive a new home. We also preserve digital fanworks which can't be hosted on the AO3, such as Zoetrope's multimedia work Missed the Saturday Dance.

    We're joyful that we're able to preserve the work of other fans by providing new homes for the collections which have been so lovingly curated by others. One of the things which makes this work possible is the generosity of fans who donate to the OTW and thus fund administration costs, transport for zine collections, servers for the AO3, and other hosting costs. Please help us continue to preserve these fannish histories by donating today. And if you've got about 15 minutes to spare, let us know what you think of the OTW and its projects by taking our OTW Community Survey. Thank you!

  • TWC: Taking a stand for open access

    By Kristen Murphy on Monday, 23 April 2012 - 12:18pm
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    Did you know that the OTW’s journal, Transformative Works and Cultures (TWC), is more than just academics writing about fandom? TWC actually has all kinds of content that's written by and for fans, such as its just-released ninth issue, which focuses on fan/remix video. The best part about TWC, at least if you ask its editors, is that its articles get discussed, debated, and even argued about within fan culture, while still serving as a resource to acafen, other academics, and the media.

    For example, the most recent issue was repeatedly referenced at the yearly conference of the Society for Cinema and Media Studies. The upcoming tenth issue, co-edited by Henry Jenkins and Sangita Shresthova, concentrates on fan activism and has already been referenced in the New York Times even before publication. Since the journal's founding five years ago, the editors of TWC have received numerous reprint requests for print anthologies.

    OTW founded TWC with the intention of providing a space for academic research on fandom and fan works in order to showcase the breadth and importance of such studies to other academics, other fans, and the outside public. As part of its commitment to creative freedom, all of TWC’s articles are licensed through Creative Commons, which means anyone can republish the essays as soon as they are published, so long as the republishing party provides a link to the original source.

    Lately, more and more academics are calling for a boycott on long-established publishers who use academic—often publicly funded—labor for the research, writing, peer review, and even editing of their articles, but nevertheless prevent the public from having access to the final products. Such traditional models of publishing keep valuable information behind pay walls at increasingly prohibitive costs. Due to its status as an online-only, Open Source, peer-reviewed academic journal, TWC exists not only on the cutting edge of current academic movements, but also at the forefront of the fight for intellectual freedom and continued informational access.

    Be sure to check out essays on mashups, remixes, fan trailers, and more in the latest issue of TWC, and donate to help OTW continue this vital, ground-breaking project!

    Thank you to Kristina Busse, editor, for providing the overwhelming amount of information for this post.

  • Mainstream Media, the OTW, and You

    By Kristen Murphy on Sunday, 22 April 2012 - 1:43pm
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    It's been quite a year for fandom in the mainstream. Since last March's membership drive we've seen a cover story in Time magazine on Harry Potter fandom and international news coverage of 50 Shades of Grey, the Twilight fanfic turned bestselling original novel.

    The news coverage of the 50 Shades phenomenon has drawn considerable attention to fandom and fanfic — not all of it necessarily good. Even as we in fandom are witnessing the emergence of new, more positive attitudes towards fandom and its place in mainstream culture, we're still seeing old questions, assumptions, and misunderstandings appearing in the media — for example, this article in The Guardian on 50 Shades that describes the novel's origins as "online slash/fic (fan-published erotic writing at the creepier end of the internet)." The New Yorker's Elizabeth Minkel recently asked, "Why, when discussing fan fiction, do journalists often sound like anthropologists discovering some long-lost tribe — and a somewhat unsavory and oversexed one at that?"

    When fandom voices get left out of the conversation, often what results is something like Dear Author's recent assay at connecting slash fiction to m/m romance using two panelists who neither read slash nor enjoyed fanfiction. The end result is often confusing to non-members of fandom and unsatisfying to members of fandom. What's more, many of us in fandom know that what manifests as mere factual inaccuracy or stereotyping of fans and their "creepy" online activities can turn into censorship, ostracism, and more, such as the recent arrests and even jailing of manga fans for violating obscenity laws.

    Fans know all too well that if we don't speak up for ourselves, the media, TPTB, and even the law can speak for us and define us. The OTW's function as a liaison to mainstream media continues to be important because it gives fans the opportunity to speak for ourselves, to have a voice in the face of misrepresentation. For example, Lev Grossman turned to the OTW to put him in touch with fans when writing his Time article, which many feel is one of the most positive representations of fandom we've seen yet.

    The OTW is committed to ensuring that the mainstream media hears fannish voices from all walks of life and all kinds of fandoms. But we can't do that without having a strong fanbase of our own. Without first hearing from you, we can't make sure that mainstream media hears from us. Our resources, our knowledge, and our devotion to the cause of representation all come from our members. Each one of you can strengthen us. Each one of you can allow our voice as an organization to grow and be heard.

    And that makes you our best bet for more positive representation in the year to come.

    Please become an OTW member today. And if you've got about 15 minutes to spare, let us know what you think of the OTW and its projects by taking our OTW Community Survey. Thank you!

  • Tag Wrangling: It’s Your Right To Tag However You Like (You Can Even Be Your Own Spotlight)

    By Kristen Murphy on Saturday, 21 April 2012 - 12:47pm
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    At the recent April Showers Import Party, the topic of tagging came up. Unsurprisingly — there were fanworks finding homes on the Archive of Our Own, after all. And one of the most amazing things about the AO3 is definitely its tagging system.

    What makes this particular tagging system so amazing? It's specifically designed so that users can use any tag, in exactly the form they want it on their works, while keeping those works as organized as they would be in a strictly classification-based archive. Perhaps even better organized, since AO3 tagging not only allows users to search for works using tags based on traditional classifications like fandom, character and relationship, but also tens of thousands of canonical "additional tags" that go far beyond the limits of genre. And the more you tag, the better it works overall (more on why that's so later).

    So, you may be asking, what’s a canonical additional tag? And how does a tag come to be one?

    First, a bit of tagging history is in order. The indexing of information using keywords isn’t a new practice, of course. When del.icio.us launched in 2003, the new part of their model wasn’t the link collections or the keywords themselves — those had been around on the Internet pretty much since the start. Their innovation was to give users the power to attach keywords to those link collections. Nearly ten years on, the AO3 has made a great start at putting that sort of descriptive tagging power in the hands of fan creators when it comes to archiving their fanworks.

    A great deal of that power comes from additional tags (originally called freeform tags). They're tags that don’t fall into the standard fandom/character/relationship groupings, and include kinks, tropes, genres, story elements, word counts, recording lengths, video formats, fan art media, POVs, episode tags, additional warnings, and whatever else users can think of! And all those additional tags gain their useful descriptive power when they're made canonical, appearing in the search filters and the auto-complete box as the most useful, general forms of particular tags, with many other synonymous tags linked to them. Tag wranglers — fans who have volunteered to curate the tags belonging to particular fandoms — do the linking, so for a tag to have been made canonical means that a wrangler has either recognized it as complying with tag wrangling guidelines or created it in compliance with those guidelines specifically so they can attach another tag to it.

    What that means is that when an additional tag appears in the archive, a tag wrangler assesses whether people searching for works would like to be able to search for works tagged with it. Often the answer is yes, but sometimes it's no — and that's fine! That doesn't mean that you shouldn't tag your works using whatever tags you like; those tags will still bring up works, after all, even if they aren't canonical! A tag wrangler making your tag canonical just means that they judged it a useful addition to the filters — and one that other people might want to have the option of tagging works with, as well.

    So if you can tag with whatever you want, how do you effectively use additional tags to shine a spotlight on your work?

    This is where we return to the question of how more tagging makes the system work better. You see, additional tags make it possible to bring up works tagged everything from Accidental Marriage to Zombies — and everything else in between. So, using tags which highlight tropes or kinks (among other things), means that people interested in these topics can more easily find your works containing them. And this isn't just limited to fanfic — there are additional tags which describe aspects of other types of fanworks that people might be looking for, as well — whether it’s a crochet pattern, a short podfic, or an example of digital fan art.

    What it comes down to is this: your were-creature accidental marriage fic/podfic/painting/quilt with zombies and a female BAMF character of color lead might be exactly the work Fan X was looking for. And they might never know it exists, if you don't tell the world exactly what awesome stuff it contains. There're a lot of awesome fanworks featuring a lot of awesome stuff on the AO3 just waiting for people to spotlight those awesome qualities, so go forth and tell people that your fic is epistolary or your comic features a mythical being or creature or that your podfic is a cast recording.

    While many of us love the diversity that additional tags bring, if you don't like seeing additional tags on works, you can always choose to ignore them, or even hide them completely using a custom skin and the Blurblings Hide freeform tags skin.

    *****

    If you'd like to know more about tagging on the AO3, or about what tag wranglers do, the Tag Wrangling Committee is having an open house on Sunday, April 22, from 19:00 to 21:00 UTC (see when this is in your timezone) in OTW's public chatroom on Campfire. The chatroom can be accessed at: https://fanarchive.campfirenow.com/c6440 Feel free to drop by at any time during the session to ask questions or just to hang out.

    The AO3 and its tagging system are funded by fans, for fans. To help keep it growing, please donate today.

  • Fanlore: Preserving Fannish Memories

    By Kristen Murphy on Friday, 20 April 2012 - 1:32pm
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    Fanlore is a library and its shelves are lined with your fandoms.

    No, really! Fanlore is a collection of fannish memories, complete with a bibliography, glossary, chronology, and scribbled annotations in the margins. Fanlore wants you to add the urban legends you tell around the campfire and on memes, the happy memories you share when you chat with other fans, and the gifs of your fandom, all grown up, that you show new acquaintances on Tumblr. Fanlore wants to archive artifacts from your fannish communities and leave space on the shelves for future endowments.

    And how can Fanlore do that? Fanlore is entirely user-driven, a wiki created, edited, and updated by fans, for fans. Fanlore recognizes and embraces fandom as a large, diverse, culture-rich community. Your favorite tropes. Your favorite fanworks. Your favorite traditions.

    Fanlore is a library fueled by the passion of fans for the preservation of their fannish histories. Fanlore is also fueled by the Organization for Transformative Works. Without the support of OTW members, Fanlore would not be able to bring together and preserve the many parts of fannish histories that interested readers may be searching for. Donating time, money, or public displays of affection to the OTW all help guarantee that Fanlore can continue to document our fandoms and tell our stories.

    Help us preserve fannish memories for years to come — please donate today.

    We'd love to hear what you think of Fanlore and the rest of OTW's projects. Please let us know by taking the OTW Community Survey between now and May 2.

  • Legal advocacy by fans, for fans

    By Kristen Murphy on Thursday, 19 April 2012 - 10:44am
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    Advocating for the legitimate status of fanworks is an ongoing battle, and OTW's Legal Advocacy project is at the forefront.

    Our legal committee is currently working to renew an exemption to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) for makers of noncommercial remix videos such as fan vids, AMVs, and political remix videos. In 2010, when OTW joined with the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and other like-minded organizations to win this exemption, we knew we'd have to return and defend it again only a few years later. Unlike the copyright expansions of recent years, the DMCA exemptions expire unless they're reinstated every three years.

    Legal's chair, Rebecca Tushnet, says that although it's hard to say at this point how different this year's DMCA process is from the previous one, she's certain of one thing: "the MPAA and other organizations took us much more seriously this time, since we were basically ignored until we had a success under our belt."

    We're also gaining a valuable network of allies in the larger free-expression, pro-fair-use activist world. As well as working closely with EFF, we've had positive interactions with groups such as the Documentary Filmmakers' Association and USC-Annenberg's Norman Lear Center. Tushnet, who will be testifying at the DMCA rule-making in May and June, points out that "the DMCA affects all sorts of creators, and as we work with them there's a great opportunity for mutual learning."

    Although the DMCA exemption has been central in our thoughts and efforts this year, volunteers from Legal have also worked on contributing to the Wikipedia page on legal issues in fanfiction to provide a more law-based discussion of fans' rights; advising fans who have been sent DMCA takedown notifications; and providing assistance on an amicus brief in an ongoing case regarding the right of publicity. Legal is also always at the service of fans who have questions regarding non-commercial fanworks. You can contact the legal committee here.

    The OTW is a dedicated champion of fans' rights, with an established track record of success — but there are many battles, large and small, still to be fought. Help us fight those battles — please donate today.

  • Stop ACTA

    By Claudia Rebaza on Tuesday, 24 January 2012 - 11:16pm
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    In a week following widespread Internet protests against proposed legislation in the U.S., there is an effort going on internationally to protest the potential effects of ACTA. The OTW is concerned about this treaty which has potentially large implications but about which there has been very little information. "In October 2007, the United States, the European Community, Switzerland, and Japan simultaneously announced that they would negotiate a new intellectual property enforcement treaty the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement or ACTA. Australia, the Republic of Korea, New Zealand, Mexico, Jordan, Morocco, Singapore, the United Arab Emirates, and Canada have joined the negotiations."

    "The main problem with this treaty is that all the negociations are done secretly. Leaked documents show that one of the major goals of the treaty is to force signatory countries into implementing anti file-sharing policies under the form of three-strikes schemes and net filtering practices."

    Tell your MEPs and government representatives you want more transparency before this is voted on. Here are some places where you can take action:

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