DeafRead, Deaf Village, Aggregators, Part V: Flogging A Deaf Horse
I just love flogging deaf horses, don’t you Mike? What about you, dog food?
Mike, Hypocrisy? Double Standards? You be the judge. Update #1[A Response], what I was trying to say in DeafRead, Deaf Village, Aggregators, Part III: Argggggghhhhhccess, is that if deaf village is an aggregator, whose aim is to aggregate “content”, targeted at a specific audience, then deaf village ceases to be an aggregator, and instead functions as a publishing house. Much the same, as DeafRead.
Both deaf village and DeafRead impose editorial and publishing guidelines, which means they cease to be aggregators and, take on different obligations to that of the personal blogger. As illustrated by DeafRead, who operate with sponsorship from Sprint, and Cochlear Implant Online, which operates a store. Which renders their responsibilities to their readership quite differently to those of individual blogs, whose interest is the personal.
And continuing to flog a dead horse, deaf horse ? [sorry there is no external reference to flogging a deaf horse], Mike, there is a big difference between personal sites and, commercial and professional sites. Personal sites don’t have the same obligations regarding access provisions, because of their, well, personal nature, and limited audience, whereas commercial and professional sites, such as A G Bell, that are designed to appeal to a broader audience than personal blogs, do have that obligation. And so it is with deaf village and DeafRead.
Remember, a personal blogger functions with an editorial guidelines applicable to their own blog, and themselves, which leaves it up to the reader/ visitor to accept or reject. This is quite a salient point, that both DeafRead and deaf village undermine with their guidelines. They are not merely aggregating content, as they are deciding [or moderating] what we see, read and hear. Which skews the perception of what is actually happening in Deaf and deaf cyberspace.
I will give you an analogy, a rather apt one. As a professional, working in a professional capacity, let’s say, running a leadership training program for Deaf and deaf people, I would have an obligation, as a professional, to ensure a number of things, in order that the programme is successful, are met. One would be, making sure that the participant’s access needs are met. However, in my personal life, I am under no such obligation, even if I am mincing..sorry, mixing, with Deaf and deaf people, because one would rightly assume, the responsibility for access would be shared. And so it is with blogging.
There is professional blogging and there is personal blogging. Each operates with a different modus operandi.
My criticism of deaf village is not of its aim to provide access. That is indeed a laudable aim. My criticism is of its imposition of an editorial and publishing guideline, that does nothing whatsoever to encourage blogging and creativity. I have been following deaf village since its inception, and as managed by the current team, who have so far have demonstrated no objective ability towards encouraging free speech and creativity in the blogging sphere, because the guidelines are paternalistic.
And really Mike, “Taylor going the purity route” is no different to Rachel going the purity route [imagine her sullying her videos with sign language. Heaven forbid!]. But it doesn’t suit your modus operandi to admit otherwise does it?
As for the question of time, money and resources, then it’s no point absolving deaf village, DeafRead or any other aggregator of this requirement, while at the same time expecting the individual blogger to pick up the slack. After all, I don’t have the resources to create the videos I want, let alone caption them. I continue to write, knowing full well, that it will still be inaccessible to people whose literacy is not the same as mine. Should my blog then not be included in deaf village [it isn't by the way. I have written to Rachel, requesting inclusion, but no............. I HAVE BEEN CENSORED! BARRED! EXCLUDED! Boo! Hiss!]
By all means encourage access, but use conciliatory language, not demanding and paternalistic. By all means encourage bloggers and webmasters to make their content accessible, but don’t claim to be an aggregator if you are going to moderate [mould] what is seen, read or heard. That in itself, will deny people the right to choose what they read, see and hear. Pertinently, render inaccessible, content that would not otherwise be seen, read or heard, because the aggregators editorial guidelines stipulate one rule or another.
Having said that, the DeafRead team has demonstrated far more laisse fare in their moderating of the content that appears on their “aggregator”, than deaf village has.
Further Reading:
DeafRead, Deaf Village, Aggregators, Part III: Argggggghhhhhccess
DeafRead, Deaf Village, Aggregators, Part II: Access
“Deaf Village Reminds Me Much Of…..”
Deaf Village - A True Village? Nay!
DeafRead, Deaf Village, and Aggregators
Let’s support closed captions!
Wait! Blogs Aren’t Fully Accessible, Either!
My Reason to find this Deaf Village’s Silly Policy…..
Wait! Blogs Aren’t Fully Accessible, Either!
“On the Fence”
Closed Captioning your Videos
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P3: New Aggregator
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression P2
DeafRead, Community, Censorship and Freedom Of Expression
MEDIA WATCH: Deaf Read [Myths? What Myths?]
Problems with DeafRead
An example of how deafread doesn’t cater for an international audience
The fur’s a-flyin’!