Labor Tech


The Purpose of LaborTech

is to bring together labor video, computer and media activists in the US and from around the world to build and develop labor communication technology and media. The first conference was held in 1990 and they have been held throughout the United States as well as Canada and Russia. Labor Media conferences are also held in Seoul. We believe that a critical task for labor is building a labor communication media movement that can tell our stories and break the corporate information blockade in every corner of the world.

LaborTech 2008
We are now endorsed by:

San Francisco Labor Council, NALC 214,
California School Employees Association
South Bay AFL-CIO Labor Council
International Labor Communication Association

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Labortech 2008 takes place in the midst of the greatest financial crisis in the history of the United States. The logic of deregulation and privatization now are destroying the lives of tens of millions of working people. Critical to labor¹s challenge today is to get our message out and break the information blockade that corporate media and telecom promote. LaborTech can be a vital tool in this work, and this conference will discuss and learn how to get our messages out and win the information and media battle.

This semi-annual educational and training conference brings together labor videographers, radio programmers, Internet developers, educators, artists and cultural workers to help educate, train and build labor communication and media technology for working people. It also examines issues of how these new technologies are being used both for and against labor in the workplace, on the Internet and the airwaves.

We will look at how unions are building new channels on the web, using pod-casting and other Internet tools to develop labor education, solidarity and directly connect with the rank and file. We will learn how to produce a daily video strike bulletin, how to stream our rallies and conferences, and how to develop labor channels on YouTube and other portals as well as using social networks.

We will also see examples of video and radio programs that have helped win our battles by education and involving the community in these campaigns. Labor and our unions cannot afford to wait in using these tools in our struggle to defend working people and to train our members to build a labor media movement.

The need to educate working people is critical. Only working together to build our understanding and use of these communication tools will help transform our situation.
Join us in this year¹s LaborTech conference.




www.labortech.net

LaborTech 2008

The Digital Revolution and Labor Media Strategy

December 5, 6 & 7, 2008

At University of San Francisco

2130 Fulton St., near Cole, San Francisco

Dear Brothers and Sisters,

Labortech 2008 takes place in the midst of the greatest financial crisis in the history of the United States. The logic of deregulation and privatization now are destroying the lives of tens of millions of working people. Critical to labor’s challenge today is to get our message out and break the information blockade that corporate media and telecom promote. LaborTech can be a vital tool in this work, and this conference will discuss and learn how to get our messages out and win the information and media battle.

This semi-annual educational and training conference brings together labor videographers, radio programmers, Internet developers, educators, artists and cultural workers to help educate, train and build labor communication and media technology for working people. It also examines issues of how these new technologies are being used both for and against labor in the workplace, on the Internet and the airwaves.

We will look at how unions are building new channels on the web, using pod-casting and other Internet tools to develop labor education, solidarity and directly connect with the rank and file. We will learn how to produce a daily video strike bulletin, how to stream our rallies and conferences, and how to develop labor channels on YouTube and other portals as well as using social networks.
We will also see examples of video and radio programs that have helped win our battles by education and involving the community in these campaigns. Labor and our unions cannot afford to wait in using these tools in our struggle to defend working people and to train our members to build a labor media movement.

The need to educate working people is critical. Only by working together to build our understanding and use of these communication tools will help transform our situation.

Join us in this year’s LaborTech conference.

Workshops: (partial list as of 10/15/08)
Plenums:
*Labor & social networking: Using the Internet to build a democratic labor communications network
*Union busting, labor journalism and the future of news and broadcast journalists and media workers
*The war on terrorism, ideology, labor and democracy
*The Economic Crisis, Labor Media and Breaking The Information Blockade
With Perelman, Rasmus, Frank Emspack,


Workshops:
*Developing a regional multi-media labor portal-
*How to produce a community access TV show
*How to produce a labor radio show
*How to do labor video documentaries
*How to stream your rallies and conferences on the web, with skype and pod casting
*Media unions, union busting and new technology
*Open source, what it is and how to use and defend it
*New technology, health and safety and labor
*Medical privacy, technology and labor protection
*Developing an international labor media network
*How to produce a labor film/cultural arts festival
*Labor culture and using technology
*Defending democratic and union rights on the Internet, net neutrality and social networks
*Public broadband and expanding democracy in communication technology
*Using websites and the internet for communication, information and solidarity campaigns including erule making and other technologies
*Defending libraries, democracy and privatization of information, LSSI
*Micro radio and labor media-Dick Delman,
*Internet Telephony, Cell Phones and Open Source For Labor
*Building A Democratic Labor Communication Network

Partial list of Panelists/Participants
:
John See, University of Minnesota Labor Education Service/Videogapher

Nancy Bupp, Formerly with Education Department IAM International*

Julian Peeples, California School Employees Association* ?

Vivian Price, Professor CSUDH, Labor Film maker, CFA*

Yeo Shinjoung, Radical Reference, Stanford Library*

Frank Emspach, WIN Founder and Director www.laboradio.org

Marty Fishgold, Director Communications SEIU 371/NY*

Bruce Wolf, Founder www.public.freemuni.net public broadband

Edward Hasbrouck, The Identity Project Privacy & Repression

Andrew Knight & Andrew Kong, Angry Tired Teachers Band, member CTA*

Jack Chernos, AFM Local 6* and Labor Musician

Catherine Alexander, SEIU 521*, Librarian

Mehmet & Gulden Bayran, LaborFest Turkey & Sendika.org

Dr. Larry Rose, Last doctor at Ca-OSHA, AFSCME member

Wes Brain, Labor Radio Producer, Brain Radio Report

Tami Bryant, SEIU 1000* Host Of “Union Buzz”

Jeff Sharlet, Journalist, historian*

Collette Washington, CNA Web Master

Jeff Smedberg, Reelworks Labor Film Festival, SEIU 521*

James Jacobs, Radical Reference, Stanford Library

Carl Bryant, TV 214, NALC 214*

Steve Dondley, Promethus ILMN Website

Shiela Davis, Silicon Valley Toxic Coalition-Nanotechnology

Peter B. Collins, AFTRA Executive Board*, Radio Host

Todd Davies, Stanford University, CPSR

Steve Stallone, Pres. ILCA, Editor of N. California Media Workers Newspaper CWA

Chris Witteman, Communications Rights Lawyer

Marco Berlinguer, Labor and Globalization in the World Social Forum

Michael Perelman, Professor CSUC, Member CFA

Dorothy Kidd, USF Media Department Chair

John Parulis, Labortech Webmaster, Community Activist

Ralph Schoenman, WBAI Radio Host “Taking Aim”

Jack Rasmus, Labor Economist, Author

Dick Meister, Labor Journalist and Reporter TNG

Nick Yale, SEIU 1000*, Videographer

Jim E. Kelly, Coordinator of Labor Studies at San Jose City College. AFT Local 6157*

Peter Phillips, Professor CSUS, Director of Project Censored, Member of CFA

Nancy Bupp, Education Department Of IAM International Retired

Bill Sparks, Labor Video Project, Member of Sign, Local 510 Sign and Display*

Linda Ackerman, Privacy Activism

David Frias, Media Director of Living Wage and Producer Of “SF Living Wage”

Shannon Sheppard, Director Holt Labor Library

Jano Oscherwitz, SEIU 1021

*invited








Privacy Under Siege:Electronic Monitoring of the Workplace.

Jeremy Gruber. pdf here

Movies, Politics and the Working Class
Visualizing Ideology: Labor Vs. Capital in the Age of Silent Film

Paper: The Information Proletariat in the Era of Globilization. PDF Here
David Hookes, Department of Computer Science,
University of Liverpool, UK

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Resolution Endorsing LaborTech 2008, SF Labor Council

Whereas, the need to develop labor communication and labor media is critical to defend our unions and working people; and

Whereas, LaborTech has had bi-annual conferences to help educate and
train trade unionists on how to build Web pages, produce labor video
programs and develop labor media; and

Whereas, San Francisco has many labor union Web sites, labor TV shows by
ILWU 10, NALC 214 and other labor media; and

Whereas, the need to defend our democratic and union rights on the Internet
and other communication portals are vital for democratic communication,

Therefore Be It Resolved that the San Francisco Labor Council endorses the 2008 LaborTech conference (www.labortech.net) which will be held at the
University of San Francisco on December 5 – 7, 2008 and will encourage its
locals and affiiates to endorse, contribute and participate.


Submitted by Brother Robert Irminger, IBU, and adopted by the San
Francisco Labor Council on October 27, 2008.


Respectfully,

Tim Paulson
Executive Director





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The following report was commissioned by the AFL-CIO which represents, via its associated unions, some 500,000 media and related workers who need to understand better the changes taking place in the arts and entertainment industry.
Report here
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Labortech
P.O. Box 720027
San Francisco, CA 94172
(415)282-1908


 

Hollywood Renaissance
http://www.strike.tv/blogs/


27th October 2008, 2:45PM
It was just shy of a year ago when I was picketing on a strike line at Disney when a casual idea popped into my head. Hey – why don't us screenwriters create a website where we could produce and stream our own original shows? We could call it "StrikeTV". Why the hell not? Sounds simple and easy to do, right? Well, it's a year later, many dedicated and talented people came together, pooled resources, donated elbow grease and burned the midnight oil. It was far from simple or easy but Strike.TV is here.



Libraries, Social Networking & Privacy
Eli Edwards MadLibrarian.net