Arigatomina wrote:Libraries don't need to attract writers in order to get books to stock their shelves. The org does.
You are right they don't need to attract writers, they just stock their shelves with whatever they can buy. Sounds like the dead proxy account to me. Go out find popular amv and put it in the catalog. You want to talk about people not having the control after they upload, if we were to "stock our shelves" the way libraries do then we would have more pissed off people.
I don't see why donation method is a defining feature. While our funding methods may be different than a public library, that doesn't make the site less a library in general.
When people talk about the site itself as a library, they aren't talking about the people on the site, they are talking about the functionality of the site. When people talk about libraries they are talking about the building with the books inside it, not the readers or even the workers.
The basic functionality is to catalog the videos. Uploading and feedback were just the next step and were implemented so that viewers can access videos easier and contribute as well.
I think the attitude of some editors that viewer feedback is somehow worth less than editor feedback that has changed the shift of the view that this site is for editors only. This is one of the reasons I have been pushing for public preview, to draw in VIEWERS. Even if it's only a view count on my page, it means that the audience was there, even if silent. I respect the opinions and views of both editors and viewers, and I'd like to see more viewer related features on this site.
Also, those "profits" (feedback and help) are free for anyone who wants to try their hand at editing weather they are here or at youtube. A viewer can easily slip into becoming an editor. I was watching amvs/fanvideos for a few years before I started editing, and I know several people on this site probably wouldn't have thought to become an editor if they hadn't seen a video first.
Writers would continue to write books even if readers stopped visiting libraries because writers do most of their "sharing" by selling. Writers would continue to write and sell books even if libraries no longer existed. Editors might not continue to make amvs if viewers stopped visiting the places where amvs are shared. Editors might not continue to make amvs if org and tube style amv-sharing places no longer existed.
Please tell me you are only speaking for yourself. I'd continue to make videos if I had the ideas and inspirations to do so, even if the org wasn't around, because there are plenty of places for me to share my videos that aren't on the internet

I rather enjoy submitting my videos to conventions and sharing them with my family and friends. This site just makes it easier to do so with friends that aren't local.
I bet a lot of authors would stop writing books if they heard that all the libraries were going to shut down. If at the very least out of protest. Lots of them actually love and appreciate libraries themselves, since when they were kids that's where they read a lot of their first books and became attracted to the profession. (I've heard similar sentiments from a specific John Green - a young adult author - who was running a youtube blog with his brother). A lot of writers just want their work read, and therefore majorly support libraries, and other places where their books can be accessed. (Godix also has a story to back this up)
Writers and Editors want the same thing: the audience, and they will usually go to where that audience can be reached.
AMVs (or at least fanvideos) might be older than you think. Do you remember the days of VCR2VCR? before there was internet sharing? Maybe writing technology has been around longer than the video age, but I don't see how this keeps the org from being a library. People were creating and sharing their videos at conventions long before the org or youtube existed. The internet just helped them to find a wider audience.
Libraries originally didn't pop up so people could access free books. PUBLIC libraries service that feature. Many original libraries didn't use to be that way, they were some rich guy's private collection of books. Repositories of knowledge for a school or a college, much like many of the guides here.
Libraries = have stocked shelves whether writers choose to donate books or not.
The org = has nothing if editors choose not to donate amvs.
Libraries = go out and find books to add to their collection.
The org = makes editors come to it, bringing their amvs with them.
The proxy account makes me think that somewhere along the line this policy was changed to suit someone who didn't want their video listed here. Still either way the collection is being created, the method is a null point.
Big Bold Bottom Line (aka, the main point): The purpose of a library is to provide poor people with the same books rich people can afford. The purpose of the org is to create and encourage editors to make and continue making amvs so that the hobby doesn't die out.
Once again there is more than one kind of library. That is the purpose of a public library... what about a private library? my personal private library of DVDs isn't to provide anyone with free access to DVDs. Screw that, if I were to lend out DVDs I probably wouldn't get them back! I'm sure that a school library isn't there to specifically supply books to anyone, it's there as a resource for the
people attending the school. Not just anyone can go to a school library and borrow books.
Is that more clear? Because I don't like derailing NME's rant here. Maybe a mod can break this into a seperate "Org vs Libraries" thread. Then I can repeat myself ad nauseam until I find the right words to get my point across.
Oh you are pretty clear, however I think that your definition of a library and how one works, is rather limited. Even if some of the aspects of the org are unlike a PUBLIC library that doesn't mean that the org isn't essentially a library of amvs.
(wow I edited this too many times

lol)