This is a reformatted and updated text from 8 years ago:
The Open Media Network (#OMN) is a reboot of the “indymedia” project, reimagined as an open, decentralized network for sharing and aggregating content across websites. Guided by the principles of the #4opens and motivated by the PGA hallmarks, OMN creates a people-to-people trust-based tagging system for collaboration and ethical aggregation.
What Are OMN Nodes?
OMN nodes are the backbone of the network. These nodes perform specific functions to enable the sharing and dissemination of content within the OMN ecosystem:
Hosting Content Flows: Nodes curate and host flows of content based on tags from other OMN sites on subjects that interest them.
Content is imported via RSS from external sites and by #ActivityPub from #Fediverse and OMN sites.
Tagging and Retagging: Nodes can tag and retag objects within content flows to direct them to other nodes or to specific sections, such as sidebars/pages on websites.
Providing Tagged Content: Nodes offer tagged content flows to other sites, which can embed the content using codes as needed.
Content Archiving (Optional): Nodes may choose to archive content locally.
The roles and functionality of nodes will evolve organically as the network develops.
Types of Sites in the OMN
OMN sites serve different purposes within the network:
Publishing Sites: The original sources of content. Typically, provide an #RSS feed of ActivityPub flow for the network.
Aggregating Sites: Focus on specific subjects, localities, or themes. Receive feeds from publishing sites and curate high-quality, trusted content for distribution to higher-level nodes.
News/Link Portals: Regional, national, or major subject sites. Aggregate trusted feeds from intermediate aggregating sites and select publishing sites.
The Human Element of OMN
The OMN emphasizes human moderation and relationship building:
Trust: Relationships between node administrators, content providers, and users form the foundation of the network.
Decentralization: Unlike traditional centralized models, OMN’s structure encourages openness and collaboration.
Ethical Aggregation: Content is networked respectfully to create a robust alternative to failing commercial platforms (#dotcons).
Key Features of Ethical Aggregation
Prominent display of OMN links on participating sites.
Links are live and direct users to the original host site for reading and commenting.
Original sources are credited under content titles.
Aggregation behaviour (e.g., full content in apps) is agreed upon by both parties, with opt-out options available.
Ad placements near Creative Commons non-commercial content require explicit agreement.
Building the Network
OMN leverages existing web standards to build an open “data soup” that enables many new possibilities:
Legacy Web Integration: Uses RSS for backward compatibility.
Semantic Web Transition: Moves towards a peer-to-peer semantic web with more p2p protocols.
User Stories: Articles published on one site can appear on many other sites, always linking back to the original source.
User Contributions
OMN encourages continuous improvement and collaboration:
Content remains open-ended to invite contributions and dialogue.
Tags and semantic data added by aggregators enhance the content flow for others.
Joining the OMN
Participation is voluntary and flexible:
Existing sites can continue operating independently while sharing content via RSS.
Posting can be done through personal blogs, group sites, or portals like #indymedia.
For “news” – A New Indymedia
Aggregating hubs/nodes in OMN represent the “new indymedia”:
These hubs may focus on subjects, countries, regions, or cities.
Unlike the centralizing elements of traditional networks, OMN’s open model reduces the need for centralized control.
Licensing and Openness
OMN adheres to open licensing principles:
Content is shared freely within the network.
Licensing ensures respect for contributors and promotes ethical usage.
Encouraging Collaboration
OMN thrives on contributions and engagement:
Leave questions or incomplete ideas to inspire participation.
Create linking overviews or summary articles that highlight stories within content flows.
Encourage human relationships to grow the trust-based network.
Conclusion
The Open Media Network (OMN) is an ambitious and open-ended project that refocuses decentralized media sharing for the modern web. By collaboration, trust, and ethical practices, OMN empowers participants to grow a sustainable and impactful alternative to the dieing corporate media platforms.
Open Media Network (OMN): A second view
What Are OMN Nodes?
OMN nodes are the backbone of the network. anyone can run one, the flows between them are based on trust. These nodes perform specific functions to enable the sharing and dissemination of content within the OMN ecosystem:
- Hosting Content Flows: Nodes curate and host flows of content based on tags from other OMN sites on subjects that interest them.
- Content is imported via RSS from external sites and by activertypub from OMN sites.
- Tagging and Retagging: Nodes can tag and retag objects within content flows to direct them to other nodes or to specific sections, such as sidebars on websites.
- Providing Tagged Content: Nodes offer tagged content flows to other sites, which can embed the content using codes as needed.
- Content Archiving (Optional): Nodes may choose to archive content locally.
The roles and functionality of nodes will evolve organically as the network develops.
Types of Sites in the OMN
OMN sites serve different purposes within the network:
- Publishing Sites:
- The original sources of content.
- Typically provide an RSS feed for the network.
- Aggregating Sites:
- Focus on specific subjects, localities, or themes.
- Receive feeds from publishing sites and curate high-quality, trusted content for distribution to higher-level nodes.
- News/Link Portals:
- Regional, national, or major subject sites.
- Aggregate trusted feeds from intermediate aggregating sites and select publishing sites.
The Human Element of OMN
The OMN emphasizes human moderation and relationship building:
- Trust: Relationships between node administrators, content providers, and users form the foundation of the network.
- Decentralization: Unlike traditional centralized models, OMN’s structure encourages openness and collaboration.
- Ethical Aggregation: Content is networked in a respectful way to create a robust alternative to failing commercial platforms (#dotcons).
Key Features of Ethical Aggregation
- Prominent display of OMN links on participating sites.
- Links are live and direct users to the original host site for reading and commenting.
- Original sources are credited under content titles.
- Aggregation behavior (e.g., full content in apps) is agreed upon by both parties, with opt-out options available.
- Ad placements near Creative Commons non-commercial content require explicit agreement.
Building the Network
OMN leverages existing web standards to build an open “data soup” that enables many new possibilities:
- Legacy Web Integration: Uses RSS for backward compatibility.
- Semantic Web Transition: Moves towards a peer-to-peer semantic web with technologies like ActivityPub, Nostr, ATprotocol etc.
- User Stories: Articles published on one site can appear on many other sites, always linking back to the original source.
User Contributions
OMN encourages continuous improvement and collaboration:
- Content remains open-ended to invite contributions and dialogue.
- Tags and semantic data added by aggregators enhance the content flow for others.
Joining the OMN
Participation is voluntary and flexible:
- Existing sites can continue operating independently while sharing content via RSS.
- Posting can be done through personal blogs, group sites, or portals like indymedia.
A New Indymedia
Aggregating hubs/nodes in OMN could be represented as the “new indymedia”:
- These hubs may focus on subjects, countries, regions, or cities.
- Unlike the centralizing elements of traditional networks, OMN’s open path reduces the need for centralized control.
Licensing and Openness
OMN adheres to open licensing principles:
- Content is shared freely within the network.
- Licensing ensures respect for contributors and promotes ethical usage.
Encouraging Collaboration
OMN thrives on contributions and engagement:
- Leave questions or incomplete ideas to inspire participation.
- Create linking overviews or summary articles that highlight stories within content flows.
- Encourage human relationships to grow the trust-based network.
Conclusion
The Open Media Network (OMN) is an ambitious and open-ended project that reimagines decentralized media sharing for the modern web. By fostering collaboration, trust, and ethical practices, OMN empowers participants to build a sustainable and impactful alternative to corporate media platforms.