Woe be unto those who were born before Google took over the world.
Alas! I learned to read books and newspapers and magazines. And -- gasp! -- I talk to people!
Not so, apparently, those who grew up with the Internet fully in place.
For the past two years, I have been trying to have the IMDB list a film I made in 1969. It's a real film, trust me. It's called Solstice, and it was shown at film festivals. Some of the people who made it became "famous." I even have a 16mm print of it, and, if you still don't trust me, I'll arrange to meet at a mutually convenient dark street corner and let you hold it in your hand, and I might even project it so that you can see that the images printed on the celluloid add up to a real living breathing "movie."
The faceless gatekeepers at IMDB (the Internet Movie Database to the rest of you) don't believe me.
"We can't find it in Google," they tell me.
"Well, that's because Google didn't exist in 1969," I tell them.
"Yes, but we can find most anything important in Google," they retort. "How about the distributor?"
The distributor was the New York University Film Library. But. They don't exist anymore. And they don't have a website. Maybe they never had a website.
I tell the faceless drone at IMDB this.
"But we can find anything important on Google," they repeat. "If it's not in Google, we can't add it to the database."
So what's the problem? Do they think I'm lying? Do they think the reel of film I'm holding in my hand is some sort of hallucination? Do they want a bribe? Probably not the latter, because they are too cowardly to tell me who they really are let alone supply an address to mail them a bribe. I'll have an easier time meeting you on a dark street corner to show you the actual film than to find out who or where these folks are.
This problem exists in spades on Wikipedia.
One of the main criteria for deleting facts on Wikipedia is how many entries about the "fact" the so-called "editor" can find when they Google the fact.
We have started an important new not-for-profit called the "Digital Nitrate Prize." Suffice it to say that this is a major service to film preservation: it will encourage the full preservation of the original beauty of real motion picture film in the inevitable transition to digital preservation and projection.
However, the "editors" at Wikipedia won't allow us to have an entry about the Digital Nitrate Prize. In fact, we're now threatened with being banned if we try to add it to the online encyclopedia!
There is, of course, the issue of who these "editors" are. Well, the answer is that I have no idea! Nor, I believe, does anyone else have any idea who they are. They are, one supposes, over weight nerds with some vaguely positive form of autism who can sit in front of their computors 24/7 and try to reject facts from being posted in Wikipedia.
To their credit, let me surmise that there must be the internet equivalent of the unwashed masses who would like to see their Great Aunt Minnie listed in Wikipedia who need to be deterred. I'll give them that. There are too many Aunt Minnies in the world for us to read about all of them in Wikipedia. The logistics of telling one Aunt Minnie from another Aunt Minnie makes my brain spin.
But benevolent not-for-profit cash prizes that will save the world's film heritage? How does that parse out?
These guys go by names like "NightRider" or "SlashAndBurn" or "UpUrFactz" and other cute names. I'm supposing most of them are guys because girls don't usually call themselves "DemonKnight," they prefer the internet equivalent of "FlowerDemon" or "DestroyerInPink."
I discovered yesterday that they get "points" for editing. If they make 100 edits, they get to display a little cute graphic on their page.
So "DemonKnight" wants to have this little graphic on his page and is vaguely incapable of doing real research. (We can safely assume that "DemonKnight" has never read a newspaper and plays X-Box simulaneously with editing WikiPedia. Perhaps there's a Nintendo version of Wikipedia that allows you to censor articles using a game controller). How does he do this? Well, you get points for deleting articles. Delete one article, one point! Delete 90 articles, 90 points! Delete 500 articles and you get an even bigger, gaudier graphic. Wow!
And what research does "DemonKnight" do? You guessed. He puts Digital Nitrate Prize into Google and counts how many times Google finds it. There must be a magic number, but we don't know what it is.
But apparently, if it's under 10 or so hits, or God Forbid, no hits at all, it doesn't exist. The fact of there being a board of internationally famous film archivists involved and discussion in the field about it doesn't seem to matter. It's not in Google, and it doesn't exist.
"Google ergo sum!" "I Google, therefore I am!" Take that Rene Descartes!
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LINKS
[Links for The Digital Nitrate Prize: http://www.answers.com/topic/digital-nitrate-prize ]
BxNF: The 7th Annual Buffalo International Film Festival
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BxNF (Buffalo by Niagara Falls) : The 7th Annual Buffalo International Film
Festival is set for October 3-6, 2013 with a special event in honor of
Buffalo ...
11 years ago
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Links for The Digital Nitrate Prize: http://www.answers.com/topic/digital-nitrate-prize
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