The Sharing (or not sharing as we like to think) Economy
The Public Domain Project by Pond5
In an effort to understand the ways in which Pond5 initiated the Public Domain Project, I will go through some areas which can highlight both its strengths and weaknesses as commons based website.
Commons is based on an idea of sharing a resource, so in the first instance we can see that The Public Domain Project, through its very title, is attempting to commit its efforts to sharing. The Public Domain Project is a website which acts as a way to make historic media files available for creative focused projects. With over 60 thousand files in the collection, it is a place worth checking.
As a side note, The Public Domain Project is a product of Creative Commons which is a derivative of the ‘Commons’ idea. But expresses the same idea in relation to work that has been made using creative input.
Creative Commons (CC) is an American non-profit organization devoted to expanding the range of creative works available for others to build upon legally and to share. The organization has released several copyright-licenses known as Creative Commons licenses free of charge to the public.
Pond5 is as an organization which claims to be the world’s largest, most vibrant video-first content marketplace, providing filmmakers, creators, and producers of all kinds with the content, inspiration, and tools they need to improve their projects. The video resource is shared through their online platform, which a suer must sign up for and search for footage. The Public Domain project particularly focuses on historical video assets. Such as the Buzz Aldrin in a space suit video which can be downloaded easily, amongst an array of videos of B-17 Bomber Taxiing On Airfield or Girl Campers Enjoying a River.
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Pond5’s governance is not however strictly horizontal in its management structure. If this was to be considered as a product of commons based effort, this websites approach to management would need to be considered. The Public Domain Project is a subsidiary of Pond 5 which is an organisation dedicated predominantly to stock content, most of which is used online.
Its USP is that it shares licensing revenue with its contributing artists, which along with The Public Domain aims to position its organisation as having strong ethics within it market, along with notable companies like Shutterstock. By driving a hard and fast rule to support content makers, they separate themselves from their competitors. But even as we language like this is used to describe an otherwise ethical organisation, we inevitable slip into the pervading question of how much it can call its practices common. Further investigation into Pond5 finds that it is a venture-backed company funded by Accel Partners and Stripes Group with offices in New York, Dublin, Prague, London, and LA. Ultimately its ethics, if challenged, cannot stand in the way of its investors recouping a bottom line, which is their right by law. They may have to abandon such practices of distributing free content, which at second glance acts as a very effective sales funnel to connect customer back to their main site to direct them towards purchasing the priced content they have available. In this way the site could be seen a PR or marketing play to draw in potential customers. When we look at Ostrom’s (1990) guidance on the area of commons, the point could be made that in and of itself the website does connect users to their main resource, but don’t give user a say in how it is run. The boundaries are very clear, however users are not clear on who edits the content or how to contact these individuals to resolve any conflicts that may arise.







There is specific focus on being a man-of-the-people. He often creates idents exhibiting his popularity within his community, e.g. footage of him taking selfies with people on the street, who recognize him from his vlog. This micro-celebrity status, bolsters the sense of authenticity that is popular among vloggers. We are encouraged to think this through his clothing styles, which are generally sports wear. This is also demonstrated through his vernacular, which has remained consistent, i.e there is a very colloquial style to his speech from his neighborhood in west London. It is also this which, paradoxically, makes him connect more authentically when he meets with people who are outside of his social circle.