Showing posts with label Simon Strumse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Simon Strumse. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 October 2014

World Intellectual Property Rights Day 2014 in Norway





This Spring I attended a seminar at the Norwegian Industrial Property Office. The seminar was aimed towards film and TV-production. It hosted a range of speakers within the fields of production, distribution and law. The World Intellectual Property Rights Day is a worldwide event and this year’s theme was “Movies – A Global Passion.” Some of the presentations can be seen on Youtube. Here’s a breakdown of the speakers and their presentations:

Per A. Foss, Director General, Norwegian Industrial Property Office (NIPO)
He has a solid academic research career and has worked with business development and licensing before taking up his role at NIPO in 2012. Foss talked about NIPO’s work in general and highlighted their increasing interest in assisting the creative industries, as this is a sector in growth. As a creative practitioner in the Kingdom of Norway having this solid backing and desire to connect from an organisation like NIPO is reassuring. From the mingling after the event it was also clear that NIPO is interested in opportunities to connect with institutions in Higher Education, to help educate prospective creative practitioners. This could include taking part in events, helping with developing curricula and more.

Håkon Briseid, CEO and Producer, MonsterScripted (Vimeo link)
Talked about:

·      Taking an idea through to a product for visual media.
·      What can be patented and what cannot? (with examples of current shows that have fed of each other’s ideas).
·      How to work well with writers and book authors in turning their products into films.
·      How the film and TV-industries have changed over the last decade and how this should affect your approach to production.
·      Where money currently is moving and not moving within the industries.
·      Effective pitching.
 
Hedvig Bengtson, Senior Adviser, Norwegian Industrial Property Office (NIPO)
Hedvig is a Senior Legal Advisor at the Norwegian IndustrialProperty Office. Hedvig provided an overview over various actions that are being taken to fight piracy internationally. Many of the same organisations that work with protecting physical copyright infringements also work with digital infringements. Infringements of copyright to a physical product and a digital product have a lot in common even though they are fundamentally different in nature. Copied digital products are hard to track.

Some organisations working for protection of digital property rights:

·      World Intellectual Property Organization, WIPO (UN). The webpage is a good resource on legal and political matters, and co-operations being done in the area of intellectual property rights
·      Norway’s premier University, the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU) has recently established Norwegian Academy for Intellectual Property
·      4 official organizations working together in Norway:
o   There is a lot of information spread around the web. A new web-page will be launched towards the end of 2014. The webpage will provide one location for important information

General:
·      Trend: “Piracy kills music” –this type of campaign has not been efficient [little wonder! An entire culture industry in effect criminalizing a whole generation it wishes to benefit financially from! =my comment=]. Increasingly one is trying to provide a positive angle!
·      UK is good at providing good information about where to legally download (The Content Map)
·      Music Inc. is a music management app where you can see how much revenue is lost from an artist to piracy
·      The Norwegian Industrial Property Office has developed an app where you can search for trademarks, company names and internet domains
·      EU completed a study of how much regular people knew about intellectual property rights
o   10% of the population commits 74% of the offences against intellectual property rights (IPR). These are typically aged 15 to 25 years old
o   IPR-intensive industries provides ¼ of the employment and ⅓ of the economic production inside the EU

Simon Strumse, Filmgrail
Filmgrail is a newly launched app and web-page to help you search for new films to watch in a legal way. Filmgrail is aiming to make people watch more films and not just the same blockbusters over and over. With their simple user-interface they make information about films available to you to help with making quick and informed decisions. The first stage has been an app developed with emphasis on the Norwegian marked, but within a short while they will cover the whole world. The system can be implemented in decoders and TVs. I have mentioned Filmgrail and Simon in a previous blog post.

From the presentation:
·      The old model: First viewing (TV)/ Cinema (Film) -> DVD is still the most profitable. But within a few years streaming will take over
·      95% of film revenue comes from about 5% of all films that have been made
·      Consumer decisions are based on psychology. User-friendliness is more important to the consumer than law
·      Popcorn Time is an illegal Argentinian web-service that has collected a huge catalogue of TV and Film in one place (torrents played through a very good interface). It is very user friendly and supposedly better than Netflix. It has no zone restrictions. This should be a wake-up call to the film industry, why are they not doing the same?

·      A lot of culture production is happening in Norway, but not much is known abroad
·      Recent developments at Lillehammer University College
·      The Royal Norwegian Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries has an emphasis on internationalization:
-> Smith asks the question, what can we do to get Norway to open up to international culture?

[My view is that this question should be asked in reverse, how can we get Norwegian culture into the world? I also believe this is much more in line with the other work Smith is doing, and that there is a lot of unexplored commercial gains in exporting a previously globally unknown culture. As a resident of Singapore and the UK for a many years I know the cultural curiosity we are met with as ex-pats. I also believe that a 1000-year-old Kingdom should allow itself to explore more of its millennial-long history than just the last few decades—which is a topic for another time.]

·      Also mentioning: Vision Norway 2030 [for more click link], Norway Exports, The Rise of the Creative Class [review], talking about Norwegian culture as an ‘experience economy,’ and the concept behind Cultural Crossroads.
·      “When you find the essence of culture, everyone can relate to it.”
=Steven Van Zandt=

Shout
Shout out also to Bernd Otto Ewald for an interesting conversation about Norwegian tourism after lunch! Ewald is a Senior Adviser at the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Trade, Industry and Fisheries.

Norway—culture to capitalize from?
Photo: Harald Haltvik

Tuesday, 12 August 2014

Three New Shouts! (pt. 2 – Music and Media)



This is thesecond round of shouts this summer. The shouts are to people I have either met, know or worked with, who are doing something in the creative industries right now worth telling the world about! Like in the last post we’ll still be talking about music, but also cover film and other media. Enjoy!


Ishani Chakravarty
 
Originally from Bangalore, India, Ishani has been flying between India, Singapore and the UK for many years. In Singapore she is one of the entrepreneurs behind high-end video-production house The SingingBush, and has been seen both in front of and behind the cameras. In London Ishani is a graduate of Music Production College Alchemea and is currently working on an EP. She just released her first music-video and the BBC Asian Network promptly named her artist of the week! In the gradual bridge-building between Eastern and Western popular music culture Ishani Chakravarty will be an artist to look out for in the time to come! Here is a recent interview with her from The Times of India, and here is the music-video:




Anaïs Mutumba

Anaïs Mutumba

Anaïs Mutumba is a freelance journalist in London. She specializes in film-reviews and has, amongst others, been writing for Showfilmfirst. The last 6 years she has been an independent film-reviewer, and regularly attends press events and viewings before new films hit the marked. Originally from Rwanda, with a strong passion for Asia, trained in Pharmaceutical Management and currently finishing her Masters in Journalism, her eclectic competence covers a wide field. She has also done training with Shine Media and Channel 4. A name to look out for in connecting viewers to films, TV-presenting and journalistic investigation. Find her at her film-blog!


Simon Strumse & Filmgrail


Simon Strumse is the head of the newly launched Norwegian company Filmgrail. I met him when he held a presentation about his company, and how to see more film online in a legal way in the future. The presentation was held at The Norwegian Industrial Property Office last spring. Filmgrail is a web-service and an app to help you search films in a brand new way. The system can be implemented in TVs and decoders, and the user-interface is remarkably simple. The search-function allows you to become acquainted with both blockbusters and less known films in a much more equal mix than usual. Filmgrail connects simple reviews to viewing-platforms to make your decision making as easy as possible when you want to see a new film. Strumse says he wants us to see more film—‘more’ refers both to variety and to quantity. The viewing-platforms Filmgrail connects you to are currently addressing mostly the Norwegian marked, but international versions are under development and can be tailored to any region. After browsing the page for only a short while I’m already a fan!


The innovative Filmgrail interface