About The Open Media Foundation
OMF's mission statement: to put the power of media and technology into the hands of the people in order to enable every person to actively engage their community and bring about the change they wish to see in the world. Open Media Foundation attempts to divert some of the power away from larger media conglomerates into the hands of the people. Many people do not have access or the necessary funding to get their voices heard by the masses. OMF wants to change this by providing equipment, space, and the knowledge necessary to create what the producers desire. OMF is based in Denver, Colorado's "Santa Fe Arts District" where it manages a 20,000 SqFt building that houses its 2 Radio studios, classrooms, and Audio/Video production facilities. The Open Media Foundation building is also home to a number of smaller, independent nonprofit media entities including The Colorado Independent online news agency,History of Open Media Foundation
2001: Tony Shawcross, Executive Director of the Open Media Foundation, co-founded a non-commercial website called enverevolutionin order to promote independent arts and non-commercial community events overlooked by the local media. 2003: members of the denverevolution collective began producing video as the enverevolutionproduction group, borrowing gear from friends at KBDI (PBS 12), Free Speech TV, and Denver Community Television. FSTV provided them with their first editing station in an office donated by Little Voice Productions'. 2004: OMF expanded its media and technology training services with a new office connected to Denver's PS1 Charter School, formed a board, and was granted 501(C)(3) tax-exempt status, incorporating as "the enverevolutionproduction group." 2005: OMF changed its name to Deproduction and with the closure of Denver Community Television, submitted a proposal to re-launch Public-access television in Denver under an entirely new model, leveraging emerging web 2.0 technologies and business models into community media. 2006: OMF launched Denver Open Media (DOM), with an independent brand and name that could be owned by the community. 2007" OMF (then Deproduction) was selected to manage production and launch the State-Wide Colorado Channel, which launched in January, 2008. 2008: after winning a Knight News Challenge award, OMF (then Deproduction) merged with Civic Pixel, a Denver-based web development firm who had built the DOM website. 2009: the parent organization changed its name to the Open Media Foundation, dropping the Deproduction and Civic Pixel names. Denver Open Media remained an independent, community-run project of the parent company, Open Media Foundation. 2010: OMF launched the Open Media Project, the result of their two-year Knight News Challenge Grant. The Open Source Software was beta-tested in 6 other cities, in an effort to build a nationwide network of Public Access TV stations collaborating on web-based community media tools and sharing content. 2012: OMF launched an open-source software-as-a-service for The Colorado State House of Representatives and Colorado State Senate at (http://coloradochannel.net). 2016: OMF launched Denver Open Media Radio, Denver's first radio station devoted entirely to local content. 2017: OMF launched Open.Media, a national software service for streaming and archiving videos of state and local governments based on the software originally built for the Colorado State House of Representatives. The software is provided free of charge to small, rural governments, with dozens of medium and large government bodies paying for the service. December, 2018: the city of Denver revoked the public access contract from OMF, despite significant and months long public outcry from community members to keep the contract with OMF, the City of Denver began running Public Access TV internally with City Staff & contractors. June, 2019: Denver Open Media changed from its original 104.7 Low-Power FM station to 92.9FM and 89.3HD3, significantly expanding the reach of their FM broadcast. Dec 2020: Open Media moved from 700 Kalamath to 2101 Arapahoe St. together with KGNU, KUVO, and over a dozen other community media organizationsReferences
{{ReflistExternal links