Participatory Culture Foundation


The Participatory Culture Foundation is a non-profit organization based in Worcester, Massachusetts. Its primary project is a free and open-source software Internet television platform called Miro, formerly called the Democracy player. It is also the developer of Broadcast Machine, an open-source video publishing tool.
A 501(c)(3) organization, the PCF's mission is to "develop technology and services that ensure everyone has access to all that the Internet has to offer", because "information is critical to building a more equitable and peaceful society".

History

The organization was founded in February 2005. The Downhill Battle project precedes PCF.
PCF has received financial support from Andy and Deborah Rappaport and Mitch Kapor. It has also received support from the Surdna Foundation, Knight Foundation, and other private donors.
As of 2006, Nicholas Reville was a co-director of PCF. That year, PCF led a workshop at YearlyKos on how individual citizens can make professional-quality political ad videos and distribute them over the Internet.
On May 29, 2007, the Mozilla Foundation announced that it had awarded PCF a grant to continue their work on its open-source video projects.

Projects

Miro – a free/open-source broadcatching software application which allows subscribing to web feeds of downloadable audio and video