Saturday, December 3, 2016

Media Editing Presents Good and Bad Opportunities


 

When it comes to communicating through the media, the medium is one that’s steadily expanded from standpoint of technology. From the newspaper and publications to telegraph to telephone to motion pictures to radio to television to the Internet and beyond, the opportunity to deliver messages and news has greatly evolved.

Editing and manipulating content, the ethical challenges

The first ever images were primitive with little chance of enhancement, a far cry from 21st Century technology that allows for drastic changes to be made.

With many of these tools, the opportunity to alter images, voices or the truth exists. While it sounds somewhat ominous, that’s not always such a bad thing because of the need to offer succinct comments that best represent what was said or done. Time constraints generally force such conventions.

Still, in all such cases, the ethical challenges that may spring forth at some point will be offered to just about anyone willing to edit content of any sort. They may choose to neatly edit comments or assorted video to provide a crisp presentation that informs or entertains. Or choose to do quit the opposite in order to mock, criticize, or take down someone: we’re facing media editing.

The decision on which way to go can make a choice that’s much more difficult. How they choose to move ahead can have serious ramifications depending on the level of influence someone may have on the media landscape.

Media editing: The Transformation of Vocal Power

Voice editing can completely change the context of a recorded comment by deftly editing certain words out. That would mean that someone’s endorsement is presented instead as a denunciation of his or her intended remarks, with this falsehood often finding its way into the morass of political advertising that comes about every year.

Sometimes who is making such remarks isn’t as important as what’s being said. That individual may be unknown to the general public, which means that few will likely pay attention to the comments. If remarks have no video component, the opportunity to manipulate a person’s voice is available to someone with the mindset to adapt the comments in the appropriate fashion.

The basis for editing this voice can possess certain legitimacy, such as the comments is difficult to hear or a person of a different gender is needed, with none available. Software that allows for a more forceful presentation from this anonymous person or can actually change the gender of the person speaking can solve the issue.

Read full article at http://www.technoexaminer.com/media-editing-272.html

Related article: Media center

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