Radio4all.net

A-Infos Radio Project
Type of site
archive
Available in English
Owner Lyn Gerry
Website radio4all.net
Alexa rank 385,425 (April 2014)[1]
Commercial No
Registration Optional
Launched October 1996 (1996-10)
Current status Active
Content license
Non-commercial

The A-Infos Radio Project was formed in October 1996 by Lyn Gerry and other grassroots broadcasters, free radio journalists and cyber-activists to provide the means to share radio programs via the Internet. Programs are typically submitted from "Independent or Alternative media", which refers to a form of media that is free of influence by government or corporate interests (i.e. "mainstream media."). Anyone may upload programs and the content is posted to the web page immediately.

Origins

The A-Infos audio internet archive began in response to a reorganisation of the Pacifica radio station that eliminated many of its more controversial programmers.[2] The project's goal is to support and expand the movement for democratic communications worldwide by offering an alternative to the concentration of corporate media outlets and perspectives. It may have been the first website to allow free upload and download of audio files.

Operations

Radio4all accepts donations from its users and has never carried advertising or received corporate sponsorship. Radio4All.net is operated exclusively by volunteers on an occasional basis, many of whom have never met in person, but who communicate through a mailing list. Lyn Gerry has stated that the decision not to censor any material was mainly pragmatic.[3]

Contents

The A-Infos Radio Project was the first grassroots media project of its kind on the internet to allow free upload and download of programs, and has attracted a wide variety of audio material. The focus remains on public domain radio programmes from various perspectives and often of an alternative political nature. Programs address both local and global issues and perspectives vary substantially, but the most often included are environmentalism, socialism, humanitarianism and anarchism.

Beginning in the late 1990s using dial up modem connections talented program producers and micro-radio stations began exchanging radio programming segments using radio4all.net as an open audio library. Lyn (Lyn Gerry) Attended the N.A.B. 2000 counter convention in San Francisco CA Radio Show #31 and presented this concept to the then hopeful Low Power FM station applicants who were awaiting FCC licensing of this new type of Local Non-Corporate radio station service. In a few years more than 500 LPFM stations were Licensed and began broadcasting and creating content and sharing it with other like minded station across North America and worldwide. Radio4all.net ran as a free service worked well for the no-budget LPFM stations springing up across the country.(WSCA,WRIR Shows in mp3, WCOM,KNFS,KQRP, KRFP KRFP-LP, FRSC,etc.)

By April 2016 the archive had received over 85,000 uploads from over 5,000 producers, of which over 65,000 were still available for download. As a 100% non-commercial operation, it relies on donations. The site has occasional outages and has occasionally limited download speed. On May 14, 2012 the site suffered an outage due to late payment of domain renewal charges, but was soon restored. The site functions autonomously without human intervention or moderation; anyone can upload or download programs.[4][5]

Several long running syndicated radio shows such as Deconstructing Dinner, TUC Radio, If You Love This Planet and Lyn Gerry's own Unwelcome Guests have used the site for hosting their archives.[6][7][8]

See also

References

  1. "Radio4all.net Site Info". Alexa Internet. Retrieved 2014-04-01.
  2. "Listserv forms Backbone of National Free Radio Network". Retrieved 2007-06-06.
  3. MP3 Interview Skidmark Bob interviews Lyn Gerry about A-Infos Radio Project
  4. "The Radio4all contributor index". Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  5. "Radio4All coverpage". Retrieved 31 July 2015.
  6. "TUC file archive". Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  7. "Deconstructing Dinner archive". Retrieved 31 March 2013.
  8. "Unwelcome Guests archive". Retrieved 31 March 2013.
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