The Miro project has come a long way from the Democracy Player I remember from years back. The folks at the Participatory Culture Foundation have re-organized the project from a media player to something many times more powerful: they are building a radically decentralized and democratic system for sharing video content.

They demonstrated Miro at the 2008 Allied Media Conference. Essentially, it is a program that organizes the world's video feeds and helps us all find and watch them.

Wow.

So what exactly does that mean?

When you download Miro, by default it comes installed to use the collection of video blogs that have been submitted to the Miro Guide. Anyone can submit a video feed to the guide and pending a review (can't seem to find any documentation on how the feeds are reviewed) it will show up in the guide.

However, there's no reason you need to use the Miro Guide. You can specify any other site to pull your content from and you can individually add your own feeds. In fact, the Miro folks have gone out of their way to de-brand the program. They even offer a way to brand your own miro player.

Let's think about why this is 100 times better than YouTube:

On the last point ... from a radical movement perspective, I don't want to over estimate their politics - this is a decidedly liberal organization firmly rooted in, and limited by, the foundation dominated non-profit world. However, the core values that form the basis of the project are core values that I share and provide a powerful basis for collaboration with the left.

Miro is a project we should all be behind 100%!