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Anonymous Kerry said...

Yes, the link has been changed to How to Play the Indian Flute. This site touts itself as being Native owned yet nowhere that I could find (in the Privacy Policy or the Terms of Use) is the owner information disclosed. Isn't that required by the FCC?
According to the iTunes App store, the NA Encyclopedia site is owned by Native Media Group, Inc.:
https://itunes.apple.com/us/app/native-american-encyclopedia/id491928487?mt=8
but I could not find any specific ownership information. There was one article that appeared about Time, Inc. creating a Native Ad Group but it does not appear to be the same entity:
http://adage.com/article/media/time-creates-native-advertising-group/294164/
I'll be curious to see if they respond and who owns the encyclopedia site.
Thank you for bringing this to the spotlight on Censored News!
Kerry Steiner

November 13, 2014 at 8:13 AM

Blogger Unknown said...

I, too look for authentic information and authentic history about Native Americans/AmerIndians/Los Indios and find little credible info online. Indian Country Today is awful. While I haven't gone to this particular site, it, too, sounds suspect and inauthentic and I wonder what actions could be taken beyond those already taken by IR/CN? Certainly we don;t want to heighten traffic by raising hell, but are there ways to hold it accountabkle? Like with the FCC?

November 14, 2014 at 7:53 AM

Anonymous Phil Konstantin said...

NAE "harvested" tons of my copyrighted work (plainly marked) directly from my website http://americanindian.net. While I have shared my material with non-profits who have asked, NAE never asked for my permission. In fact, they posted my material, and then listed themselves as the author and copyright holder. It took me two years to get all of my material off their website. As far as I can tell, some of my copyrighted material is still on their Apple app. Some other articles which appeared on NAE were also taken directly from other websites without permission or the knowledge of the original authors. Granted, NAE will post the name of some of the original authors at the bottom of the material. That is fine, if the author knows about it, or the material is in the public domain (Wikipedia, etc.).

I have asked NAE repeatedly to identify themselves. They have never replied. Their online registration comes back to a domain registration service. That service said they will only reveal who the owners if they receive a court order to do so.

The "How To Dress Like An Indian" article on NAE was harvested from the eHow website. NAE dropped the article immediately after I posted about it on several social media sites.

My website has been up since 1996. I have happily helped many other American Indian-related websites over the years. The more accurate, appropriate, and culturally-correct information there is out there, the better it is for all. NAE's harvesting of material, claiming it as their own, and refusing to say who they are is no way to properly represent the American Indian community online.

In case anyone is curious, I am an enrolled citizen of the Cherokee Nation.

November 17, 2014 at 9:38 PM

Blogger GinaB said...

How's this to scare you: Native American Encyclopedia has 250,000 "likes" on Facebook!!!  That's more than most legitimate Native sites.

As an educator, this terrifies me. So much of NAE is misinformation and/or disrespectful of Native cultures. Worst is that students and visitors may assume this website is run/approved run by Natives because the name implies it. Yet those running NAE refuse to identify themselves. There's no accountablility

When a website like NAE receives a quarter of a million hits to pass on false information, we've got a big problem. It's illegal for non-Native artists to promote or sell their artwork labeled Native American. NAE is not authentic and should be illegal, too.
 
Stepping off my soapbox.

Gina

November 17, 2014 at 11:14 PM

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