YouTube’s All-Access Pass to Davos
January 24th, 2010 | Published in Youtube
For the past three years at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, YouTube has partnered with WEF to give YouTube users the chance to send videos to world leaders. Fom a special production booth up the Swiss Alps, presidents, CEOs, and global change-makers respond directly to those videos throughout the conference. This year, we're opening up the conference even further by allowing you to share your ideas using our new Moderator tool which will be incorporated into three different panel discussions at Davos. Go to the Davos channel (youtube.com/davos) to submit your ideas and questions.
Loic LeMeur will bring your questions to his panel on the growing influence of social networks; Rima Maktabi of Al Arabiya will use your ideas on her televised panel on the balance of power in the Middle East, and Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times will include your thoughts in the debate over female genital mutiliation, a panel which will feature the winner of our "Your Pitch to the World" contest, Julia Lalla-Maharajh.
Loic LeMeur will bring your questions to his panel on the growing influence of social networks; Rima Maktabi of Al Arabiya will use your ideas on her televised panel on the balance of power in the Middle East, and Nicholas Kristof of the New York Times will include your thoughts in the debate over female genital mutiliation, a panel which will feature the winner of our "Your Pitch to the World" contest, Julia Lalla-Maharajh.
And as usual, we'll be streaming your questions at our YouTube booth at Davos, too.
One value of the Moderator tool is that it allows you to engage via video and text. You can also vote up the most important ideas and questions submitted by others to help determine which issues you want the panelists to address. We used the same platform in Copenhagen for the CNN/YouTube Debate on climate change, and will continue to use it in 2010 as a way to bring your participation to televised events.
Go to YouTube.com/Davos and join the discussion now. Here's more information about each panel, including the deadlines for submission:
One value of the Moderator tool is that it allows you to engage via video and text. You can also vote up the most important ideas and questions submitted by others to help determine which issues you want the panelists to address. We used the same platform in Copenhagen for the CNN/YouTube Debate on climate change, and will continue to use it in 2010 as a way to bring your participation to televised events.
Go to YouTube.com/Davos and join the discussion now. Here's more information about each panel, including the deadlines for submission:
January 20: The Growing Influence of Social Networks
January 21: The Balance of Power in the Middle East
January 30: YouTube Debate on Female Genital Mutilation (FGM)
Steve Grove, Head of News and Politics, recently watched "Al Arabiya Debate"
- Host: Loic LeMeur (Seesmic), Jack Dorsey (Twitter), Reid Hoffmann (LinkedIn), Owen van Natta (MySpace), Gina Bianchini (Ning), and others
January 21: The Balance of Power in the Middle East
- Host: Rima Maktabi (Al Arabiya)
January 30: YouTube Debate on Female Genital Mutilation (FGM)
- Host: Nicholas Kristof (The New York Times)
Steve Grove, Head of News and Politics, recently watched "Al Arabiya Debate"