Board of Directors

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(alpha order) 

 

Scott Bradner is a senior figure in the area of Internet governance. He served in multiple roles for the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF), which develops internet standards. He served as a trustee, VP for standards and then as secretary to The Internet Society and as a director of the American Registry for Internet Numbers (ARIN) the North American IP address registry. At his retirement Nov. 1, 2016, he was senior technical consultant in the office of the CTO at Harvard University, where he spent 50 years working in computers, networking, security and identity management. Bradner was involved in the process of developing an institution to succeed the Internet Assigned Numbers Authority (IANA), which managed the Internet’s domain name system. In 1996 at a conference of the Harvard Information Infrastructure Project, Mr. Bradner famously described two conundrums of the Internet that still hold: “Who says who makes the rules?” and “Who says who pays for what?” He has been a frequent speaker at technical conferences, a weekly columnist for Network World, and, now, an independent consultant and patent expert witness.  He lives near Boston.

Hendricks

Christian Hendricks has been president for the Local Media Consortium (LMC) since 2018. He joined the LMC after a 25-year career at McClatchy where he led its digital efforts for more than two decades. During his McClatchy stint, Hendricks served on the boards of Careerbuilder, Cars.com and Apartments.com. Hendricks is also Managing Partner for Extol Digital, a business consultancy focused on helping media and media-related companies with strategy, go-to-market planning, and operations. In addition to the abovementioned roles, he serves on the board of directors for Moonlighting, Recruitology, Wellness Within and ITEGA. He is also a venture partner for Impact VC, a west-coast venture capital firm and advisor to Impact Venture Capital,  Hendricks was a keynote presenter at ITEGA’s founding-member meeting at the Pocantico Center in 2018, at which he described the ITEGA opportunity. 

Green Kaiser

Jo Ellen Green Kaiser∫is founding chair of the ITEGA Board of Directors. A project-management consultant to independent-media and privacy sectors, she is also chair of teh Foundation for the Alliance for Community Media.  From 2011-2018 she chair the Media Alliance board and has worked in independent, progressive media for over 15 years, as both an editor and publisher. She previously served on the  board of the Association of Alternative Newsmedia. Kaiser is driven by a belief that democratic societies thrive only when their members have access to accurate information and informed opinion. Before coming to the Media Consortium, Kaiser was a leading figure in Jewish media. As a project manager, she specializes in bringing together volunteers. A signature project was managing the production of Siddur Sha’ar Zahav, the first complete LGBT Jewish prayerbook, to which 200 volunteers contributed time and effort. She received a B.A. at Yale University and a Ph.D. in English from the University of California, Berkeley. She taught modern poetry, women’s studies and literary theory for six years at the University of Kentucky before leaving academia for media. She lives in San Francisco.

Miller

Linda Miller most recently served as director of network journalism and innovation at American Public Media (APM) in St. Paul, Minn.  As the general manager of the Public Insight Network at APM, and seeded with a $4.1-million Corporation for Public Broadcasting grant, she helped journalists deepen relationships with the communities they serve, albeit with better technology. Prior to joining APM, she spent 12 years as a reporter and editor at The Salt Lake Tribune. She has taught public- insight reporting and  journalism ethics at Arizona State University and her alma mater, University of Wyoming. She became a journalist in the small towns of Wyoming, where newspapers were pieced together with hot wax and held together by trust, transparency and a partnership with readers. Miller is also a director of the nonprofit Journalism That Matters.  She lives near Minneapolis, Minn. 


Emeritus directors

Zuckerman

Ethan Zuckerman is director of the Institute for Digital Public Infrastructure at the University of Massachusettts-Amherst and an associate professor of public policy, communication and information there. The institute advocates for approaches to digital infrastructures that treat platforms and supporting technologies as public spaces and public goods, not purely as profit-making ventures. Previously he headed the MIT Center for Civic Media. He latest book is “Mistrust: Why Losing Faith in Institutions Provides the Tools to Transform Them.” He’s been a tech startup guy (with Tripod.com), a non-profit founder (Geekcorps.org) and co-founder (Globalvoices.org).  Zuckerman has been a senior researcher at the Berkman Klein Center for Internet & Society at Harvard University and previously served on the Global Board of the the Open Society Foundations.

Taysom

John Taysom is a British-based technology investor and entrepreneur. He is a board member and trustee of The Web Science Trust, and a founder and board member of Privitar. From 1983-2001 he was a product manager, strategy director and then venture investing executive at Reuters PLC in Hong Kong, the Middle East, Europe and the United States. He started the Reuters Venture Capital Fund in Palo Alto in 1995, making 82 investments in internet and web infrastructure and services, including Infoseek, Yahoo and Verisign. He acquired the fund in an MBO in 2002. His investments in 18 companies have lead to IPOs. He holds ground-breaking U.S. and European patents for the anonymization of private user data for advertising purposes.  He served as a director of Forbes.com until 2006. An alumnus of PricewaterhouseCoopers, he was chairman of Performance Horizon Group Ltd. until Sept. 2015, and earlier,  a director of Advertising.com Inc.  Taysom earned a Bsc in cconomics, with honors, from the University of Bath. He is a Policy Fellow at the University of Cambridge Centre for Science and Policy and a Visiting Professor, Department of Computer Science, at UCL.In 2016, he helped organize the Privacy Summit of the Alan Turing Institute. He also runs a small farm in Devon.

 

Buzenberg

Bill Buzenberg has spent 35 years as a journalist and news executive at newspapers and public radio. From 1978-1997 he was a reporter, foreign correspondent and then vice president of news for National Public Radio.  During his tenure, the NPR News Division  was honored with 9 DuPont-Columbia University batons and 10 Peabody Awards. He was also senior vice president of news at American Public Media / Minnesota Public Radio from 1998-2006 where he won his second DuPont-Columbia gold baton. A former Peace Corps volunteer in Bolivia, he was co-editor of the memoirs of the late CBS News President Richard Salant.  Buzenberg has won numerous awards, including the prestigious Edward R. Murrow Award, public radio’s highest honor and he has held fellowships at the Shorenstein Center for Media, Politics and Public Policy and the JFK Institute of Politics, both at Harvard University; at the University of Michigan and the Johns Hopkins University School of Advanced International Studies.  From 2007-20015, he was responsible for raising millions of dollars while serving as director of the non-profit Center for Public Integrity, an investigative news organization based in Washington, D.C. with a 20-year track record and some 37 first place national journalism awards. He has served on the board of the Institute for Nonprofit News and as a strategic advisor to Yes! magazine.  A graduate of Kansas State University, he now lives on Bainbridge Island, Wash.

Founder

Densmore

Bill Densmore is founder and secretary of the Information Trust Exchange Governing Association.  He is a Donald W. Reynolds Journalism Institute (RJI) fellow and author of its white paper, “From Persona to Payment: A Status Report on the News Ecosystem, and a Challenge to Create the Next One.” (2015).  A career journalist, publisher and tech entrepreneur, Densmore has been an editor/writer for The Associated Press in Boston, Chicago and San Francisco and for trade publications in business, law,  insurance and information-technology in Boston, Chicago and New York. He co-owned and published The Advocate newsweeklies for the Berkshires/southwestern Vermont, from 1983-1992. Densmore founded Amherst, Mass.-based Clickshare Service Corp. , which provides user registration, authentication, content access control and transaction services to Internet web content sites and publishers.  He is co-founder of Taxonometrics Inc., a New York-based company incubating a news- and information-personalization service called YourStream®. He’s a founding member and director of Journalism That Matters and also served eight years on the board of the New England Newspaper & Press Association and four years on the board of Shires Media Partnership, Inc.  Densmore also served as director/editor of the Media Giraffe Project at the University of Massachusetts-Amherst from 2005-2008. It was an effort to find and spotlight individuals making sustainable, innovative use of media (old and new) to foster participatory democracy and community. He is a member of the editorial advisory board of The Berkshire Eagle. Densmore holds a B.A. from the University of Massachusetts-Amherst in environmental policy and communications.

RELATED LINKS:   WHO WE ARE   |  TEAM   |    ADVISORY BOARD   |   OTHER ADVISORS