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起艺 Our Talent让你凭本事赚钱 黄明志创造APP造福艺术家

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除了创作唱歌、导演主持,马来西亚艺人黄明志和研发团队最近创作了一个流动应用程序(mobile application,简称:APP),“起艺” (Our Talent),为艺术家和才艺人士谋福利,并在优管(YouTube)上传介绍视频,获得超过7万网民按赞,更有3万人留言评论。

在介绍视频中,黄明志表示,人们生活中离不开艺术,但是艺术“养不起人”。“这些都是我们生活的一部分,却没有办法向其他行业的人一样,赚正常的钱、过正常的生活。”

以亲身经历为借镜

他也分享了他开始创作后的生活,他当时的梦想只是希望所创作的歌曲会被他人演唱,因此到台湾去闯天下。他白天上课,晚上工作,一天工作十二小时。他使用睡觉时间来创作,上课时间来睡觉,也经常创作,录制成样本送到各唱片公司,送出的歌曲多达三百首,但是音讯全无。

他指出,当时他的生活非常困苦,没钱吃饭,一天三餐,两天吃泡面。一直到优管的出现,才让他的知名度一下子飙升了,成为人人追随的对象。虽然有了知名度,但仍然没有摆脱穷困生活。

黄明志表示,他相信很多艺术家或艺术人士都和他一样,有过这种困境,或是仍然生活在这个困境中,因此他和研究团队努力了三年,终于在2019那边2月创造了一个平台,让爱艺术的大家有个能够展示才艺、获得观众、标价并取得赚钱门路的流动应用程序,起艺 Our Talent。

艺术难以定价、中介抽佣– 艺术家生活困苦

他表示,艺术家或才艺人士没有办法像正常人一样赚钱,主要有两个原因。艺术是无价、无标准可言的,所以客户不知道才艺的价值,就连艺术家和才艺人士也不知道。艺术家不是商人,不懂的销售自己的才艺,也是造成艺术家或才艺人士“比较穷”的原因。

黄明志也指出,虽然人们可以在有需要时,透过中介公司找到相关的艺术家或表演家,但是中介将抽取高昂佣金,而表演人士并未从中获取多大利益。这些艺术家最后为了谋生,只有放弃梦想和目标,转入其他行业中,也让艺术永远埋没了。

Airbnb为灵感来源

他指出,他是透过Airbnb流动程序引发了创作起艺 Our Talent的想法。Airbnb是一个方便人们租房度假或公干的流动程序,提供无法租到酒店或饭店住宿的人士,可以有房出租的人士申请短期租房,而有房人士也有了提供短期出租的平台。这个流动程序也避免了酒店乱开价、狮子开大口的情况出现,简直可以说是制造了双赢局面。

他希望,起艺 Our Talent也能起到这样的作用,让有需要的人能直接找到有才艺的人士,直接沟通商谈开价。

他也呼吁艺术家和才艺人士能够加入平台,记录下能够演出的日期,不用中介、不用贱卖,各凭本事赚钱。

“如果你觉得自己很会唱歌、跳舞、乐器、魔术、武术表演,或者话剧、相声、栋笃笑,甚至你会画画、雕塑、裁缝,各种商业设计,再不然你会拍摄、拍照修图、剪接影片,各种各样的才艺都好,你都可以透过起艺Our Talent,把你的价钱标下去。”

消费者可搜寻评价

他指出,消费者不用害怕被骗或吃亏了,因为在起艺 Our Talent中,人们将展出视频、介绍、评价和标价,让人们自行搜选、比较和评估。

黄明志希望每一项才艺都应该能转换成应得的收入,都应该被尊重,大家有权利选择自己要的生活。“我也希望起艺Our TalentApp,可以帮助世界每一个角落正在为艺术努力为信念奋斗的艺术家朋友们。”

冀黄明志协助香港市场

网民对此都表示赞成,有的艺术家和才艺人士也分享了自己的亲身经历,对黄志明之举表示支持力挺。

网民也表示,对于艺术的定义很模糊,就以特效化妆为例。他指出,特效化妆也是艺术,并不是只有万圣节才有用,电影等都需要特效化妆。

网名也询问是否能够打入香港市场,香港和需要黄志明来改变一下整个市场生意。对艺术来说,观众也很重要。“很多人就不觉得艺术是要付费的,很多时候听的歌也不用付费……久而久之商家客户也瞧不起艺术家,认为这些都不值得花钱。”

支持设立平台

有人支持,一定有人贬。有网民表示黄志明录制这个视频,只是为了拍广告博同情,以此赚钱。

但是大多数网民都对黄明志的给予支持,甚至说黄明志说出了他的心声,感谢黄明志对于艺术和创作的坚持,以及相关视频也成功传达了目前社会所缺乏的意识概念。

网民也批评中介公司的介入,对艺术家过分要求和压迫,希望其他的艺术家能够通过有关的流动程序受惠。

促请关注版权问题

网民非常相应黄志明的召唤,纷纷到起艺 Our Talent注册和游览,但是过后发现该流动程序缺陷很多,也呼吁黄明志注意版权问题。

网民也表示看过类似的流动程序,但是最后的效果并没有如预期般好。

他们表示,游览了内容就像做梦一样,做过就忘记了,只记得可以分国家、点视频等。主题太杂乱、只有初步分类,因此促请黄明志整理一下,更好的销售经理,不然看了就会问“他到底是再买什么才艺。”

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Reforming Singapore’s defamation laws: Preventing legal weapons against free speech

Opinion: The tragic suicide of Geno Ong, linked to the financial stress from a defamation lawsuit, raises a critical issue: Singapore’s defamation laws need reform. These laws must not be weaponized to silence individuals.

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by Alexandar Chia

This week, we hear the tragic story of the suicide of Geno Ong, with Ong citing the financial stress from the defamation lawsuit against her by Raymond Ng and Iris Koh.

Regardless of who’s right and who’s wrong, this Koh/Ng vs Ong affair raises a wider question at play – the issue of Singapore’s defamation laws and how it needs to be tightened.

Why is this needed? This is because defamation suits cannot be weaponised the way they have been in Singapore law. It cannot be used to threaten people into “shutting up”.

Article 14(2)(a) of the Constitution may permit laws to be passed to restrict free speech in the area of defamation, but it does not remove the fact that Article 14(1)(a) is still law, and it permits freedom of speech.

As such, although Article 14(2)(a) allows restrictions to be placed on freedom of speech with regard to the issue of defamation, it must not be to the extent where Article 14(1)(a)’s rights and liberties are not curtailed completely or heavily infringed on.

Sadly, that is the case with regard to precedence in defamation suits.

Let’s have a look at the defamation suit then-PM Goh Chok Tong filed against Dr Chee Soon Juan after GE 2001 for questions Dr Chee asked publicly about a $17 billion loan made to Suharto.

If we look at point 12 of the above link, in the “lawyer’s letter” sent to Dr Chee, Goh’s case of himself being defamed centred on lines Dr Chee used in his question, such as “you can run but you can’t hide”, and “did he not tell you about the $17 billion loan”?

In the West, such lines of questioning are easily understood at worse as hyperbolically figurative expressions with the gist of the meaning behind such questioning on why the loan to Suharto was made.

Unfortunately, Singapore’s defamation laws saw Dr Chee’s actions of imputing ill motives on Goh, when in the West, it is expected of incumbents to take the kind of questions Dr Chee asked, and such questions asked of incumbent office holders are not uncommon.

And the law permits pretty flimsy reasons such as “withdrawal of allegations” to be used as a deciding factor if a statement is defamatory or not – this is as per points 66-69 of the judgement.

This is not to imply or impute ill intent on Singapore courts. Rather, it shows how defamation laws in Singapore needs to be tightened, to ensure that a possible future scenario where it is weaponised as a “shut-up tool”, occurs.

These are how I suggest it is to be done –

  1. The law has to make mandatory, that for a case to go into a full lawsuit, there has to be a 3-round exchange of talking points and two attempts at legal mediation.
  2. Summary judgment should be banned from defamation suits, unless if one party fails to adduce evidence or a defence.
  3. A statement is to be proven false, hence, defamatory, if there is strictly material along with circumstantial evidence showing that the statement is false. Apologies and related should not be used as main determinants, given how many of these statements are made in the heat of the moment, from the natural feelings of threat and intimidation from a defamation suit.
  4. A question should only be considered defamatory if it has been repeated, after material facts of evidence are produced showing, beyond reasonable doubt, that the message behind the question, is “not so”, and if there is a directly mentioned subject in the question. For example, if an Opposition MP, Mr A, was found to be poisoned with a banned substance, and I ask openly on how Mr A got access to that substance, given that its banned, I can’t be found to have “defamed the government” with the question as 1) the government was not mentioned directly and 2) if the government has not produced material evidence that they indeed had no role in the poisoning affair, if they were directly mentioned.
  5. Damages should be tiered, with these tiers coded into the Defamation Act – the highest quantum of damages (i.e. those of a six-figured nature) is only to be reserved if the subject of defamation lost any form of office, revenue or position, or directly quantifiable public standing, or was subjected to criminal action, because of the act of defamation. If none of such occur, the maximum amount of damages a plaintiff in a defamation can claim is a 4-figure amount capped at $2000. This will prevent rich and powerful figures from using defamation suits and 6-figure damages to intimidate their questioners and detractors.
  6. All defendants of defamation suit should be allowed full access to legal aid schemes.

Again, this piece does not suggest bad-faith malpractice by the courts in Singapore. Rather, it is to suggest how to tighten up defamation laws to avoid it being used as the silencing hatchet.

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Man arrested for alleged housebreaking and theft of mobile phones in Yishun

A 23-year-old man was arrested for allegedly breaking into a Yishun Ring Road rental flat and stealing eight mobile phones worth S$3,400 from five tenants. The Singapore Police responded swiftly on 1 September, identifying and apprehending the suspect on the same day. The man has been charged with housebreaking, which carries a potential 10-year jail term.

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SINGAPORE: A 23-year-old man has been arrested for allegedly breaking into a rental flat along Yishun Ring Road and stealing eight mobile phones from five tenants.

The incident occurred in the early hours on Sunday (1 September), according to a statement from the Singapore Police Force.

The authorities reported that they received a call for assistance at around 5 a.m. on that day.

Officers from the Woodlands Police Division quickly responded and, through ground enquiries and police camera footage, were able to identify and apprehend the suspect on the same day.

The stolen mobile phones, with an estimated total value of approximately S$3,400, were recovered hidden under a nearby bin.

The suspect was charged in court on Monday with housebreaking with the intent to commit theft.

If convicted, he could face a jail term of up to 10 years and a fine.

In light of this incident, the police have advised property owners to take precautions to prevent similar crimes.

They recommend securing all doors, windows, and other openings with good quality grilles and padlocks when leaving premises unattended, even for short periods.

The installation of burglar alarms, motion sensor lights, and CCTV cameras to cover access points is also advised. Additionally, residents are urged to avoid keeping large sums of cash and valuables in their homes.

The investigation is ongoing.

Last month, police disclosed that a recent uptick in housebreaking incidents in private residential estates across Singapore has been traced to foreign syndicates, primarily involving Chinese nationals.

Preliminary investigations indicate that these syndicates operate in small groups, targeting homes by scaling perimeter walls or fences.

The suspects are believed to be transient travelers who enter Singapore on Social Visit Passes, typically just a day or two before committing the crimes.

Before this recent surge in break-ins, housebreaking cases were on the decline, with 59 reported in the first half of this year compared to 70 during the same period last year.

However, between 1 June and 4 August 2024, there were 10 reported housebreaking incidents, predominantly in private estates around the Rail Corridor and Bukit Timah Road.

The SPF has intensified efforts to engage residents near high-risk areas by distributing crime prevention advisories, erecting alert signs, and training them to patrol their neighborhoods, leading to an increase in reports of suspicious activity.

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