Mediaproxml

They built the first draft on a whiteboard. Media files carried metadata—dates, codecs, locations—but it was brittle: inconsistent fields, forgotten tags, and software that read a dozen standards and ignored the rest. What if there were a human-centered schema, they wondered, one that captured not just technical details but creator intent, context, and the small decisions that made a clip meaningful?

MediaproXML began as a gentle extension of existing metadata: title, creator, rights, timestamps. But Ari pushed for nuance—fields for "creative intent," "primary emotion," "reference materials," and a lightweight provenance trail that recorded every hands-on edit. June insisted on accessibility: structured captions, language variants, and scene descriptions that made media useful to people as well as machines. Malik focused on interoperability—tight, predictable structures that could map to databases, content-management systems, and the tangled pipes of ad-tech without breaking. mediaproxml

The schema remained deliberately human-readable. You could open a MediaproXML file and trace a decision like reading a hand-annotated script: who suggested a change, which reference clip influenced a scene’s color grading, whether the composer asked for a tempo change. And because provenance was first-class, restorers could repair damaged works with confidence, knowing what had been altered and why. They built the first draft on a whiteboard