Kristine Hanna

Director, Web Archiving Programs And Services, at Internet Archive

Kristine Hanna has over 15 years of experience in various roles within the technology and media industries. Kristine began their career as a Supervising Producer/Production Supervisor at (Colossal) Pictures, where they oversaw post-production and visual effects for popular animated shows. Kristine then moved on to Lucasfilm, where they served as a Visual Effects Producer, managing the budget and post-production of the "Young Indiana Jones Chronicles" and producing visual effects for various projects. After this, Kristine co-founded GirlGeeks, a company focused on building an online community and providing web services/products for women in technology. Kristine successfully raised funds for the company and played a key role in branding and content creation. Kristine then joined Hire.com as the Senior Director of Content Development, where they produced online media and conceptualized and defined a strategy for diversity recruiting web-based products and services. Kristine later worked at Digital Think as the Senior Manager of Creative Services, managing a team of Creative Directors and Designers and overseeing projects from concept to delivery. Currently, Kristine is the Director of Web Archiving Programs and Services at the Internet Archive, where they lead various projects and programs, defines the strategy and business opportunities, and manages an internal team to develop and market web archiving services and programs.

Kristine Hanna holds a Bachelor of Arts (BA) degree in Cinema and Television from the University of Southern California.

Location

San Francisco, United States

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Internet Archive

3 followers

The Internet Archive, a 501(c)(3) non-profit, is a digital library of Internet sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free access to researchers, historians, scholars, people with print disabilities, and the general public. We serve millions of people each day and are one of the top 300 web sites in the world. We are funded through donations, grants, and by providing web archiving and book digitization services for our partners. Our mission is to provide Universal Access to All Knowledge. We began in 1996 by archiving the Internet itself, a medium that was just beginning to grow in use. Today our archive contains: 735 billion web pages 41 million books and texts 14.7 million audio recordings (including 240,000 live concerts) 8.4 million videos (including 2.4 million Television News programs) 4.4 million images 890,000 software programs You can find information about our projects on our blog at https://blog.archive.org/


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51-200

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