An Alice Springs based community funded organisation, Indigenous Community Television, has created a website it says is the voice of remote Indigenous Australia.
IndigiTUBE is a website only featuring content uploaded by Indigenous users.
Manager Rita Cattoni says this is what sets it apart from other file sharing websites.
"All the material is pretty much made by Aboriginal people in remote communities and it is submitted to us by them or by organisations they work for," she says.
The website features videos in 25 different Indigenous languages with topics ranging from hunting, fishing and cooking demonstrations, bird identification, music videos and traditional ceremonies.
Rita Cattoni says videos are constantly being uploaded Australia wide, from the Pilbara to the Queensland coast.
"We get a lot of stuff from the Kimberley, from the Pilbara...from around Central Australia, the Warlpiri lands," she says.
"We've had stuff from Mutitjulu. From some young men in Mutijulu and that's a great clip...it's called Nigel and Ben's Remix and they're driving around Ayers Rock and we always think it's great, there's not a lot of people who could take their own music video clip driving around Ayers Rock.
"We've got stuff from the Top End, a little bit from the Torres Strait Islands and just this week we've received our first small amount of material from Queensland, from the Lockhart River."
On a good day the website receives up to 150 hits, so it still has a little way to go before the success of other file sharing sites, but for now it's a popular and vital service for many remote communities.
To hear more about Indigitube, click on the audio to the right.
