Help us protect the commons. Make a tax deductible gift to fund our work in 2025. Donate today!
Author:
Kristin Hersh and 50 Foot Wave go CC!
by Eric Steuer Uncategorized50 Foot Wave, the excellent rock group fronted by Kristin Hersh of seminal post-punkers Throwing Muses has announced that its new EP, Free Music is available for — you guessed it — free under a Creative Commons Music Sharing License. Right on, 50 Foot Wave! With “Free Music” 50FootWave is seeking new earballs. We thought…
New Featured Commoner – Pamela Jones
by Eric Steuer UncategorizedPamela Jones is December’s Featured Commoner. Jones is the founder and editor of Groklaw, an award-winning Web site that conducts complex legal research using an approach inspired by open source. What started out as a one-woman operation in 2003 has grown to a full-fledged community with hundreds of contributors and millions of daily visitors. We…
Redhat, Six Apart challenge the community to match their gifts to Creative Commons
by anne UncategorizedCreative Commons is pleased to announce that Six Apart is its newest Challenge Match Sponsor. Six Apart will match dollar for dollar all contributions to Creative Commons Fall Campaign up to $5,000. Join the challenge today and support Creative Commons! Many thanks to Redhat for completing their Sponsor Challenge Match!
CC in Review: Lawrence Lessig on CC Tools
by Lawrence Lessig Copyright[This email is part of a weekly series written by Lawrence Lessig and others about the history and future of Creative Commons. If you would like to be removed from this list, please click here: https://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter#unsubscribe Alternatively, if you know others who might find these interesting, please recommend they sign up at https://creativecommons.org/about/lessigletter ] From…
NeuroCommons
by mike UncategorizedScience Commons announced the NeuroCommons project with generous support from Teranode to build the “first neurology repository for the Semantic Web.” See commentary at eWeek (New Brain Trust to Work Like the Web) and from Andrew Newman (Model Driven, Semantic Web Enabled, Science Commons). Subscribe to the Science Commons weblog feed.
Groklaw's Pamela Jones
by Eric Steuer Open CulturePamela Jones is the founder and editor of Groklaw, an award-winning Web site that conducts complex legal research using an approach inspired by open source. What started out as a one-woman operation in 2003 has grown to a full-fledged community with hundreds of contributors and millions of daily visitors. Focused primarily on issues that concern…
Radio Radicale to put archives online
by Eric Steuer UncategorizedRadio Radicale, the official radio station of Italy’s Radical Party, recently announced that it is applying a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 license to much of its archived audio content. What that means: Thirty years of history, parliamentary sittings, political conferences, trials, intelligence scandals, interviews, declarations, denunciations; the material collected with ant-like patience by Radio Radicale,…
Geek Speak
by nathan UncategorizedWhat’s that you say? You don’t have enough opportunities to hear geeks talking about Creative Commons work? Well, let me see if I can help remedy that situation. The PyCon 2006 committee has announced the slate of papers for the conference, and I’m pleased to have had my proposal accepted. I’ll be presenting on “Extensible…
Remix Alex Burr's CC-licensed tracks
by Eric Steuer UncategorizedLowell, MA-based zine and music publisher Outlet is hosting a remix contest to promote Neighbor Hater, the new CC-licensed album by Alex Burr. From Outlet’s press release: [D]ownload the raw tracks from three songs: Neighbor Hater, Throne of Blood, and Bullet Train. From there, it’s all in your hands, use whatever you deem necessary to…
Economic Analysis
by mike UncategorizedCaltech economics professor Preston McAfee appears to be mad as hell about high journal and textbook prices, and he’s doing something about it. He’s published a complete Introduction to Economic Analysis textbook under a Creative Commons license. See his page about the license and high textbook prices: Why open source? Academics do an enormous amount…