Skip to content

Help us protect the commons. Make a tax deductible gift to fund our work. Donate today!

Publishers Weekly

O’Reilly Marks 25 Years, Looks to Tech Future,” by Calvin Reid

Ars Technica

O’Reilly adopts Founding Fathers’ copyright terms,” by Jon Stokes

Extreme Tech

Spreading the Digital Word,” by Radhika Kaushik

San Jose Mercury News

Grants promoting unfettered innovation,” by Dan Gillmor

InfoWorld

Tech Books to Enter Public Domain,” by Dennis O’Reilly

New Scientist

Customised copyright licences going global,” by Will Knight

On Warranties: Part II

In response to the ongoing discussion of our licences’ warranty provision, I’ve decided to raise the issue at our upcoming board meeting.

Meantime, please keep fleshing out what you think our approach to warranties should be. The how is as important as the why. Is there any disadvantage to making a quitclaim-style warranty optional (as opposed to the standard)? Do you think we should have some type of warranty in the licenses, or rather abandon the idea altogether?

Soon we can move the conversation over to our forthcoming Discuss page, where we’ll host a variety of archived email lists dedicated to public development of innovations, license versions, iCommons, and more. For now, please keep posting your comments here. And thanks.

Color Blender

Web Developers and designers looking for that perfect color might want to check out Eric Meyer’s Color Blender, recently released under a Creative Commons license. You input two colors and specify how many midtones you’ll need, and it does the rest. Since it’s written entirely in javascript, you can download it and use it yourself.

Featured Commoner: Wiley Wiggins

Check out a new interview with actor, animator, author, and Austinite Wiley Wiggins, by our own Matt Haughey. You may remember Wiggins’ star turns in Richard Linklater’s films Dazed and Confused and Waking Life. But if you’re really in, you recognize him as a friendly blogger and all-around web dude.

Project Gutenberg CD

The people at Project Gutenberg, long known for creating and hosting public domain works, are releasing a “Best Of” CD under a Creative Commons license.