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Lessig on Digital Barbarism

Lawrence Lessig has posted a review of David Halperin's recent book, Digital Barbarism.

Halperin, who authored the (in)famous New York Times article calling for perpetual copyright, has now compiled his ideas into a book. Lessig offers a much-needed critique, including citing misconceptions about Creative Commons (Halperin conflates it not only with "freeware" with software... more

 
Free Culture House
1
Heather Ford · Johannesburg (South Africa) · Oct 29th, 2007 9:25 pm · 54 votes · 3 comments
 
Free Culture House, Heather Ford, CC BY 3.0 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/)
Free Culture House, by Heather Ford
Last month, Jimmy Wales and I announced a new project for iCommons called the ‘Free Culture House’ project. Inspired by similar initiatives around the world, we have come to recognise the growing importance of physical spaces in building the kinds of communities that will spread the global commons. After all, the creative and information commons is by its nature a virtual and intangible thing, and having a physical space where people can learn from and talk to one another, becomes more and more important.

The idea is simple and its sustainability is at its core. Buy a property (or rent something initially) that will serve as a space for members to meet and eat (a kickass wifi-enabled coffee shop), learn (a training room that doubles up as movie house), broadcast (a podcast studio) and work (shared office space and board room). Sleep rooms would also potentially be available for short-term stays by commuters who work between Johannesburg and Cape Town, for example.

At the same time, gather together a core group of founding members who will decide on the membership criteria, costs and responsibilities of members. The principle here is that each member should have something to teach other members, and that the House should be open to the community on regular ‘open days’ where members can reach out to the larger community to teach and advise others. Once a month, for example, members would be available to give free advice to non-profits on their technology and website strategy, to teach young people how to mix music, to help teachers to build open content for their students, and to advise artists, musicians and creators on how to use open licences and collaborate with artists around the world.

The House will be established with the help of sponsorships and will be maintained by membership dues, rental of the coffee shop and venue rental for training etc. Its founding documents will ensure that the House remains a centre for learning and networking to build a free digital culture, and all activities will need to be approved by the House Committee. Targeting bloggers, web developers, software engineers, researchers, journalists and marketers, the House will also serve as a repository of specialised knowledge management skills that could be employed by companies, NGOs and government departments for developing websites, information campaigns and copyright licensing strategies.

Once this Free Culture House has been established, others could be set up using similar models. All documentation and plans will be open to others to use, and a system would be established to link Free Culture Houses in different parts of the world.

A working group has been established with interested parties in four continents. If anyone is interested in joining, please email me.

tags: johannesburg-cape-town south africa culture free house co-working


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jshatcher Thanks for the article! Interesting, though it sounds a lot like the many community run coffee/event places that are out there, but I reckon this is with a free culture twist. For some examples, see

the Forest in Edinburgh, UK
http://www.theforest.org.uk/

RISC in Reading, UK
http://www.risc.org.uk/

There is also this really cool space in San Antonio, Texas run by salsa.net that does a whole lot of similar stuff (we -- EFF-Austin and others had a Penguin day there), but I'm not sure if there is a good website explaining what it is (I think it is part of the peace center http://1.salsa.net/peace/).

Anywho, might be worth trying to network with existing cafes in addition to starting more. They'll also have loads of experience and can share their tips and tricks at organising these kinds of things.

Good luck! I'll be watching with interest...

jshatcher (United Kingdom) · Nov 02nd, 2007 7:33 pm
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In Europe i've performed music in some Non-profit places that provide entertainment. It seems that almost every large town or city has some form of non-profit entertainment. Mostly these places bring published entertainment rather than art from the community.

In a lot of regional areas in Europe these places used to be the only form of entertainment, yet in the last years different clubs and venues have sprung up everywhere. So now these non-profits are often promoting well published acts to the public in order to get attention and maintain a reputation.

An idea to integrate into the "free culture house" might be a "free-culture bus". Get artists to create their own bus online and tour it. Most of these non-profit organizations need information on free-culture and also want to bring quality entertainment that is not part of the label scene to the locals.




Jamison · Oslo (Norway) · Nov 04th, 2007 8:14 pm
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Hi Heather, we have opened up a Free Culture House in Chennai. The first Chennai CC Salon will take place on February 9th at this place. http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Chennai_Salon
Kiruba Shankar · Chennai (India) · Jan 24th, 2008 7:57 pm
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