home · Projects
Projects
iCommons works on a number of projects and campaigns to help build the capacity of people around the world working to grow the awareness and availability of commons-based knowledge and culture. From Heritage Day sprints in South Africa, to the development of software to promote and organise commons-related projects/nodes, to the annual iSummit that brings together people from around the world to celebrate and build free culture and open knowledge, iCommons aims to build the network of the global commons into one that advances the goals of the free Internet.
Current
iSummit 08 (July, 08)

Our annual global event that brings together leaders of the Creative Commons, free software, open education and access to knowledge communities to debate their vision for the future and discuss strategies for building a free global culture.
In partnership with the City of Sapporo, Digital Garage and Creative Commons Japan, the event will be held in Sapporo Japan, in July 2008.
icommons.org version 2 (November, 07)

The next steps in the development of the icommons.org node programme that builds the profile and experimentation of projects related to building the digital commons.
Upcoming features include personalised project pages, a project management back end to effectively administer projects, improved social networking capability and a way to easily upload resources to share with the community.
iCommons Magazine

A monthly review of the research and writing on the global commons in countries around the world.
Monthly features include an Organisation Spotlight and Commoner profile which showcase the work of organisations and individuals in the community, a Commons Toolkit which provides easy hints and tips on organising events or creating materials on topics related to the commons, a 10 of the Best insert which sources the most useful or interesting websites for the community, reports on the progress of nodes, and an insert by our very own Agony Aunt.
Local context, global commons (2007-08)

A project, funded by the Ford Foundation, to develop leadership by countries in the South (Brazil, South Africa and India) to better understand and report on relevant issues around intellectual property in the developing country context.
Outcomes of the project are shared on the iCommons website, in the monthly magazine, and Annual, as well as in a workshop at the Summit in 2008.
iCommons iCurriculum (2007-08)

iCommons is working with the Institute for the Study of Knowledge Management in Education, to develop and coordinate a research framework with which to assess what makes an open educational resources project successful in developing low-cost, sustainable and effective resources. iCiC is supported by four of the most prominent donors to open educational resources: Curriki ‘ the Global Education and Learning Community, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the telecentre.org program at Canada’s International Development Research Centre (IDRC), and the Shuttleworth Foundation (TSF).
Archived
The iCommons Summit ‘08 planning workshop (January ‘08)

A group of representatives from the iCommons community met in Johannesburg to discuss the programme and help with planning for the Summit ‘08 to be held in Sapporo in July.
Amongst other activities, the participants built their dream summit venues out of sweets and toothpicks, and got serious with SWOT (strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats) analyses on the different aspects of the Summit, from facilitation to translation. Find links to notes taken at the event, as well as audio clips, a video, presentations and photographs.
Innovation Series (November, 07)

This is a series of events with influential speakers from around the world who have had a significant influence on the world of the Internet. On Tuesday, 13 November, we launched ‘The Innovation Series’ with a talk by Jimmy Wales, to raise funds for iCommons and the Wikipedia Academies, and to share some leading insights from the world’s digital innovators.
Held in collaboration with IT Web, and with media partners Mail & Guardian Online and MindShift.
Wikipedia Academies (November, 07)

iCommons and the Wikimedia Foundation partnered to launch a series of Wikipedia Academies to stimulate awareness and community around local language Wikipedias in South Africa. The first Academy was held on 10 November, where students participated in workshops to learn how to edit Wikipedia. The workshops were attended by Jimmy Wales and were run by a group of dedicated enthusiasts who are active in building the Swahili, German and Afrikaans language Wikipedias. iCommons coordinated these workshops with the aim of supporting and growing local communities who are building free and open resources such as Wikipedia. Click here to watch a short video showing highlights from the event.
iHeritage (September, 07)

An online and real world campaign to build a repository of free cultural heritage resources around South Africa’s Heritage Day celebrations.
The results: 18 WikiMedia uploads, 15 audio interviews and 380 Flickr photos! We heard some amazing stories that reflected the diversity of South Africa: about practising Zulu traditions in the city of Jozi, about the history of a Johannesburg street in 1950 that is now a bustling business centre, and about the adjustments of a Dutch immigrant family in South Africa.
Campaigns (July, 07)

iCommons participated in two South African campains in July 07. iCommons fellow, Paul Jacobson, participated in a local meeting that saw the South African Bureau of Standards reject Microsoft’s call to have xml the default standard in SA.
iCommons also made a submission to the South African government on the Publicly Financed Research Bill which could be highly detrimental for open access research in SA.
The SA Free Culture Tour (April, 07)

This event was a celebration of free culture in South Africa at a Cape Town live music venue to get students and young people to become more aware of the importance of copyright policies in culture, cultural heritage and the cultural economy.
Jimmy Wales and Larry Lessig were special guests at this event. Also featured were the winners of the South African ccMixter’s SAfro-Brazil remix competition.
ccSalon Johannesburg ‘Remix Nation’ (August, 06)

This event was a celebration of the pioneering local artists who are pushing the boundaries of the digital world and recognising how important legal remixing is to building a vibrant creative industry in South Africa.
Held at the Gordart Gallery in Melville, guest speakers were artist Nathaniel Stern, net.art duo MtKidu, as well as DJ and producer Richard tha IIIrd. They shared their creations by making their music and artworks available for download at the event, for the benefit of future remixing efforts by attendees.
Open Publishing edition of NGO-in-a-Box (July, 06)

Along with Tactical Tech, we produced this toolkit of free and open source software, tutorials and guides for producing, publishing and distributing content.
The contents of the toolkit were selected by an editorial team made up of leading international practitioners working in DIY publishing, free culture, technology for social justice and the development and deployment of free and open source software.
iCommons has lectured at South African universities to grow academic awareness of the value of commons-based production (practice and research) in the academic programme.
Archived iSummits

|