Monatsarchiv für October 2010

Thank you and auf Wiedersehen!

Many thanks to everyone for a fantastic conference! Documentation from the conference is now available, including blog posts from other participants, our Flickr stream, a visualization of retweets at #FCRC, and even a few radio interviews. You can follow more Free Culture research news on the commons-research mailing list. An enormous thank-you to all participants, […]

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COMMUNIA Panel: Free Culture Research and Policy

This panel addressed the relationship between research and policy, and featured Amelia Andersdotter, one of the “phantom MEPs” from the Swedish, Pirate Party; Renata Avila of CC Guatemala; Marcus Beckedahl, who runs netzpolitik.org about internet policy and politics; and Mayo Fuster Morell, researcher and activist in Barcelona. It was moderated by Juan Carlos de Martin […]

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New Forms of Access

This paper session reviewed the impact of Creative Commons, the copyright law discourse in Germany and copyrights issues in Israel.

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„We need commons sense instead of common sense“

The panel “New Markets for Free Music” looked at the shifts within the music scene.

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Wikimedia Panel: “Government Works in the Public Domain”

Matthias Schindler, the Project Manager (and unofficial “Content Liberator”) of Wikimedia Germany sat down with Paul Keller of CC Netherlands, Tomer Ashur of Wikipedia Israel, and Mike Linksvayer of Creative Commons to talk about their experiences with government works and their efforts to release them to the public domain or under a free license.

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New Forms of Production

The paper session “New Form of Production” discussed the features and effects of a hybrid economy.

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Geert Lovink keynote: “After the Critique of Free and Open: Alternative Platforms and Revenue Models”

Geert Lovink‘s keynote, “After the Critique of Free and Open,” focused on the practical aspects of a free culture, and a need for the movement to shift from making legal demands and instead focus on the platforms and revenue models that could support the kind of culture we’re striving towards.

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Live from #FCRC

You can follow the #FCRC here!

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Conference coverage

The twitter-hashtag for the conference is #fcrc and we will try to cover the event via this blog. Pictures will be available on  https://www.flickr.com/photos/fcrc

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Hello Free Culture Researchers!

This is the official blog of the Free Culture Research Conference 2010, taking place October 8-9 at Freie Universität Berlin, School of Business & Economics. It’s main purpose is to document what is going on at the conference, provide a possibility to comment and interact as well as to make it easier to follow news […]

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