Date archives "January 2008"

Software Bill of Rights proposes new Fair Software license

Forwarded message: Note the project is still in beta and invitation only. Alain Raynaud: Everyone loves Open Source and the GPL license that allows you to freely use someone else’s code. Except it’s hard to pay the rent writing *free* software. So we invented a new license, the Software Bill of Rights: “when you benefit… Continue reading

Official launch of the Eco-Patent Commons

Forwarded announcement by Michael Maloney. For background see here. Michael Maloney: “the official launch of the Eco-Patent Commons (? was announced today by IBM and the World Business Council for Sustainable Development who, along with Nokia, Pitney Bowes, and Sony, are offering dozens of innovative, environmentally-responsible patents into the public domain. Unrestricted availability of these… Continue reading

Filesharing fight enters new phase: A “Pirate’s” reply

“In this special interview Rick Falkvinge, the founder and the leader of Swedish Pirate Party, gives his own views on the wildly heated political filesharing debate in Sweden, evaluates the political and technological prospects of P2P and talks about the dangers of citizen surveillance and Big Brother society….” Read the rest of this article here… Continue reading

User generated orchestra summoned by My Grammy Moment

My Grammy Moment is a YouTube-enabled initiative with the Grammy’s, a yearly US music award ceremony. The Foo Fighters are asking musicians to submit 60 second instrumental solos which will be judged and winner allowed to rock out with them live at this year’s show! “Are you a saxophonist, pianist, trumpeter or a skilled musician… Continue reading

Franz Nahrada: Can we produce for physical abundance or sufficiency?

Here is the context to the contribution below by Franz Nahrada, which originally appeared in the Oekonux mailing list. Peer production as we define it is a form of non-reciprocal engagement, combining free contributions with universal availability of the resulting material. This can work because there are plenty of people with an abundance or surplus… Continue reading

Crowdfund your new company into existence

A new eco-clothing start-up based in LA is inviting you to join in making a lot of key decisions in product design. This guiding principle of collective intelligence ruling decision making is also at play with French blogger Loic le Muir’s new start-up Seesmic. “Launched just before the holidays, Los Angeles-based Nvohk aims to create… Continue reading

Umair Haque predicts the Macropocalypse of Hypercapitalism

A very powerful editorial from Umair Haque, one of the brightest analytical thinkers of the day, see below. But first: spend a few hours going through his blog, and read, and be convinced, why Facebook’s strategy can’t work, or why Google’s Knol is a dead-born baby even before it’s launched. Provocative, sometimes counter-intuitive stuff, but… Continue reading

Anthony Judge: the Wikipedia needs a process for counterclaims

I have a very simple proposal for reforming part of the process of Wikipedia, which goes like this, and it aims to reinforce the role of experts, but not at the expense of the self-publishing by the general public. The idea is this: as the examples of Nupedia and Citizendium have show, along with other… Continue reading

Flemming Funch on how to deal with meritocratic power structures

This is a broad, more generic reaction to the issues raised by our Wikipedia articles, by Flemming Funch. Flemming Funch: “More generally it is also about how to deal effectively with power structures. Particularly when they’re self-organized meritocracies. In some ways it is more simple to understand the power structure a prisoner in Gitmo Bay… Continue reading

Is something fundamentally wrong with Wikipedia governance processes?

The Wikipedia is often hailed as a prime example of peer production and peer governance, an example of how a community can self-govern very complex processes. Including by me. But it is also increasingly showing the dark side and pitfalls of purely informal approaches, especially when they scale. Wikipedia is particularly vulnerable because its work… Continue reading