P2P Public Policy – P2P Foundation https://blog.p2pfoundation.net Researching, documenting and promoting peer to peer practices Fri, 12 Sep 2014 08:27:16 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.5.17 62076519 10 Open Source Policies for a Commons-Based Society https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/open_source_policies_for_a_commons-based_society/ https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/open_source_policies_for_a_commons-based_society/#respond Mon, 15 Sep 2014 08:09:27 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=41773 Mira Luna from Shareable asked me for my top recommendations of government policies to encourage open source development and the commons. While government policy usually sides with proprietary knowledge in the public sector, there is a huge opportunity to use goverments as a ally, supporter and guardian of the commons. To learn more and get involved,... Continue reading

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Mira Luna from Shareable asked me for my top recommendations of government policies to encourage open source development and the commons. While government policy usually sides with proprietary knowledge in the public sector, there is a huge opportunity to use goverments as a ally, supporter and guardian of the commons. To learn more and get involved, check out the P2P Foundation,  OpenSource.comOpen Mind and the Open Source Initiative.

1. Education – Government should invest in the education and awareness for public of the legal and licensing choices for open knowledge to create and protect open commons, including for law students.

2. Research – Publicly funded research should be Free/Libre/Open Source (FLOS). Citizens have the right to learn from the technologies their governments invest in on their behalf (e.g. public university research). This includes open designs that enable the production of free and open hardware.

3. Purchasing – Government purchasers, educational institutions and other recipients of government funding should preferentially invest in open machinery, software and hardware, for example use open scientific hardware in laboratories to save the public and students’ money by using nonproprietary and free products. (e.g. Linux for university and student use).

4. Patents –  Adopt policies which preserve open source status of new technologies in relationship to patents, especially in early stages of development (e.g. 3D printers).

5. Data – Data produced or commissioned by public entities for public use (e.g. surveys of vacant properties, government budgets) should be open and shareable by the public.

6. Collaboration –Governments and education institutions should invest in physical infrastructures that enable human collaboration around open knowledge, such as hackerspaces, fablabs, and co-working spaces.

7. Commons – Government should preferentially invest in the type of material commons that allows the creative actors to live and thrive in urban and rural centers, protected from the private speculation that renders commons-oriented creative work more difficult if not impossible. Examples include: creation of non-speculative, off market housing through urban community land trusts and publicly owned community centers.

8. Health – Governments should especially invest in open medical research, so that medicines will be available at reasonable price levels. Patents on drugs permit the deaths millions of Africans each year who fall to AIDS alone. Many natural cures go untested because they can’t be patented.

9. Economy – Government should invest in public-commons partnerships and incubators that create livelihoods and a thriving economy around open knowledge, software and design.

10. Systemic Change –  Government should embark on open source and commons-oriented transition policies that systematize the transition towards a society and economy towards open knowledge, following the example of the Commons Transition Plan in Ecuador.

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Possible Utopias and the need for a Social Knowledge Economy https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/possible-utopias-and-the-need-for-a-social-knowledge-economy/ https://blog.p2pfoundation.net/possible-utopias-and-the-need-for-a-social-knowledge-economy/#respond Tue, 01 Apr 2014 11:36:25 +0000 http://blog.p2pfoundation.net/?p=37954 Here’s a very recent interview with P2P Foundation founder Michel Bauwens, recorded in Quito, Ecuador. You can find the original, published at Radios Libres’ site, right here. It was originally conducted in Spanish, with consecutive translation by FLOKSociety’s Andrés Delgado. For our blog, I’ve translated the questions in text and kept Michel’s audio answers in... Continue reading

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Here’s a very recent interview with P2P Foundation founder Michel Bauwens, recorded in Quito, Ecuador. You can find the original, published at Radios Libres’ site, right here.

It was originally conducted in Spanish, with consecutive translation by FLOKSociety’s Andrés Delgado. For our blog, I’ve translated the questions in text and kept Michel’s audio answers in English. The original article also features audio contributions by Jenny Torres and Andrés Delgado.


Michel Bauwens and the FLOK logo. Images courtesy of thinkcommons.org and floksociety.org

Question 1: When talking about P2P, it’s often thought to be related to well-known file-sharing sites, so, what can you tell us about “the peer to peer economy” and the “social knowledge economy”?

Question 2: Many people think that this change in the productive matrix, going from extractivism to knowledge, is somewhat utopian. Do you agree? Or, is it viable, and are countries like Ecuador (and the rest of Latin America) ready to shift from cognitive capitalism to a social knowledge economy?

Question 3: What are the main issues a country must work on in order to become an open, commons-based society?

Question 4: Ecuador, like most Latin American countries, is very influenced by the ancestral knowledge of the first native cultures. How can we combine this wisdom with modern knowledge, and current information and communication technologies, to create this commons-based society?

Question 5: What role does communication play within the social knowledge economy, and what can community radio do to support this process?

Question 6: Although this particular process is taking place in Ecuador, it’s also extremely important for the whole region. Do you agree, Michel?

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