There is a growing number of Museums, Galleries, archives, and other cultural 
organizations that have been digitizing their collections and releasing the 
images or scans under a free license. 

--Tom ----- Original Message -----

From: "Alex Kozak" <[email protected]> 
To: "Discussion of Free Culture in general and this organization in particular" 
<[email protected]> 
Sent: Wednesday, January 30, 2013 6:08:48 PM 
Subject: Re: [FC-discuss] Cool projects in the FC world / academic FC leaders 


As usual. it really depends on what you think the spirit of Free Culture is. A 
few things to throw out there: 


    * CASH Music is indeed a very cool project. You all should get involved 
somehow. 
    * I'm continuing to see steady progress in open education, open science, 
and open data to some extent. 
    * Academics are finally starting to gather empirical data about the 
copyright debate. Some examples: DiCola , Karaganis and Karaganis et al, 
Lauinger et al, Lerner 



On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 11:30 AM, Kevin Driscoll < [email protected] > 
wrote: 


Great post, Aditi! 


On Wed, Jan 30, 2013 at 10:21 AM, Aditi Rajaram < [email protected] > 
wrote: 
> 

> 1. What are some cool, free culture esque projects going on right now? 

CASH Music hits a sweet spot for me at the intersection of music and 
tech: "CASH Music is a nonprofit organization that builds open source 
tools for musicians." 
http://cashmusic.org/ 

I really like their "Tweet-for-Track" tool. The basic premise is that 
fans can download a song for the social cost of tweeting a link to 
their followers. 
https://github.com/cashmusic/Tweet-for-Track 

I'm also really excited that both Mozilla/Firefox and Canonical/Ubuntu 
are working on building free/open mobile software. This has been an 
area of considerable frustration for me, particularly after Nokia 
abandoned the MeeGo operating system. 


> 2. Who do you guys think are some cool people working on FC stuff? I'm 
> looking less for the Lessig type answer and more for cutting 
> edge/up-and-comers. 

Lately, I've been most excited by the work of archivists, librarians, 
and some of the scholars affiliated with the "digital humanities." 
While these folks might not be embedded in the same 
copyfighter/freeculture discourses that we're familiar with, they are 
dedicated to preserving and growing a public commons. 

This is pretty broad, but on the more activist side, you might look at 
the Archive Team website. They are a loose network of DIY archivists 
with big harddrives and lots of bandwidth who try to mirror entire 
commercial sites (like Geocities or Yahoo! Video) before their parent 
companies take them off-line. 
http://archiveteam.org/index.php?title=Main_Page 

Kevin 


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