1. The document summarizes a conference on open culture, open science, open education, and free/open society organized by the Stanford Open Source Lab.
2. It discusses the history and goals of Creative Commons, which aims to expand access to knowledge and creativity through open copyright licenses.
3. Building on the success of the free and open source software movement, the document argues that free culture is important for digital freedom, innovation, and participatory democracy.
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CC @ Stanford Open Source Lab (un)Conference
1. Stanford Open Source Lab (un)Conference 2008-11-14 Beyond Open Source Software — Open Culture, Open Science, Open Education, Free/Open Society Mike Linksvayer Creative Commons Image by Extra Ketchup · Licensed under CC Attribution-ShareAlike 2.0 · http://flickr.com/photos/extraketchup/748440319/
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3. Original photo by Brooke Novak · Licensed under CC BY · http://flickr.com/photos/brookenovak/337889974/ I AM NOT A
58. Cyber terrorism (Cyber terror war on) Privacy breaches Loss of Generativity Lock-in Surveillance
59. Cyber terrorism (Cyber terror war on) Privacy breaches Loss of Generativity Lock-in Surveillance DRM
60. Cyber terrorism (Cyber terror war on) Privacy breaches Loss of Generativity Lock-in Surveillance DRM Censorship
61. Cyber terrorism (Cyber terror war on) Privacy breaches Loss of Generativity Lock-in Surveillance DRM Censorship Suppression of innovation
62. Cyber terrorism (Cyber terror war on) Privacy breaches Loss of Generativity Lock-in Surveillance DRM Censorship Suppression of innovation Electoral fraud
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65. How building the commons (free software, free culture, and friends) helps
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70. Can the success of the (digital) commons alter how we view freedom and power generally?
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75. So Create! (and learn/experience so you can teach/recommend free software and free culture when appropriate)
76. You Can Also Give Money :-) http://support.creativecommons.org