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		Viral Spiral - How the Commoners Built a Digital Republic of Their Own
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		David Bollier
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		&#169; 2008 by David Bollier All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, in any form, without written permission from the publisher. The author has made an online version of the book available under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license. It can be accessed at http://www.viralspiral.cc and http://www.onthecommons.org. Requests for permission to reproduce selections from this book should be mailed to: Permissions Department, The New Press, 38 Greene Street, New York, NY 10013. Published in the United States by The New Press, New York, 2008 Distributed by W. W. Norton & Company, Inc., New York ISBN 978-1-59558-396-3 (hc.) CIP data available The New Press was established in 1990 as a not-for-profit alternative to the large, commercial publishing houses currently dominating the book publishing industry. The New Press operates in the public interest rather than for private gain, and is committed to publishing, in innovative ways, works of educational, cultural, and community value that are often deemed insufficiently profitable. www.thenewpress.com A Caravan book. For more information, visit www.caravanbooks.org.;<br /> License: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial license.
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<object id="1">
	<ocn>1</ocn>
	<text class="h1">
		Viral Spiral - How the Commoners Built a Digital Republic of Their
Own,<br />David Bollier
	</text>
</object>
<object id="2">
	<ocn>2</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
	</text>
</object>
<object id="3">
	<ocn>3</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In this book, as with any book, dozens of barely visible means of
support conspired to help me. It has been hard work, but any author
with sufficient honesty and self-awareness realizes the extent to which
he or she is a lens that refracts the experiences, insights, and
writings of others. It is a pleasure to pay tribute to those who have
been helpful to me.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="4">
	<ocn>4</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I am grateful to Larry Lessig, a singular visionary in developing the
commons as a new paradigm, for helping to make this book possible. He
submitted to several interviews, facilitated my research within the
Creative Commons community, and, despite our shared involvements in
various projects over the years, scrupulously respected my
independence. It is also a pleasure to thank the Rockefeller Foundation
for generously helping to cover my research, reporting, and travel
expenses.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="5">
	<ocn>5</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I interviewed or consulted with more than one hundred people in the
course of writing this book. I want to thank each of them for carving
out some time to speak with me and openly sharing their thoughts. The
Creative Commons and iCommons staff were particularly helpful in making
time for me, pointing me toward useful documents and Web sites and
sharing their expertise. I must single out Glenn Otis Brown, Mia
Garlick, Joichi Ito, Heather Ford, Tomislav Medak, Ronaldo Lemos, and
Hal Abelson for their special assistance.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="6">
	<ocn>6</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since writing a book resembles parachuting into a forest and then
trying to find one's way out, I was pleased to have many friends who
recommended some useful paths to follow. After reading some or all of
my manuscript, the following friends and colleagues offered many
invaluable suggestions and criticisms: Charles Schweik, Elliot E.
Maxwell, John Seely Brown, Emily Levine, Peter Suber, Julie Ristau, Jay
Walljasper, Jonathan Rowe, Kathryn Milun, Laurie Racine, and Gigi Sohn.
It hardly requires saying that none of these astute readers bears any
responsibility for the choices that I ultimately made.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="7">
	<ocn>7</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For the past seven years, the Tomales Bay Institute, recently renamed
On the Commons, has nurtured my thinking and commitment to the commons.
(On the Commons has no formal affiliation to the Creative Commons
world, but it enthusiastically shares its commitments to the commons.)
I am grateful to my colleagues Peter Barnes, Harriet Barlow, and Julie
Ristau for their unflagging support of my book over the past three
years, even when it impinged on my other responsibilities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="8">
	<ocn>8</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the early stages of this book, Elaine Pagels was unusually generous
in offering her help, and my conversations with Nick Bromell helped pry
loose some important insights used in my conclusion. Cherry Alvarado
was of extraordinary help to me as she transcribed scores of interviews
with unfailing good humor and precision. I also wish to thank Andrew
Ryder for resourceful assistance in the early stages of my research.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="9">
	<ocn>9</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I have dedicated this book to my dear friend and mentor Norman Lear.
The zeal, imagination, and grace that he brings to the simple
imperatives of citizenship have been more instructive and inspirational
than he perhaps realizes. He has also been of incalculable support to
me in my headstrong explorations of the commons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="10">
	<ocn>10</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Finally, at the end of the day, when I emerge from my writer's lair or
return from yet another research and reporting trip, it is Ellen and my
sons Sam and Tom who indulge my absences, mental and physical, and
reacquaint me with the things that matter most. I could not wish for
more. David Bollier Amherst, Massachusetts May 1, 2008
	</text>
</object>
<object id="11">
	<ocn>11</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		INTRODUCTION
	</text>
</object>
<object id="12">
	<ocn>12</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It started with that great leap forward in human history the Internet,
which gave rise to free software in the 1980s and then the World Wide
Web in the early 1990s. The shockingly open Internet, fortified by
these tools, began empowering a brash new culture of rank amateurs
&#8212; you and me. And this began to reverse the fierce tide of
twentieth-century media. Ordinary people went online, if only to escape
the incessant blare of television and radio, the intrusive ads and the
narrow spectrum of expression. People started to discover their own
voices . . . and their own capabilities . . . and one another.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="13">
	<ocn>13</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the commoners began to take charge of their lives, they discovered
anew that traditional markets, governments, and laws were often not
serving their needs very well. And so some pioneers had the audacity to
invent an infrastructure to host new alternatives: free and open-source
software. Private licenses to enable sharing and bypass the oppressive
complications of copyright law. A crazy quilt of Web applications. And
new types of companies that thrive on servicing social communities on
open platforms.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="14">
	<ocn>14</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At the dawn of the twenty-first century, the commoners began to make
some headway. More people were shifting their attention away from
commercial media to homegrown genres &#8212; listservs, Web sites, chat
rooms, instant messaging, and later, blogs, podcasts, and wikis. A
swirling mass of artists, legal scholars, techies, activists, and even
scientists and businesses began to create their own online commons.
They self-organized themselves into a loosely coordinated movement
dedicated to &#8220; free culture.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="15">
	<ocn>15</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The viral spiral was under way.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="16">
	<ocn>16</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Viral spiral? <i>Viral</i>, a term borrowed from medical science,
refers to the way in which new ideas and innovations on the Internet
can proliferate with astonishing speed. A video clip, a blog post, an
advertisement released on the Internet tumbles into other people's
consciousness in unexpected ways and becomes the raw feedstock for new
creativity and culture. This is one reason the Internet is so powerful
&#8212; it virally propagates creativity. A novel idea that is openly
released in the networked environment can often find its way to a
distant person or improbable project that can really benefit from it.
This recombinative capacity &#8212; efficiently coordinated through
search engines, Web logs, informal social networks, and other
means&#8212; radically accelerates the process of innovation. It
enlivens democratic culture by hosting egalitarian encounters among
strangers and voluntary associations of citizens. Alexis de Tocqueville
would be proud.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="17">
	<ocn>17</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The <i>spiral</i> of <i>viral spiral</i> refers to the way in which the
innovation of one Internet cohort rapidly becomes a platform used by
later generations to build their own follow-on innovations. It is a
corkscrew paradigm of change: <i>viral</i> networking feeds an upward
<i>spiral</i> of innovation. The cutting-edge thread achieves one twist
of change, positioning a later thread to leverage another twist, which
leverages yet another. Place these spirals in the context of an open
Internet, where they can sweep across vast domains of life and catalyze
new principles of order and social practice, and you begin to get a
sense of the transformative power of viral spirals.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="18">
	<ocn>18</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The term <i>viral spiral</i> is apt, additionally, because it suggests
a process of change that is anything but clean, direct, and mechanical.
In the networked environment, there is rarely a direct cause-andeffect.
Things happen in messy, irregular, indeterminate, serendipitous ways.
Life on the Internet does not take place on a stable Cartesian grid
&#8212; orderly, timeless, universal &#8212; but on a constantly
pulsating, dynamic, and labyrinthine <i>web</i> of finely
interconnected threads radiating through countless nodes. Here the
context is as rich and generative as any individual, <i>Viral
spiral</i> calls attention to the holistic and historical dynamics of
life on the Web, which has a very different metaphysical feel than the
world of twentieth-century media.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="19">
	<ocn>19</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The viral spiral began with free software (code that is free to use,
not code at no cost) and later produced the Web. Once these open
platforms had sufficiently matured, tech wizards realized that
software's great promise is not as a stand-alone tool on PCs, but as a
social platform for Web-based sharing and collaboration. The commoners
could then begin to imagine: How might these tools be used to overcome
the arbitrary and confusing limitations of copyright law? One answer,
the Creative Commons (CC) licenses, a free set of public licenses for
sharing content, helped mitigate the legal risks of sharing of works
under copyright law. This innovation, in turn, helped unleash a massive
wave of follow-on innovations.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="20">
	<ocn>20</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Web 2.0 applications flourished, many of them relying upon sharing made
legal through CC licenses. By avoiding the costly overhead of
centralized production and marketing, and tapping into the social
vitality of a commons, Web 2.0 platforms have enabled ordinary people
to share photos (Flickr), favorite browser bookmarks (del.icio.us),
favorite news stories (Digg, Reddit), and homemade videos (YouTube).
They let people access user-created archives (Wikipedia, Internet
Archive, Ourmedia.org), collaborate in news gathering (OhmyNews,
Assignment Zero), participate in immersive communities (Second Life),
and build open-business models (Magnatune, Revver, Jamendo).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="21">
	<ocn>21</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This book seeks to trace the long arc of change wrought by a
kaleidoscopic swarm of commoners besieged by oppressive copyright laws,
empowered by digital technologies, and possessed of a vision for a more
open, democratic society. Their movement has been fired by the rhetoric
of freedom and actualized by digital technologies connected by the
Internet. These systems have made it extremely cheap and easy for
ordinary people to copy and share things, and to collaborate and
organize. They have democratized creativity on a global scale,
challenging the legitimacy and power of all sorts of centralized,
hierarchical institutions.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="22">
	<ocn>22</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This larger story has rarely been told in its larger scope. It is at
base a story of visionary individuals determined to protect the shared
code, content, and social community that they have collectively
generated. Richard Stallman pioneered the development of free software;
Lawrence Lessig waged challenges against excessive copyright protection
and led the development of the Creative Commons licenses;
citizen-archivist Eric Eldred fought to preserve his online body of
public-domain literature and the community that grew up around it.
These are simply the better-known leaders of a movement that has
attracted thousands of commoners who are building legally defensible
commons into which to pour their creative energies and live their
lives.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="23">
	<ocn>23</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The commons &#8212; a hazy concept to many people &#8212; is a new
paradigm for creating value and organizing a community of shared
interest. It is a vehicle by which new sorts of self-organized publics
can gather together and exercise new types of citizenship. The commons
can even serve as a viable alternative to markets that have grown
stodgy, manipulative, and coercive. A commons arises whenever a given
community decides that it wishes to manage a resource in a collective
manner, with special regard for equitable access, use, and
sustainability. The commons is a means by which individuals can band
together with like-minded souls and express a sovereignty of their own.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="24">
	<ocn>24</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Self-styled commoners can now be found in dozens of nations around the
world. They are locally rooted but internationally aware citizens of
the Internet. They don't just tolerate diversity (ethnic, cultural,
aesthetic, intellectual), they celebrate it. Although commoners may
have their personal affinities &#8212; free software, open-access
publishing, remix music, or countless others &#8212; they tend to see
themselves as part of a larger movement. They share an enthusiasm for
innovation and change that burbles up from the bottom, and are known to
roll their eyes at the thick-headedness of the mainstream media, which
always seem to be a few steps behind.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="25">
	<ocn>25</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If there is an element of self-congratulatory elitism at times, it
stems from the freedom of commoners to negotiate their own rules and
the pleasure of outmaneuvering conventional institutions. The commoners
know how to plug into the specialized Web sites and practitioner
communities that can provide just-in-time, highly specialized
expertise. As Herbert Simon, the computer-oriented social scientist,
once put it, &#8220; The meaning of &#8216; knowing' today has shifted
from being able to remember and repeat information to being able to
find and use it.&#8221; <en>1</en> Commoners realize that this other
way of being, outside hierarchical institutions, in the open space
where viral spirals of innovation are free to materialize, is an
important source of their insurgent power.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="1">
		<number>1</number>
		<note>
			Cited by John Seely Brown, former chief scientist, Xerox Palo Alto
Research Center, at Open Educational Resources conference, Houston,
Texas, March 29, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="26">
	<ocn>26</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is perilous to generalize about a movement that has so many
disparate parts pushing and pulling and innovating in so many different
directions at once. Yet it is safe to say that the commoners&#8212; a
digital embodiment of <i>e pluribus unum</i> &#8212; share a common
goal. They wish to transcend the limitations of copyright law in order
to build their own online communities. It's not as if the commoners are
necessarily hostile to copyright law, markets, or centralized
institutions. Indeed, many of them work for large corporations and
universities; many rely on copyright to earn a livelihood; many are
entrepreneurs.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="27">
	<ocn>27</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet the people who are inventing new commons have some deeper
aspirations and allegiances. They glimpse the liberating potential of
the Internet, and they worry about the totalizing inclinations of large
corporations and the state, especially their tendency to standardize
and coerce behavior. They object as well to processes that are not
transparent. They dislike the impediments to direct access and
participation, the limitations of credentialed expertise and arbitrary
curbs on people's freedom.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="28">
	<ocn>28</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the first major gatherings of international commoners occurred
in June 2006, when several hundred people from fifty nations converged
on Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, for the iCommons Summit. The people of this
multinational, eclectic vanguard blend the sophistication of the
establishment in matters of power and politics with the bravado and
playfulness of Beat poets. There were indie musicians who can
deconstruct the terms of a record company licensing agreement with
Talmudic precision. There were Web designers who understand the
political implications of arcane rules made by the World Wide Web
Consortium, a technical standards body. The lawyers and law professors
who discourse about Section 114 of the Copyright Act are likely to
groove on the remix career of Danger Mouse and the appropriationist
antics of Negativland, a sound-collage band. James Boyle and Jennifer
Jenkins, two law scholars at Duke Law School, even published a
superhero comic book, <i>Down by Law!</i>, which demystifies the
vagaries of the &#8220; fair use doctrine&#8221; through a filmmaker
character resembling video game heroine Lara Croft.<en>2</en> (Fair use
is a provision of copyright law that makes it legal to excerpt portions
of a copyrighted work for noncommercial, educational, and personal
purposes.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="2">
		<number>2</number>
		<note>
			Keith Aoki, James Boyle, Jennifer Jenkins, <i>Down by Law!</i> at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.duke.edu/cspd/comics">http://www.duke.edu/cspd/comics</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="29">
	<ocn>29</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Rise of Socially Created Value
	</text>
</object>
<object id="30">
	<ocn>30</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The salience of electronic commerce has, at times, obscured an
important fact &#8212; that the commons is one of the most potent
forces driving innovation in our time. Individuals working with one
another via social networks are a growing force in our economy and
society. This phenomenon has many manifestations, and goes by many
names &#8212; &#8220; peer production,&#8221; &#8220; social
production,&#8221; &#8220; smart mobs,&#8221; the &#8220; wisdom of
crowds,&#8221; &#8220; crowdsourcing,&#8221; and &#8220; the
commons.&#8221;<en>3</en> The basic point is that <i>socially created
value</i> is increasingly competing with conventional markets, as
GNU/Linux has famously shown. Through an open, accessible commons, one
can efficiently tap into the &#8220; wisdom of the crowd,&#8221;
nurture experimentation, accelerate innovation, and foster new forms of
democratic practice.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="3">
		<number>3</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Social production&#8221; and &#8220; peer production&#8221;
are associated with the work of Yale law professor Yochai Benkler,
especially in his 2006 book, <i>The Wealth of Networks</i>. &#8220;
Smart mobs&#8221; is a coinage of Howard Rheingold, author of a 2003
book by the same name.&#8220;Crowdsourcing&#8221; is the name of a blog
run by Jeff Howe and the title of a June 2006 <i>Wired</i> article on
the topic.&#8220;Wisdom of crowds&#8221; is a term coined by James
Surowiecki and used as the title of his 2004 book.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="31">
	<ocn>31</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This is why so many ordinary people &#8212; without necessarily having
degrees, institutional affiliations, or wealth &#8212; are embarking
upon projects that, in big and small ways, are building a new order of
culture and commerce. It is an emerging universe of economic, social,
and cultural activity animated by self-directed amateurs, citizens,
artists, entrepreneurs, and irregulars.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="32">
	<ocn>32</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Hugh McGuire, a Montreal-based writer and Web designer, is one. In
2005, he started LibriVox, a digital library of free public-domain
audio books that are read and recorded by volunteers. More than ten
thousand people a day visit the Web site to download audio files of
Twain, Kafka, Shakespeare, Dostoyevsky, and others, in nearly a dozen
languages.<en>4</en> The Faulkes Telescope Project in Australia lets
high school students connect with other students, and with professional
astronomers, to scan the skies with robotic, online
telescopes.<en>5</en> In a similar type of learning commons, the
Bugscope project in the United States enables students to operate a
scanning electronic microscope in real time, using a simple Web browser
on a classroom computer connected to the Internet.<en>6</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="4">
		<number>4</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.librivox.org">http://www.librivox.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="5">
		<number>5</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://faulkes-telescope.com">http://faulkes-telescope.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="6">
		<number>6</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu">http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="33">
	<ocn>33</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Thousands of individual authors, musicians, and filmmakers are using
Web tools and Creative Commons licenses to transform markets for
creative works &#8212; or, more accurately, to blend the market and
commons into integrated hybrids. A nonprofit humanitarian group
dedicated to doing reconstructive surgery for children in poor
countries, Interplast, produced an Oscar-winning film, <i>A Story of
Healing</i>, in 1997. Ten years later, it released the film under a
Creative Commons license as a way to publicize Interplast's work while
retaining ownership of the film: a benefit for both film buffs and
Interplast.<en>7</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="7">
		<number>7</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.interplast.org">http://www.interplast.org</link>&gt;
and &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/press-releases/2007/04/%E2%80%9Ca-story-of-healing%E2%80%9D-becomes-first-acad">http://creativecommons.org/press-releases/2007/04/%E2%80%9Ca-story-of-healing%E2%80%9D-becomes-first-acad</link>&gt;
emy-award%C2%AE-winning-film-released-under-a-creative-commons-li
cense.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="34">
	<ocn>34</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Scoopt, a Glasgow, Scotland&#8211;based photography agency, acts as a
broker to help bloggers and amateurs sell newsworthy photos and videos
to the commercial media.<en>8</en> The Boston band Two Ton Shoe
released its music on the Web for free to market its concerts. Out of
the blue, a South Korean record label called one day to say it loved
the band and could it come over to Seoul, all expenses paid, to perform
four concerts? Each one sold out.<en>9</en> Boing Boing blogger and
cyber-activist Cory Doctorow released his 2003 science-fiction novel,
<i>Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom</i>, under a CC license, reaping a
whirlwind of worldwide exposure.<en>10</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="8">
		<number>8</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.scoopt.com">http://www.scoopt.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="9">
		<number>9</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.twotonshoe.com/news.html">http://www.twotonshoe.com/news.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="10">
		<number>10</number>
		<note>
			See Doctorow's preface to the second release of the book, February
12, 2004, Tor Books. See also his blog Craphound.com, September 9,
2006, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.craphound.com/?=p=1681">http://www.craphound.com/?=p=1681</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="35">
	<ocn>35</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Commoners Build a Digital Republic of Their Own
	</text>
</object>
<object id="36">
	<ocn>36</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The profusion of commons on the Internet may appear to be a spontaneous
and natural development. In fact, it is a hard-won achievement. An
infrastructure of software, legal rights, practical expertise, and
social ethics had to be imagined, built, and defended. In a sense, the
commoners had to invent themselves as commoners. They had to learn to
recognize their own distinct interests &#8212; in how to control their
creative works, how to organize their communities, and how to engage
with market players without being co-opted. They have, in fact,
invented a new sort of democratic polity within the edifice of the
conventional nation-state.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="37">
	<ocn>37</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The commoners differ from most of their corporate brethren in their
enthusiasm for sharing. They prefer to freely distribute their writing,
music, and videos. As a general rule, they don't like to encase their
work in airtight bubbles of property rights reinforced by technological
locks. They envision cyberspace more as a peaceable, sociable kingdom
than as a take-no-prisoners market. They honor the individual while
respecting community norms. They are enthusiastic about sharing while
respecting the utility of markets. Idealistic yet pragmatic, they share
a commitment to open platforms, social cooperation, and elemental human
freedoms.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="38">
	<ocn>38</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is all very well to spout such lofty goals. But how to actualize
them? That is the story that the following pages recount. It has been
the work of a generation, some visionary leaders, and countless
individuals to articulate a loosely shared vision, build the
infrastructure, and develop the social practices and norms. This
project has not been animated by a grand political ideology, but rather
is the result of countless initiatives, grand and incremental, of an
extended global family of hackers, lawyers, bloggers, artists, and
other supporters of free culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="39">
	<ocn>39</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		And yet, despite its focus on culture and its aversion to conventional
politics, the growth of this movement is starting to have political
implications. In an influential 2003 essay, James F. Moore announced
the arrival of &#8220; an emerging second superpower.&#8221;<en>11</en>
It was not a nation, but the coalescence of people from around the
world who were asserting common values, and forming new public
identities, via online networks. The people of this emerging &#8220;
superpower,&#8221; Moore said, are concerned with improving the
environment, public health, human rights, and social development. He
cited as early examples the international campaign to ban land mines
and the Seattle protests against the World Trade Organization in 1999.
The power and legitimacy of this &#8220; second superpower&#8221; do
not derive from the constitutional framework of a nation-state, but
from its ability to capture and project people's everyday feelings,
social values, and creativity onto the world stage. Never in history
has the individual had such cheap, unfettered access to global
audiences, big and small.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="11">
		<number>11</number>
		<note>
			James F. Moore, &#8220; The Second Superpower Rears its Beautiful
Head,&#8221; March 31, 2003, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jmoore/secondsuperpower.html">http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/people/jmoore/secondsuperpower.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="40">
	<ocn>40</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The awakening superpower described in <i>Viral Spiral</i> is not a
conventional political or ideological movement that focuses on
legislation and a clutch of &#8220; issues.&#8221; While commoners do
not dismiss these activities as unimportant, most are focused on the
freedom of their peer communities to create, communicate, and share.
When defending these freedoms requires wading into conventional
politics and law, they are prepared to go there. But otherwise, the
commoners are more intent on building a kind of parallel social order,
inscribed within the regnant political economy but animated by their
own values. Even now, the political/cultural sensibilities of this
order are only vaguely understood by governments, politicians, and
corporate leaders. The idea of &#8220; freedom without anarchy, control
without government, consensus without power&#8221; &#8212; as Lawrence
Lessig put it in 1999<en>12</en> &#8212; is just too counterintuitive
for the conventionally minded to take seriously.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="12">
		<number>12</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, <i>Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace</i> (New York:
Basic Books, 1999), p. 4.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="41">
	<ocn>41</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Very early on, the commoners identified copyright law as a major
impediment to their vision of a &#8220; sharing economy.&#8221; It is
not that they revile copyright law as such; indeed, many commoners
defend the importance of copyright law to creative endeavor. The
problem, they insist, is that large corporations with vast inventories
of copyrighted works &#8212; film studios, record labels, book
publishers, software companies &#8212; have used their political power
unfairly to extend the scope and term of copyright privileges. A
limited monopoly granted by the U.S. Constitution has morphed into an
expansive, near-perpetual monopoly, enforced by intrusive technologies
and draconian penalties.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="42">
	<ocn>42</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The resulting curbs on citizen freedom, as large entertainment and
media corporations gain legal privileges at the expense of the public,
is a complicated issue that I return to in chapter 2. But it is worth
noting briefly why copyright law has been particularly harmful to the
commons in the digital age. When Congress enacted a major revision of
U.S. copyright law in 1976, it eliminated a longstanding requirement
that works had to be formally registered in order to receive copyright
protection.<en>13</en> Under the new law, <i>everything</i> became
automatically copyrighted upon creation. This meant that all
information and artistic work created after 1978 (when the law took
effect) has been born into an invisible envelope of property rights. It
sounds appealing to eliminate bureaucratic formalities like
registration. But the shift to automatic copyright has meant that every
digital scribble is born with a &#169; branded on its side. <i>Culture
= private property</i>.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="13">
		<number>13</number>
		<note>
			The effect of the elimination of formal registration in copyright
law is cogently discussed by Lessig in <i>Free Culture</i> (New York:
Penguin, 2004), pp. 170&#8211;73, and pp. 248&#8211;53.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="43">
	<ocn>43</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The various industries that rely on copyrights have welcomed this
development because it helps them portray their ownership rights as
all-encompassing. They can cast the public's right to use works without
permission or payment &#8212; traditionally guaranteed under the fair
use doctrine and the public domain &#8212; as exceptions to the general
rule of absolute property rights. &#8220; What could be wrong with
enclosing works in ever-stronger packages of property rights?&#8221;
the music and film industries argue. &#8220; That's how new economic
wealth is created.&#8221; The media oligopolies that control most of
television, film, music, and news gathering naturally want to protect
their commercial content. It is the fruit of a vast system of fixed
investment &#8212; equipment, high-priced stars, lawyers, distribution
channels, advertising, etc. &#8212; and copyright law is an important
tool for protecting that value.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="44">
	<ocn>44</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Internet has profoundly disrupted this model of market production,
however. The Internet is a distributed media system of low-cost capital
(your personal computer) strung together with inexpensive transmission
and software. Instead of being run by a centralized corporation that
relies upon professionals and experts above all else, the Internet is a
noncommercial infrastructure that empowers amateurs, citizens, and
ordinary individuals in all their quirky, authentic variety. The mass
media have long regarded people as a commodifiable audience to be sold
to advertisers in tidy demographic units.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="45">
	<ocn>45</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Now, thanks to the Internet, &#8220; the people formerly known as the
audience&#8221; (in Jay Rosen's wonderful phrase) are morphing into a
differentiated organism of flesh-and-blood, idiosyncratic individuals,
as if awakening from a spell. Newly empowered to speak as they wish, in
their own distinctive, personal voices to a global public of whoever
cares to listen, people are creating their own transnational tribes.
They are reclaiming culture from the tyranny of mass-media economics
and national boundaries. In Lessig's words, Internet users are
overthrowing the &#8220; read only&#8221; culture that characterized
the &#8220; weirdly totalitarian&#8221; communications of the twentieth
century. In its place they are installing the &#8220; read/write&#8221;
culture that invites everyone to be a creator, as well as a consumer
and sharer, of culture.<en>14</en> A new online citizenry is arising,
one that regards its socially negotiated rules and norms as at least as
legitimate as those established by conventional law.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="14">
		<number>14</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; The Read-Write Society,&#8221; delivered at
the Wizards of OS4 conference in Berlin, Germany, on September 5, 2006.
Available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wizards-of-os.org/programm/panels/authorship_amp_culture/keynote_the_read_write_society/the_read_write_society.html">http://www.wizards-of-os.org/programm/panels/authorship_amp_culture/keynote_the_read_write_society/the_read_write_society.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="46">
	<ocn>46</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Two profoundly incommensurate media systems are locked in a struggle
for survival or supremacy, depending upon your perspective or, perhaps,
mutual accommodation. For the moment, we live in a confusing
interregnum &#8212; a transition that pits the dwindling power and
often desperate strategies of Centralized Media against the callow,
experimental vigor of Internet-based media. This much is clear,
however: a world organized around centralized control, strict
intellectual property rights, and hierarchies of credentialed experts
is under siege. A radically different order of society based on open
access, decentralized creativity, collaborative intelligence, and cheap
and easy sharing is ascendant. Or to put it more precisely, we are
stumbling into a strange hybrid order that combines both worlds &#8212;
mass media and online networks &#8212; on terms that have yet to be
negotiated.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="47">
	<ocn>47</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Rise of the Commoners
	</text>
</object>
<object id="48">
	<ocn>48</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But who shall do the negotiating? Who will set forth a compelling
alternative to centralized media, and build it? That task has fallen to
a loosely coordinated global federation of digital tribes &#8212; the
free software and open-source hackers, the Wikipedians, the bloggers
and citizen-journalists, the remix musicians and filmmakers, the
avant-garde artists and political dissidents, the educators and
scientists, and many others. It is a spontaneous folk-tech conspiracy
that belongs to everyone and no one.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="49">
	<ocn>49</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As we will see in chapter 1, Richard Stallman, the legendary hacker,
played an indispensable first-mover role by creating a sovereign domain
from which to negotiate with commercial players: free software. The
software commons and later digital commons inspired by it owe an
incalculable debt to Stallman's ingenious legal innovation, the General
Public License, or GPL, launched in 1989. The GPL is a license for
authorizing anyone to use a copyrighted software program so long as any
copies or derivative versions are also made available on the same
terms. This fairly simple license enables programmers to contribute
code to a common pool without fear that someone might privatize and
destroy the commons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="50">
	<ocn>50</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the computer revolution continued through the 1980s and the Internet
went wide in the 1990s, the antisocial, antidemocratic implications of
copyright law in networked spaces became more evident. As we will see
in chapter 2, a growing community of progressive legal scholars blew
the whistle on some nasty developments in copyright law that were
shrinking the public's fair use rights and the public domain. Scholars
such as James Boyle, Pamela Samuelson, Jessica Litman, Yochai Benkler,
Lawrence Lessig, Jonathan Zittrain, and Peter Jaszi provided invaluable
legal analyses about the imperiled democratic polity of cyberspace.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="51">
	<ocn>51</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the late 1990s, this legal scholarship was in full flower, Internet
usage was soaring, and the free software movement produced its first
significant free operating system, GNU/Linux. The commoners were ready
to take practical action. Lessig, then a professor at Harvard Law
School, engineered a major constitutional test case, <i>Eldred v.
Reno</i> (later <i>Eldred v. Ashcroft</i>), to try to strike down a
twentyyear extension of copyright terms &#8212; a case that reached the
U.S. Supreme Court in 2002. At the same time, Lessig and a number of
his colleagues, including MIT computer scientist Hal Abelson, Duke law
professor James Boyle, and Villanova law professor Michael W. Carroll,
came together to explore innovative ways to protect the public domain.
It was a rare moment in history in which an ad hoc salon of brilliant,
civic-minded thinkers from diverse fields of endeavor found one
another, gave themselves the freedom to dream big thoughts, and
embarked upon practical plans to make them real.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="52">
	<ocn>52</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The immediate upshot of their legal and techno ingenuity, as we will
see in chapters 3 and 4, was the drafting of the Creative Commons
licenses and the organization that would promote them. The purpose of
these free, standardized public licenses was, and is, to get beyond the
binary choice imposed by copyright law. Why must a work be considered
either a chunk of privately owned property or a kind of nonproperty
completely open to anyone without constraint (&#8220;in the public
domain&#8221;)? The CC licenses overcome this stifling either/or logic
by articulating a new middle ground of ownership that sanctions sharing
and collaboration under specified terms. To stress its difference from
copyright law, which declares &#8220; All Rights Reserved,&#8221; the
Creative Commons licenses bear the tagline &#8220; Some Rights
Reserved.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="53">
	<ocn>53</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Like free software, the CC licenses paradoxically rely upon copyright
law to legally protect the commons. The licenses use the rights of
ownership granted by copyright law not to exclude others, but to invite
them to share. The licenses recognize authors' interests in owning and
controlling their work &#8212; but they also recognize that new
creativity owes many social and intergenerational debts. Creativity is
not something that emanates solely from the mind of the &#8220;
romantic author,&#8221; as copyright mythology has it; it also derives
from artistic communities and previous generations of authors and
artists. The CC licenses provide a legal means to allow works to
circulate so that people can create something new. <i>Share, reuse, and
remix, legally</i>, as Creative Commons puts it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="54">
	<ocn>54</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After the licenses were introduced in December 2002, they proliferated
throughout the Internet and dozens of nations as if by spontaneous
combustion. It turns out that the licenses have been more than a legal
fix for the limitations of copyright law. They are a powerful form of
social signaling. The licenses have proven to be a flag for commoners
to advertise their identities as members of a culturally insurgent
sharing economy &#8212; an aesthetic/political underground, one might
say. Attaching the CC logo to one's blog, video, MP3 file, or laptop
case became a way to proclaim one's support for free culture. Suddenly,
all sorts of participatory projects could be seen as elements of a
larger movement. By 2007, authors had applied one or more of six CC
licenses to 90 million works, by one conservative estimate, or more
than 220 million works by another estimate. Collectively, CC-licensed
works constitute a class of cultural works that are &#8220; born
free&#8221; to be legally shared and reused with few impediments.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="55">
	<ocn>55</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A great deal of the Creative Commons story revolves around its founder,
the cerebral yet passionate Larry Lessig, a constitutional law
professor at Harvard in the mid-1990s until a move to Stanford Law
School in 2000. As a scholar with a sophisticated grasp of digital
technologies, Lessig was one of the first to recognize that as
computers became the infrastructure for society, software code was
acquiring the force of law. His 1999 classic, <i>Code and Other Laws of
Cyberspace</i>, is renowned for offering a deep theoretical framework
for understanding how politics, law, technology, and social norms shape
the character of cyberspace &#8212; and in turn, any society.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="56">
	<ocn>56</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In popularizing this message, it didn't hurt that Lessig, an
experienced classroom lecturer, is a poised and spellbinding performer.
On the tech and copyright circuit, in fact, he has become something of
a rock star. With his expansive forehead and wire glasses, Lessig looks
every bit the professor he is. Yet in his signature black jeans and
sport jacket, delivering punchy one-liners punctuated by arresting
visuals projected on a big screen behind him, Lessig makes a powerful
impression. He's a geek-chic techie, intellectual, legal activist, and
showman all rolled into one.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="57">
	<ocn>57</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		From the beginning, Lessig and his colleagues wondered, How far can the
sharing ethic be engineered? Just how far can the idea of free culture
extend? As it turns out, quite far. At first, of course, the free
culture project was applied mostly to Web-based text and music. But as
we see in chapters 5 through 12, the technologies and ethic of free
culture have rapidly taken root in many creative sectors of society
&#8212; video, music, books, science, education &#8212; and even
business and international arts and culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="58">
	<ocn>58</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>Remix culture.</i></b> Thanks to digital technologies, musicians
can sample verbatim snippets of other musicians' work in their own
works, producing &#8220; remixes&#8221; that blend sounds from a number
of copyrighted songs. It's all patently illegal, of course, unless
you're wealthy enough to pay for the rights to use a sample. But that
hasn't stopped artists.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="59">
	<ocn>59</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In fact, the underground remix scene has become so robust that even
established artists feel obliged to engage with it to bolster their
street cred. With a wink and a nudge from record labels, major rap
stars like Jay-Z and Eminem have released instrumental tracks of their
records in the hope and expectation that remix <i>auteurs</i> will
recycle the tracks. Record labels have quietly relied on
mixtapes&#8212; personalized compilations of tracks &#8212; to gain
exposure and credibility.<en>15</en> To help an illegal social art go
legit, many artists are using Creative Commons licenses and
public-domain sound clips to build a legal body of remix works.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="15">
		<number>15</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Joanna Demers, <i>Steal This Music: How Intellectual
Property Law Affects Musical Creativity</i> (Athens: University of
Georgia Press, 2006); Kelefa Sanneh, &#8220; Mixtapes Mix in
Marketing,&#8221; New York Times, July 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="60">
	<ocn>60</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the video world, too, the remix impulse has found expression in its
own form of derivative creativity, the mashup. From underground remakes
of <i>Star Wars</i> films to parodies of celebrities, citizenamateurs
are taking original video clips and mixing them with other images, pop
music tracks, and their own narrations. When Alaska senator Ted Stevens
compared the Internet to a &#8220; series of tubes,&#8221; video clips
of his rambling speech were mashed up and set to a techno dance beat.
Beyond this playful subculture, serious filmmakers are using CC
licenses on their works to develop innovative distribution systems that
attract large audiences and earn money. Machinima animations &#8212; a
filmmaking technique that uses computer game action sequences, shot
with in-game cameras and then edited together &#8212; are pioneering a
new market niche, in part through their free distribution under a CC
license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="61">
	<ocn>61</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>Open business.</i></b> One of the most surprising recent
developments has been the rise of &#8220; open business&#8221; models.
Unlike traditional businesses that depend upon proprietary technology
or content, a new breed of businesses see lucrative opportunities in
exploiting open, participatory networks. The pioneer in this strategy
was IBM, which in 2000 embraced GNU/Linux, the open-source computer
operating system, as the centerpiece of its service and consulting
business.<en>16</en> Dozens of small, Internet-based companies are now
exploiting open networks to build more flexible, sustainable
enterprises.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="16">
		<number>16</number>
		<note>
			Steve Lohr, &#8220; IBM to Give Free Access to 500 Patents, <i>New
York Times</i>, July 11, 2005. See also Steven Weber, <i>The Success of
Open Source Software</i> (Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press,
2004), pp. 202&#8211;3. See also Pamela Samuelson, &#8220; IBM's
Pragmatic Embrace of Open Source,&#8221; <i>Communications of the
ACM</i> 49, no. 21 (October 2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="62">
	<ocn>62</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The key insight about many open-platform businesses is that they no
longer look to copyright or patent law as tools to assert market
control. Their goal is not to exclude others, but to amass large
communities. Open businesses understand that exclusive property rights
can stifle the value creation that comes with mass participation, and
so they strive to find ways to &#8220; honor the commons&#8221; while
making money in socially acceptable forms of advertising,
subscriptions, or consulting services. The brave new economics of
&#8220; peer production&#8221; is enabling forward-thinking businesses
to use social collaboration among thousands, or even millions, of
people to create social communities that are the foundation for
significant profits. <i>BusinessWeek</i> heralded this development in a
major cover story in 2005, &#8220; The Power of Us,&#8221; and called
sharing &#8220; the net's next disruption.&#8221;<en>17</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="17">
		<number>17</number>
		<note>
			Robert D. Hof, &#8220; The Power of Us: Mass Collaboration on the
Internet Is Shaking Up Business,&#8221; <i>BusinessWeek</i>, June 20,
2005, pp. 73&#8211;82.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="63">
	<ocn>63</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>Science</i></b> as a commons. The world of scientific research
has long depended on open sharing and collaboration. But increasingly,
copyrights, patents, and university rules are limiting the flow of
scientific knowledge. The resulting gridlock of rights in knowledge is
impeding new discoveries and innovation. Because of copyright
restrictions and software incompatibilities, scientists studying
genetics, proteins, and marine biology often cannot access databases
containing vital research. Or they cannot easily share physical samples
of lab samples. When the maker of Golden Rice, a vitamin-enhanced
bioengineered rice, tried to distribute its seeds to millions of people
in poor countries, it first had to get permissions from seventy patent
holders and obtain six Material Transfer Agreements (which govern the
sharing of biomedical research substances).<en>18</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="18">
		<number>18</number>
		<note>
			Interview with John Wilbanks, &#8220; Science Commons Makes Sharing
Easier,&#8221; <i>Open Access Now</i>, December 20, 2004, available at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.biomedcentral.com/openaccess/archive/?page=features&amp;issue=23">http://www.biomedcentral.com/openaccess/archive/?page=features&amp;issue=23</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="64">
	<ocn>64</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The problem of acquiring, organizing, and sharing scientific knowledge
is becoming more acute, paradoxically enough, as more scientific
disciplines become dependent on computers and the networked sharing of
data. To help deal with some of these issues, the Creative Commons in
2005 launched a new project known as the Science Commons to try to
redesign the information infrastructure for scientific research. The
basic idea is to &#8220; break down barriers to sharing that are
hindering innovation in the sciences,&#8221; says John Wilbanks,
executive director of Science Commons. Working with the National
Academy of Sciences and other research bodies, Wilbanks is
collaborating with astronomers, archaeologists, microbiologists, and
medical researchers to develop better ways to make vast scientific
literatures more computer-friendly, and databases technically
compatible, so that they can be searched, organized, and used more
effectively.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="65">
	<ocn>65</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>Open education and learning.</i></b> A new class of knowledge
commons is poised to join free and open-source software, the Creative
Commons and Wikipedia as a coherent social movement. The new
groundswell goes by the awkward name &#8220; Open Educational
Resources,&#8221; or OER.<en>19</en> One of the earlier pioneers of the
movement was the Massachusetts Institute of Technology which has put
virtually all of its course materials on the Web, for free, through its
OpenCourseWare initiative. The practice has now spread to scores of
colleges and universities around the world, and inspired a broader set
of OER initiatives: digital repositories for articles, reports, and
data; open-access scholarly journals that bypass expensive commercial
publishers; and collaborative Web sites for developing teaching
materials. There are wikis for students and scholars working together,
sites to share multimedia presentations, and much more.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="19">
		<number>19</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Daniel E. Atkins, John Seely Brown, and Allen L. Hammond,
&#8220; A Review of the Open Educational Resources (OER) Movement:
Achievements, Challenges and New Opportunities,&#8221; February 2007,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.oerderves.org/?p=23">http://www.oerderves.org/?p=23</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="66">
	<ocn>66</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The OER movement has particular importance for people who want to learn
but don't have the money or resources &#8212; scholars in developing
countries, students struggling to pay for their educations, people in
remote or rural locations, people with specialized learning needs. OER
is based on the proposition that it will not only be cheaper or perhaps
free if teachers and students can share their materials through the
Web, it will also enable more effective types of learning. So the OER
movement is dedicated to making learning tools cheaper and more
accessible. The revolutionary idea behind OER is to transform
traditional education &#8212; teachers imparting information to passive
students &#8212; into a more learnerdriven process facilitated by
teachers. Self-directed, socially driven learning supplants formal,
hierarchical modes of teaching.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="67">
	<ocn>67</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>The international sharing economy.</i></b> Shortly after the
first CC licenses were released in 2002, dozens of exceptionally
capable volunteers &#8212; from Japan, Finland, Brazil, South Africa,
and other countries &#8212; came knocking on the door of CC. How can we
adapt the American CC licenses to our respective national legal
systems? they asked. This unexpected turn prompted the Creative Commons
to inaugurate Creative Commons International, based in Berlin, Germany,
to supervise the complicated task of &#8220; porting&#8221; the U.S.
licenses to other legal jurisdictions. To date, CC affiliates in
fortyseven nations have adapted the U.S. licenses to their legal
systems, and another seventeen have porting projects under way.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="68">
	<ocn>68</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The volunteers include avant-garde artists in Croatia, free software
programmers in the Netherlands, South Korean judges, Italian law
professors, South African musicians, Malaysian citizenjournalists,
Bulgarian filmmakers, and Taiwanese songwriters. The passionate
international licensing movement has even been embraced by the
Brazilian government, which has proclaimed itself the first Free
Culture Nation. As usage of the licenses spreads, they are effectively
becoming the default international legal structure of the sharing
economy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="69">
	<ocn>69</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		A New Type of Emergent Democracy?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="70">
	<ocn>70</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Peter Suber, a leading champion of open-access scholarly publishing,
once explained to me why a disparate, rambunctious crowd of commoners
spread around the globe might wish to work together to do something
about their plight. &#8220; People are taking back their
culture,&#8221; Peter said. &#8220; People who have not been served by
the current law have quietly endured it until they saw that they didn't
have to.&#8221;<en>20</en> The Creative Commons has become both a
symbol and a tool for people to reclaim creativity and culture from the
mass-media leviathans. The licenses and the organization have become
instruments to advance a participatory, sharing economy and culture.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="20">
		<number>20</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Peter Suber, June 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="71">
	<ocn>71</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		How far can it go? Will it significantly affect conventional politics
and government? Can it bring market forces and social needs into a more
positive alignment?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="72">
	<ocn>72</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This book is about the struggle to imagine this new world and push it
as far as it can go. It is, in one sense, a history, but &#8220;
history&#8221; suggests that the story is over and done. The truth is
that the commons movement is tremendously robust and expansive right
now. The early history about free software, the public domain, and the
Creative Commons is simply a necessary foundation for understanding the
propulsive logic of what is happening.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="73">
	<ocn>73</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The story told in these pages is not entirely new; it has been told in
fragments and through the restless lens of journalism. But it has not
been told in its larger conceptual and historical sweep. That's partly
because most of its players are usually seen in isolation from one
another, and not put in the context of the larger open-platform
revolution. It's also because the free culture movement,
nothwithstanding its vigor, is generally eclipsed by the bigmoney
corporate developments that are ostensibly more important. But that is
precisely the problem: conventional economics does not understand the
actual significance of open platforms and the commons. We need to
understand what the online commons represent: a powerful
sociotechnological paradigm that is reordering some basic dynamics of
creative practice, culture, politics, and everyday life.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="74">
	<ocn>74</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I am no bystander in this story, it must be said, but a commoner who
has grappled with the quandaries of copyright law and the public domain
for nearly twenty years. In 2001, after co-founding Public Knowledge, a
Washington advocacy group to defend the public's stake in copyright and
Internet policies, I went on to write books on the market enclosure of
myriad commons and on the absurd expansions of copyright and trademark
law. Over the course of this work, I discovered how a commons analysis
can help us understand the digital revolution. It can help us see that
it is not just about technological innovation, but about social and
legal innovations. Reading Elinor Ostrom and Yochai Benkler, in
particular &#8212; two leading theorists of the commons &#8212; I came
to realize that social communities, and not just markets, must be
recognized as powerful vehicles for creating value. I realized that
many basic assumptions about property rights, as embedded in copyright
law and neoclassical economics, fail to take account of the generative
power of online communities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="75">
	<ocn>75</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		How then shall we create the commons and protect it? That question lies
at the core of this book and the history of the commoners in
cyberspace. I am mostly interested in exploring how the Creative
Commons has galvanized a variety of interrelated crusades to build a
digital republic of, by, and for the commoners. One reason why a small
licensing project has grown into a powerful global brand is that, at a
time of mass-media dominance and political stalemate, free culture
offers an idealistic alternative vision. Something you can do. A
movement in which everyone can play some useful role. The free culture
movement stands for reclaiming culture by making it yourself and for
reviving democracy by starting in your own digital backyard. CC stands
for personal authenticity and diversity in a world of stale,
mass-marketed product. It stands for good fun and the joys of sharing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="76">
	<ocn>76</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Put the CC logo on your blog or music CD or video, and you too can
belong to a movement that slyly sticks it to Big Media without getting
into an ugly brawl. Don't get mad, the CC community seems to whisper.
Just affiliate with a growing virtual nation of creative renegades.
Transcend a rigged game by migrating to a commons of your own making.
Build therefore your own world, in the manner of Henry David Thoreau
&#8212; then imagine its embrace by many others. Imagine it radiating
into conventional politics with a refreshing ethic of open
accountability and earned rewards, a contempt for coercive business
practices and governmental abuses, and an insistence upon transparency,
participation, and the consent of the governed. You may be an
entrepreneur who just wants to build a profitable business, or a
scientist who just wants to find better ways to research Huntington's
disease. The commons has some solutions in these areas, too. This
big-tent movement is unabashedly ecumenical.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="77">
	<ocn>77</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This is the vision now exploding around the world anyway. The recurring
question in its earliest days, and now, remains &#8212; How can we
build it out? <i>Can</i> it be built out? And how far? For the
commoners, just asking the question is halfway to answering it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="78">
	<ocn>78</ocn>
	<text class="h2">
		PART I
	</text>
</object>
<object id="79">
	<ocn>79</ocn>
	<text class="h3">
		Harbingers of the Sharing Economy
	</text>
</object>
<object id="80">
	<ocn>80</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The rise of the sharing economy had its roots among the renegades
living on the periphery of mainstream culture. At the time, they were
largely invisible to one another. They had few ways of making common
cause and no shared language for even naming the forces that troubled
them. It was the 1990s, after all, a time of alluring mercantile
fantasies about the limitless possibilities of the laissez-faire
&#8220; information superhighway.&#8221; Even for those who could
pierce the mystifications, the new technologies were so new, powerful,
and perplexing that it was difficult to understand their full
implications.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="81">
	<ocn>81</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The renegades, while sharing a vision of technological progress, were
disturbed by many on-the-ground realities. A small network of hackers,
for example, was enraged to learn that software was becoming a closed,
proprietary product. Companies could prohibit interested individuals
from tinkering with their own, legally purchased software. On both
creative and political grounds, this development was odious to Richard
Stallman, a brilliant programmer who soon hatched a dream of building a
protected kingdom of &#8220; free software,&#8221; the subject of
chapter 1.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="82">
	<ocn>82</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Meanwhile, a loose community of legal scholars and tech activists was
becoming alarmed by the antisocial, anti-democratic tendencies of
copyright law and digital technology. Scholars such as Lawrence Lessig,
James Boyle, and Hal Abelson began to realize that copyright law and
software code were acquiring unsuspected powers to redesign our
political and social order. They also began to understand the ways in
which the public domain is not a wasteland, as conventional minds had
long supposed, but a highly generative zone of culture. This
intellectual journey is described in chapter 2.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="83">
	<ocn>83</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Finally, it was becoming painfully apparent to yet another amorphous
band of renegades &#8212; artists, musicians, writers, scientists,
educators, citizens &#8212; that copyright law and technological
controls were artificially restricting their creative freedoms. With
scant public attention, the music, film, and publishing industries were
using their clout to protect their archaic business models at the
expense of innovation and the commons. This onslaught ultimately
provoked one exemplary commoner, Eric Eldred, to team up with legal
scholar Lawrence Lessig to mount an unprecedented constitutional
challenge to copyright law, the focus of chapter 3.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="84">
	<ocn>84</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		None of these surges of innovative dissent was well funded or
particularly promising. For the most part, they were improvisational
experiments undertaken by public-spirited individuals determined to
vindicate their visions for a better society. With the benefit of
hindsight, we can now see that while many of these initiatives were
only partially successful, each was indispensable to the larger, later
task of imagining and building a digital republic to secure basic human
freedoms, the subject of Part II.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="85">
	<ocn>85</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		1 IN THE BEGINNING WAS FREE SOFTWARE
	</text>
</object>
<object id="86">
	<ocn>86</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Richard Stallman's mythic struggle to protect the commons of code
set the viral spiral in motion.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="87">
	<ocn>87</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The struggle to imagine and invent the software commons, which later
set in motion a viral spiral now known as free culture, began with
Richard Stallman, a brilliant, eccentric MIT computer programmer.
Stallman's history as a hacker and legal innovator has by now become
the stuff of legend. As one of the first people to confront the deep
tensions between proprietary control and the public domain in software
development, Stallman has achieved that rare pinnacle in the high-tech
world, the status of celebrity geek. Besides his programming prowess,
he is renowned for devising the GNU General Public License, more
commonly known as the GPL, an ingenious legal mechanism to protect
shared software code.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="88">
	<ocn>88</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman &#8212; or RMS, as he likes to be called &#8212; has become an
iconic figure in the history of free culture in part because he showed
courageous leadership in protecting the commons well before anyone else
realized that there was even a serious problem. He was a lone voice in
the wilderness for at least ten years before the Internet became a mass
medium, and so has earned enormous credibility as a leader on matters
of free culture. He has also been reviled by some as an autocratic
zealot with bad manners and strident rhetoric.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="89">
	<ocn>89</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is perhaps fitting that Stallman could be mistaken for an Old
Testament prophet. He is a shaggy, intense, and fiercely stubborn guy.
On his Web site, visitors can find a gag photo of him posed as Saint
IGNUcius, with his hand raised in mock genuflection and his head
encircled by a gold aureole (held in place by two admiring acoyltes).
He has been known to deliver lectures barefoot, sleep on the couch in a
borrowed office for weeks at a time, and excoriate admirers for using
taboo phrases like &#8220; intellectual property&#8221; and &#8220;
copyright protection.&#8221; Stallman explains that &#8220;
intellectual property&#8221; incorrectly conflates three distinct
bodies of law &#8212; copyright, patent, and trademark &#8212; and
emphasizes individual property rights over public rights. &#8220;
Copyright protection&#8221; is misleading, he says, because it implies
a positive, necessary act of <i>defending</i> something rather than an
acquisitive, aggressive act of a monopolist. Stallman considers
<i>content</i> to be a disparaging word, better replaced by &#8220;
works of authorship.&#8221; He has even made a list of fourteen words
that he urges people to avoid because of their politically misleading
valences.<en>21</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="21">
		<number>21</number>
		<note>
			Joshua Gray, editor, <i>Free Software Free Society: Selected Essays
of Richard M. Stallman</i> (Boston: GNU Press, 2002), pp. 190&#8211;91.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="90">
	<ocn>90</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even though Stallman frequently speaks to august academic and
scientific gatherings, and meets with the heads of state in developing
countries, he resembles a defiant hippie, Yet for his visionary role in
developing free software and the free software philosophy, Stallman is
treated as if he were a head of state . . . which, in a way, he is. His
story has irresistible mythological resonances &#8212; the hero's
journey through hardship and scorn, later vindicated by triumph and
acclaim. But for many, including his most ardent admirers, Stallman's
stubborn idealism can also be supremely maddening.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="91">
	<ocn>91</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		His first encounter with the creeping ethic of proprietary control, in
the late 1970s, is an oft-told part of his story. The Xerox Corporation
had donated an experimental laser printer to the MIT Artificial
Intelligence Lab, where Stallman was then a graduate student. The
printer was constantly jamming, causing frustration and wasting
everyone's time. Stallman wanted to devise a software fix but he
discovered that the source code was proprietary. Determined to find out
who was responsible and force them to fix it, he tracked down a
computer scientist at Carnegie Mellon University who had supposedly
written the code &#8212; but the professor refused to help him; he had
signed a nondisclosure agreement with Xerox prohibiting him from
sharing the code.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="92">
	<ocn>92</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman considered Xerox's lockup of code a profound moral offense
that violated the integrity of the hacker community. (Among
practitioners, <i>hacker</i> is a term of respect for an ingenious,
resourceful programmer, not an accusation of criminality.) Not only did
it prevent people from fixing their own equipment and software, the
nondisclosure agreement flouted the Golden Rule. It prohibited sharing
with one's neighbor. The proprietary ethic was not just immoral, by
Stallman's lights, but a barrier to developing great software.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="93">
	<ocn>93</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the late 1970s, he had developed a breakthrough text editor, Emacs,
in collaboration with a large community of programmers. &#8220;
Everybody and his brother was writing his own collection of redefined
screen-editor commands, a command for everything he typically liked to
do,&#8221; Stallman wrote. &#8220; People would pass them around and
improve them, making them more powerful and more general. The
collections of redefinitions gradually became system programs in their
own right.&#8221;<en>22</en> Emacs was one of the first software
projects to demonstrate the feasibility of large-scale software
collaboration and the deep well of innovative ideas that it could
yield. Emacs enabled programmers to add new features with great ease,
and to constantly upgrade and customize the program with the latest
improvements. The Emacs experiment demonstrated that <i>sharing</i> and
<i>interoperability</i> are vital principles for a flourishing online
commons.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="22">
		<number>22</number>
		<note>
			Sam Williams, <i>Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for
Free Software</i> (Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly &amp; Associates 2002), pp.
76&#8211;88.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="94">
	<ocn>94</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Two problems quickly emerged, however. If people did not communicate
their innovations back to the group, divergent streams of incompatible
code would produce a Tower of Babel effect. Second, if the code and its
derivations were not shared with everyone, the usefulness of the
program would slowly decline. The flow of innovation would dissipate.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="95">
	<ocn>95</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To solve these problems, Stallman invented a user contract that he
called the &#8220; Emacs Commune.&#8221; It declared to all users that
Emacs was &#8220; distributed on a basis of communal sharing, which
means that all improvements must be given back to me to be incorporated
and distributed.&#8221; He enforced the provisions of the contract with
an iron hand. As Stallman biographer Sam Williams writes, when the
administrators for the MIT Laboratory for Computer Science instituted a
new password system &#8212; which Stallman considered an antisocial
power grab &#8212; he &#8220; initiated a software &#8216; strike,'
refusing to send lab members the latest version of Emacs until they
rejected the security system on the lab's computers. The move did
little to improve Stallman's growing reputation as an extremist, but it
got the point across: commune members were expected to speak up for
basic hacker values.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="96">
	<ocn>96</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman was groping for a way to sustain the hacker ethic of community
and sharing in the face of new types of top-down control. Some
programmers were beginning to install code that would turn off access
to a program unless money was paid. Others were copyrighting programs
that had been developed by the community of programmers. Bill Gates, as
an undergraduate at Harvard in the late 1970s, was nearly expelled for
using publicly funded labs to create commercial software. He was forced
to put his code into the public domain, whereupon he left the
university to found an obscure Albuquerque company called Micro-Soft.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="97">
	<ocn>97</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Software was simply becoming too lucrative for it to remain a shared
resource &#8212; an attitude that enraged Stallman. He was determined
to preserve the integrity of what we would now call the software
commons. It was an immense challenge because copyright law makes no
provisions for community ownership of creative work beyond &#8220;
joint authorship&#8221; among named individuals. Stallman wanted to
devise a way to ensure that all the talent and innovation created by
commoners would <i>stay</i> in the commons. The idea that an outsider
&#8212; a university administrator, software entrepreneur, or large
company &#8212; could intrude upon a hacker community and take its work
was an appalling injustice to Stallman.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="98">
	<ocn>98</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet this was precisely what was happening to the hacker community at
MIT's AI Lab in the early 1980s. It was slowly disintegrating as one
programmer after another trooped off to join commercial software
ventures; the software itself was becoming annexed into the
marketplace. Software for personal computers, which was just then
appearing on the market, was sold as a proprietary product. This meant
that the source code &#8212; the deep design architecture of the
program that operated everything &#8212; was inaccessible.<en>23</en>
Perhaps most disturbing to Stallman at the time was that the leading
mainframe operating system, Unix, was locking up its source code. Unix
had been developed by AT&amp;T with generous federal funding, and had
been generally available for free within academic computing circles. At
the time, most mainframe software was given away to encourage buyers to
purchase the computer hardware. But when the Department of Justice
broke up AT&amp;T in 1984 to spur competition, it also enabled AT&amp;T
to enter other lines of business. Naturally, the company was eager to
maximize its profits, so in 1985 it began to charge a licensing fee for
Unix.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="23">
		<number>23</number>
		<note>
			Steven Levy, <i>Hackers: Heroes of the Computer Revolution</i> (New
York: Delta, 1993), pp. 425, 427.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="99">
	<ocn>99</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman grieved at the disintegration of the hacker community at the
AI Lab as closed software programs inexorably became the norm. As he
wrote at the time:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="100">
	<ocn>100</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The people remaining at the lab were the professors, students, and
non-hacker researchers, who did not know how to maintain the system, or
the hardware, or want to know. Machines began to break and never be
fixed; sometimes they just got thrown out. Needed changes in software
could not be made. The non-hackers reacted to this by turning to
commercial systems, bringing with them fascism and license agreements.
I used to wander through the lab, through the rooms so empty at night
where they used to be full, and think, &#8220; Oh my poor AI lab! You
are dying and I can't save you.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="101">
	<ocn>101</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman compared himself to Ishi, &#8220; the last survivor of a dead
[Native American] culture. And I don't really belong in the world
anymore. And in some ways I feel I ought to be dead.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="102">
	<ocn>102</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman decided to leave MIT &#8212; why stay? &#8212; but with a
brash plan: to develop a free software operating system that would be
compatible with Unix. It would be his brave, determined effort to
preserve the hacker ethic. He dubbed his initiative the GNU Project,
with &#8220; GNU&#8221; standing for &#8220; GNU's Not Unix&#8221;
&#8212; a recursive hacker's pun. He also started, in 1985, the Free
Software Foundation to help develop GNU software projects and
distribute them for free to anyone. (The foundation now occupies a
fifth-floor office on a narrow commercial street in downtown Boston.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="103">
	<ocn>103</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Emacs Commune experience had taught Stallman about the limits of
informal social norms in protecting the software commons. It also
revealed the difficulties of being the central coordinator of all code
changes. This time, in developing a set of software programs for his
GNU Project, Stallman came up with a better idea &#8212; a legally
enforceable license. The goal was to ensure that people could have free
access to all derivative works and share and reuse software. The
licensing rights were based on the rights of ownership conferred by
copyright law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="104">
	<ocn>104</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman called his license the GNU General Public License, or GPL. He
puckishly referred to it as &#8220; copyleft,&#8221; and illustrated it
with a reverse copyright symbol (a backward c in a circle). Just as
programmers pride themselves on coming up with ingenious hacks to solve
a software problem, so the GPL is regarded as a world-class hack around
copyright law. Copyright law has no provisions for protecting works
developed by a large community of creators. Nor does it offer a way to
prevent works from being made proprietary. Indeed, that's the point of
copyright law &#8212; to create private property rights.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="105">
	<ocn>105</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The GPL bypasses these structural limitations of copyright law by
carving out a new zone of collective ownership. A work licensed under
the GPL permits users to run any program, copy it, modify it, and
distribute it in any modified form. The only limitation is that any
derivative work must also be licensed under the GPL. This provision of
the GPL means that the license is <i>automatically</i> applied to any
derivative work, and to any derivative of a derivative, and so on
&#8212; hence its viral nature.<en>*1</en> The GPL ensures that the
value created by a given group of commoners shall stay within the
commons. To guarantee the viral power of the license, users of GPL'd
works cannot modify the licensing terms. No one has to pay to use a
GPL'd work &#8212; but as a condition for using it, people are legally
obliged to license any derivative versions under the GPL. In this way,
a GPL'd work is born and forever protected as &#8220; shareable.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*1">
		<symbol>*1</symbol>
		<note>
			Stallman told me he considers it &#8220; a common calumny to compare
the GNU GPL to a virus. That is not only insulting (I have a virus
infection in my throat right now and it is no fun), it is also
inaccurate, because the GPL does not spread like a virus. It spreads
like a spider plant: if you cut off a piece and plant it over here, it
grows over here.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="106">
	<ocn>106</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Version 1.0 of the GPL was first published in 1989. It was significant,
writes Sam Williams, because it &#8220; demonstrated the intellectual
similarity between legal code and software code. Implicit within the
GPL's preamble was a profound message: instead of viewing copyright law
with suspicion, hackers should view it as yet another system begging to
be hacked.&#8221;<en>24</en> The GPL also served to articulate, as a
matter of law, the value of collaborative work. A universe of code that
might previously have been regarded as part of the &#8220; public
domain&#8221; &#8212; subject to free and unrestricted access &#8212;
could now be seen in a subtly different light.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="24">
		<number>24</number>
		<note>
			Williams, <i>Free as in Freedom</i>, p. 127.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="107">
	<ocn>107</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A GPL'd work is not part of the public domain, because the public
domain has no rules constraining how a work may be used. Works in the
public domain are open to anyone. The GPL is similar, but with one very
important restriction: no private appropriation is allowed. Any
follow-on uses must remain free for others to use (a provision that
some property rights libertarians regard as &#8220; coercive&#8221;).
Works in the public domain, by contrast, are vulnerable to
privatization because someone need only add a smidgen of &#8220;
originality&#8221; to the work and she would own a copyright in the
resulting work. A GPL'd work and its derivatives stay free forever
&#8212; because anyone who tries to privatize a GPL'd work is
infringing on the license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="108">
	<ocn>108</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Stallman, the GPL became the symbol and tool for enacting his
distinct political vision of &#8220; freedom.&#8221; The license rests
on four kinds of freedoms for users of software (which he lists using
computer protocols):
	</text>
</object>
<object id="109">
	<ocn>109</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Freedom 0: The freedom to run the program for any purpose;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="110">
	<ocn>110</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Freedom 1: The freedom to study how the program works, and to adapt it
to your needs. (Access to the source code is a precondition for this);
	</text>
</object>
<object id="111">
	<ocn>111</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Freedom 2: The freedom to redistribute copies so you can help your
neighbor; and
	</text>
</object>
<object id="112">
	<ocn>112</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Freedom 3: The freedom to improve the program, and release your
improvements to the public, so that the whole community benefits.
(Access to the source code is a precondition for this.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="113">
	<ocn>113</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman has become an evangelist for the idea of freedom embodied in
all the GNU programs. He refuses to use any software programs that are
not &#8220; free,&#8221; and he has refused to allow his appearances to
be Webcast if the software being used was not &#8220; free.&#8221;
&#8220; If I am to be an honest advocate for free software,&#8221; said
Stallman, &#8220; I can hardly go around giving speeches, then put
pressure on people to use nonfree software. I'd be undermining my own
cause. And if I don't show that I take my principles seriously, I can't
expect anybody else to take them seriously.&#8221;<en>25</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="25">
		<number>25</number>
		<note>
			Stallman at MIT forum, &#8220; Copyright and Globalization in the
Age of Computer Networks,&#8221; April 19, 2001, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://media-in-transition.mit.edu/forums/copyright/transcript.html">http://media-in-transition.mit.edu/forums/copyright/transcript.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="114">
	<ocn>114</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman has no problems with people making money off software. He just
wants to guarantee that a person can legally use, copy, modify, and
distribute the source code. There is thus an important distinction
between software that is commercial (possibly free) and software that
is proprietary (never free). Stallman tries to explain the distinction
in a catchphrase that has become something of a mantra in free software
circles: <i>&#8220;free as in &#8216; free speech,' not as in &#8216;
free beer.'&#8221;</i> The point is that code must be freely
accessible, not that it should be free of charge. (This is why &#8220;
freeware&#8221; is not the same as free software. Freeware may be free
of charge, but it does not necessarily make its source code
accessible.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="115">
	<ocn>115</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Eben Moglen, a professor of law at Columbia University and general
counsel for the Free Software Foundation since 1994, calls the
provisions of the GPL &#8220; elegant and simple. They respond to the
proposition that when the marginal cost of goods is zero, any nonzero
cost of barbed wire is too high. That's a fact about the twentyfirst
century, and everybody had better get used to it. Yet as you know,
there are enormous cultural enterprises profoundly committed to the
proposition that more and more barbed wire is necessary. And their
basic strategy is to get that barbed wire paid for by the public
everywhere.&#8221;<en>26</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="26">
		<number>26</number>
		<note>
			Eben Moglen, &#8220; Freeing the Mind: Free Software and the Death
of Proprietary Culture,&#8221; June 29, 2003, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://emoglen.law/columbia.edu/publications/maine-speech.html">http://emoglen.law/columbia.edu/publications/maine-speech.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="116">
	<ocn>116</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The GPL truly was something new under the sun: a legally enforceable
tool to vouchsafe a commons of software code. The license is based on
copyright law yet it cleverly turns copyright law against itself,
limiting its reach and carving out a legally protected zone to build
and protect the public domain. In the larger scheme of things, the GPL
was an outgrowth of the &#8220; gift economy&#8221; ethic that has
governed academic life for centuries and computer science for decades.
What made the GPL different from these (abridgeable) social norms was
its legal enforceability.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="117">
	<ocn>117</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The GPL might well have remained an interesting but arcane curiosity of
the software world but for two related developments: the rise of the
Internet in the 1990s and software's growing role as core
infrastructure in modern society. As the computer and Internet
revolutions have transformed countless aspects of daily life, it has
become evident that software is not just another product. Its design
architecture is seminally important to our civic freedoms and
democratic culture. Or as Lawrence Lessig famously put it in his 1999
book <i>Code</i>, &#8220; code is law.&#8221; Software can affect how a
business can function, how information is organized and presented, and
how individuals can think, connect with one another, and collaborate.
Code invisibly structures people's relationships, and thus serves as a
kind of digital constitutional order. As an economic force, software
has become as critical as steel or transportation in previous eras: a
building block for the basic activities of the economy, businesses,
households, and personal life.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="118">
	<ocn>118</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman's atavistic zeal to preserve the hacker community, embodied in
the GPL, did not immediately inspire others. In fact, most of the tech
world was focused on how to convert software into a marketable product.
Initially, the GPL functioned like a spore lying dormant, waiting until
a more hospitable climate could activate its full potential. Outside of
the tech world, few people knew about the GPL, or cared.<en>*2</en> And
even most techies were oblivious to the political implications of free
software.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*2">
		<symbol>*2</symbol>
		<note>
			The GPL is not the only software license around, of course, although
it was, and remains, the most demanding in terms of protecting the
commons of code. Other popular open-source licenses include the MIT,
BSD, and Apache licenses, but each of these permit, but do not require,
that the source code of derivative works also be freely available. The
GPL, however, became the license used for Linux, a quirk of history
that has had far-reaching implications.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="119">
	<ocn>119</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Working under the banner of the Free Software Foundation, Stallman
continued through the 1980s and 1990s to write a wide number of
programs needed to build a completely free operating system. But just
as Lennon's music was better after finding McCartney, Stallman's free
software needed to find Linus Torvalds's kernel for a Unix-like
operating system. (A kernel is the core element of an operating system
that controls how the various applications and utilities that comprise
the system will run.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="120">
	<ocn>120</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 1991, Torvalds was a twenty-one-year-old computer science student at
the University of Helsinki, in Finland. Frustrated by the expense and
complexity of Unix, and its inability to work on personal computers,
Torvalds set out to build a Unix-like operating system on his IBM AT,
which had a 33-megahertz processor and four megabytes of memory.
Torvalds released a primitive version of his program to an online
newsgroup and was astonished when a hundred hackers responded within a
few months to offer suggestions and additions. Over the next few years,
hundreds of additional programmers joined the project, which he named
&#8220; Linux&#8221; by combining his first name, &#8220; Linus,&#8221;
with &#8220; Unix.&#8221; The first official release of his program
came in 1994.<en>27</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="27">
		<number>27</number>
		<note>
			One useful history of Torvalds and Linux is Glyn Moody, <i>Rebel
Code: Inside Linux and the Open Source Revolution</i> (Cambridge, MA:
Perseus, 2001).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="121">
	<ocn>121</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Linux kernel, when combined with the GNU programs developed by
Stallman and his free software colleagues, constituted a complete
computer operating system &#8212; an astonishing and unexpected
achievement. Even wizened computer scientists could hardly believe that
something as complex as an operating system could be developed by
thousands of strangers dispersed around the globe, cooperating via the
Internet. Everyone assumed that a software program had to be organized
by a fairly small group of leaders actively supervising the work of
subordinates through a hierarchical authority system &#8212; that is,
by a single corporation. Yet here was a virtual community of hackers,
with no payroll or corporate structure, coming together in a loose,
voluntary, quasi-egalitarian way, led by leaders who had earned the
trust and respect of some highly talented programmers.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="122">
	<ocn>122</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The real innovation of Linux, writes Eric S. Raymond, a leading analyst
of the technology, was &#8220; not technical, but sociological&#8221;:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="123">
	<ocn>123</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Linux was rather casually hacked on by huge numbers of volunteers
coordinating only through the Internet. Quality was maintained not by
rigid standards or autocracy but by the naively simple strategy of
releasing every week and getting feedback from hundreds of users within
days, creating a sort of rapid Darwinian selection on the mutations
introduced by developers. To the amazement of almost everyone, this
worked quite well.<en>28</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="28">
		<number>28</number>
		<note>
			Eric S. Raymond, &#8220; A Brief History of Hackerdom,&#8221;
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.catb.org/~est/writings/cathedral-bazaar/hacker-history/ar01s06.html">http://www.catb.org/~est/writings/cathedral-bazaar/hacker-history/ar01s06.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="124">
	<ocn>124</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Free Software Foundation had a nominal project to develop a kernel,
but it was not progressing very quickly. The Linux kernel, while
primitive, &#8220; was running and ready for experimentation,&#8221;
writes Steven Weber in his book <i>The Success of Open Source</i>:
&#8220; Its crude functionality was interesting enough to make people
believe that it could, with work, evolve into something important. That
promise was critical and drove the broader development process from
early on.&#8221;<en>29</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="29">
		<number>29</number>
		<note>
			Steven Weber, <i>The Success of Open Source</i> (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2004), p. 100.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="125">
	<ocn>125</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There were other powerful forces driving the development of Linux.
Throughout the 1990s, Microsoft continued to leverage its monopoly grip
over the operating system of personal computers, eventually attracting
the attention of the U.S. Department of Justice, which filed an
antitrust lawsuit against the company. Software competitors such as
Hewlett-Packard, Sun Microsystems, and IBM found that rallying behind
an open-source alternative &#8212; one that was legally protected
against being taken private by anyone else&#8212; offered a terrific
way to compete against Microsoft.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="126">
	<ocn>126</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Meanwhile, the once-free Unix software program was becoming a
fragmented mess. So many different versions of Unix were being sold
that users were frustrated by the proliferation of incompatible
proprietary versions. In the words of a Sun Microsystems executive at
the time, users were unhappy with the &#8220; duplication of effort
around different implementations, leading to high prices; poor
compatibility; and worst of all, slower development as each separate
Unix vendor had to solve the same kinds of problems independently. Unix
has become stagnant. . . .&#8221;<en>30</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="30">
		<number>30</number>
		<note>
			Williams, <i>Free as in Freedom</i>, p. 100.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="127">
	<ocn>127</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Given these problems, there was great appeal in a Unix-like operating
system with freely available source code. Linux helped address the
fragmentation of Unix implementations and the difficulties of competing
against the Microsoft monopoly. Knowing that Linux was GPL'd, hackers,
academics, and software companies could all contribute to its
development without fear that someone might take it private, squander
their contributions, or use it in hostile ways. A commons of software
code offered a highly pragmatic solution to a market dysfunction.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="128">
	<ocn>128</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman's GNU Project and Torvalds's Linux software were clearly
synergistic, but they represented very different styles. The GNU
Project was a slower, more centrally run project compared to the
&#8220; release early and often&#8221; developmental approach used by
the Linux community. In addition, Stallman and Torvalds had
temperamental and leadership differences. Stallman has tended to be
more overbearing and directive than Torvalds, who does not bring a
political analysis to the table and is said to be more tolerant of
diverse talents.<en>31</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="31">
		<number>31</number>
		<note>
			Torvalds included a brief essay, &#8220; Linux kernel management
style,&#8221; dated October 10, 2004, in the files of the Linux source
code, with the annotation, &#8220; Wisdom passed down the ages on clay
tablets.&#8221; It was included as an epilogue in the book <i>Open
Life: The Philosophy of Open Source</i>, by Henrik Ingo, and is
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.openlife.cc/node/43">http://www.openlife.cc/node/43</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="129">
	<ocn>129</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		So despite their natural affinities, the Free Software Community and
the Linux community never found their way to a grand merger. Stallman
has applauded Linux's success, but he has also resented the eclipse of
GNU programs used in the operating system by the Linux name. This
prompted Stallman to rechristen the program &#8220; GNU/Linux,&#8221; a
formulation that many people now choose to honor.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="130">
	<ocn>130</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet many hackers, annoyed at Stallman's political crusades and crusty
personal style, committed their own linguistic raid by renaming &#8220;
free software&#8221; as &#8220; open source software,&#8221; with a
twist. As GNU/Linux became more widely used in the 1990s, and more
corporations began to seriously consider using it, the word <i>free</i>
in &#8220; free software&#8221; was increasingly seen as a problem. The
&#8220; free as in free speech, not as in free beer&#8221; slogan never
quite dispelled popular misconceptions about the intended sense of the
word <i>free</i>. Corporate information technology (IT) managers were
highly wary about putting mission-critical corporate systems in the
hands of software that could be had for <i>free</i>. Imagine telling
the boss that you put the company's fate in the hands of a program you
downloaded from the Internet for free!
	</text>
</object>
<object id="131">
	<ocn>131</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Many corporate executives clearly recognized the practical value of
free software; they just had no interest in joining Stallman's
ideological crusade or being publicly associated with him. They did not
necessarily want to become champions of the &#8220; four
freedoms&#8221; or the political vision implicit in free software. They
simply wanted code that works well. As Eric Raymond wrote: &#8220; It
seemed clear to us in retrospect that the term &#8216; free software'
had done our movement tremendous damage over the years. Part of this
stemmed from the well-known &#8216; free speech/free beer' ambiguity.
Most of it came from something worse &#8212; the strong association of
the term &#8216; free software' with hostility to intellectual property
rights, communism, and other ideas hardly likely to endear themselves
to an MIS [management information systems] manager.&#8221;<en>32</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="32">
		<number>32</number>
		<note>
			Eric S. Raymond, &#8220; The Revenge of the Hackers,&#8221; in Chris
DiBona, Sam Ockman, and Mark Stone, eds., <i>Open Sources: Voices from
the Open Source Revolution</i> (Sebastopol, CA: O'Reilly &amp;
Associates, 1999), p. 212.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="132">
	<ocn>132</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One response to this issue was the rebranding of free software as
&#8220; open-source&#8221; software. A number of leading free software
programmers, most notably Bruce Perens, launched an initiative to set
forth a consensus definition of software that would be called &#8220;
opensource.&#8221; At the time, Perens was deeply involved with a
community of hackers in developing a version of Linux known as the
Debian GNU/Linux distribution. Perens and other leading hackers not
only wanted to shed the off-putting political dimensions of &#8220;
free software,&#8221; they wanted to help people deal with the
confusing proliferation of licenses. A lot of software claimed to be
free, but who could really tell what that meant when the terms were so
complicated and legalistic?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="133">
	<ocn>133</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Open Source Initiative, begun in 1998, helped solve this problem by
enumerating criteria that it considered significant in judging a
program to be &#8220; open.&#8221;<en>33</en> Its criteria, drawn from
the Debian community, helped standardize and stabilize the definition
of open-source software. Unlike the GPL, permissive software licenses
such as BSD and MIT <i>allow</i> a program to be freely copied,
modified, and distributed but don't <i>require</i> it. A programmer can
choose to make a proprietary derivative without violating the license.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="33">
		<number>33</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.opensource.org">http://www.opensource.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="134">
	<ocn>134</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Open Source Initiative has focused more on the practical, technical
merits of software than on the moral or political concerns that have
consumed Stallman. Free software, as Stallman conceived it, is about
building a cohesive moral community of programmers dedicated to &#8220;
freedom.&#8221; The backers of open-source software are not necessarily
hostile to those ideals but are more interested in building reliable,
marketable software and improving business performance. As Elliot
Maxwell described the free software/open source schism:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="135">
	<ocn>135</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		[S]upporters of the Open Source Initiative were willing to acknowledge
a role for proprietary software and unwilling to ban any link between
open-source software and proprietary software. Richard Stallman aptly
characterized the differences: &#8220; We disagree on the basic
principles but agree more or less on the practical recommendations. So
we can and do work together on many specific
projects.&#8221;<en>34</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="34">
		<number>34</number>
		<note>
			Elliot Maxwell, citing Wikipedia entry on &#8220; Open Source
Movement,&#8221; in &#8220; Open Standards Open Source and Open
Innovation,&#8221; in <i>Innovations: Technology, Governance,
Globalization</i> 1, no. 3 (Summer 2006), p. 134, note 56.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="136">
	<ocn>136</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The philosophical rift between free software and open-source software
amounts to a &#8220; friendly schism,&#8221; a set of divergent
approaches that has been bridged in some respects by
language.<en>35</en> Observers often use the acronym FOSS to refer to
both free software and open-source software, or sometimes FLOSS &#8212;
the L stands for the French word <i>libre</i>, which avoids the double
meaning of the English word <i>free</i>. Whatever term is used, free
and open-source software has become a critical tool for making online
marketplaces more competitive, and for creating open, accessible spaces
for experimentation. In his classic essay, &#8220; The Cathedral and
the Bazaar,&#8221; Eric Raymond explains how the licenses help elicit
important noneconomic, personal energies:
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="35">
		<number>35</number>
		<note>
			Richard Stallman has outlined his problems with the &#8220; open
source&#8221; definition of software development in an essay, &#8220;
Why &#8216; Open Source' Misses the Point of Free Software,&#8221;
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-thepoint.html">http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-thepoint.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="137">
	<ocn>137</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The Linux world behaves in many respects like a free market or an
ecology, a collection of selfish agents attempting to maximize utility
which in the process produces a selfcorrecting spontaneous order more
elaborate and efficient than any amount of central planning could have
achieved. . . . The utility function Linux hackers are maximizing is
not classically economic, but is the intangible of their own ego
satisfaction and reputation among other hackers.<en>36</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="36">
		<number>36</number>
		<note>
			Eric Raymond, &#8220; The Cathedral and the Bazaar,&#8221; available
at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ar01s11.html">http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar/cathedral-bazaar/ar01s11.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="138">
	<ocn>138</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It turns out that an accessible collaborative process, FOSS, can elicit
passions and creativity that entrenched markets often cannot. In this
respect, FOSS is more than a type of freely usable software; it
reunites two vectors of human behavior that economists have long
considered separate, and points to the need for new, more integrated
theories of economic and social behavior.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="139">
	<ocn>139</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		FOSS represents a new breed of &#8220; social production,&#8221; one
that draws upon social energies that neoclassical economists have long
discounted or ignored. It mobilizes the personal passions and moral
idealism of individuals, going beyond the overt economic incentives
that economists consider indispensable to wealth creation. The
eighteenth-century economist Adam Smith would be pleased. He realized,
in his 1776 book <i>The Wealth of Nations</i>, that people are
naturally given to &#8220; truck, barter and exchange&#8221; &#8212;
but he also recognized, in his earlier <i>The Theory of Moral
Sentiments</i>, written in 1759, that people are motivated by deep
impulses of human sympathy and morality. Neoclassical economists have
long segregated these as two divergent classes of human behavior,
regarding altruism and social sympathies as subordinate to the
rational, utility-maximizing, selfserving behavior. FOSS embodies a new
synthesis &#8212; and a challenge to economists to rethink their crude
model of human behavior, <i>Homo economicus</i>. Free software may have
started as mere software, but it has become an existence proof that
individual and collective goals, and the marketplace and the commons,
are not such distinct arenas.<en>37</en> They are tightly intertwined,
but in ways we do not fully understand. This is a golden thread that
will reappear in later chapters.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="37">
		<number>37</number>
		<note>
			I am grateful to Nicholas Gruen for this insight, taken from his
essay &#8220; Geeks Bearing Gifts: Open Source Software and Its
Enemies,&#8221; in <i>Policy</i> 21, no. 2 (Winter 2005), pp.
39&#8211;48.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="140">
	<ocn>140</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Red Hat, a company founded in 1993 by Robert Young, was the first to
recognize the potential of selling a custom version (or &#8220;
distribution&#8221;) of GNU/Linux as a branded product, along with
technical support. A few years later, IBM became one of the first large
corporations to recognize the social realities of GNU/Linux and its
larger strategic and competitive implications in the networked
environment. In 1998 IBM presciently saw that the new software
development ecosystem was becoming far too variegated and robust for
any single company to dominate. It understood that its proprietary
mainframe software could not dominate the burgeoning, diversified
Internet-driven marketplace, and so the company adopted the open-source
Apache Web server program in its new line of WebSphere business
software.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="141">
	<ocn>141</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was a daring move that began to bring the corporate and open-source
worlds closer together. Two years later, in 2000, IBM announced that it
would spend $1 billion to help develop GNU/Linux for its customer base.
IBM shrewdly realized that its customers wanted to slash costs,
overcome system incompatibilities, and avoid expensive technology
&#8220; lock-ins&#8221; to single vendors. GNU/Linux filled this need
well. IBM also realized that GNU/Linux could help it compete against
Microsoft. By assigning its property rights to the commons, IBM could
eliminate expensive property rights litigation, entice other companies
to help it improve the code (they could be confident that IBM could not
take the code private), and unleash a worldwide torrent of creative
energy focused on GNU/Linux. Way ahead of the curve, IBM decided to
reposition itself for the emerging networked marketplace by making
money through tech service and support, rather than through proprietary
software alone.<en>38</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="38">
		<number>38</number>
		<note>
			Andrew Leonard, &#8220; How Big Blue Fell for Linux,&#8221;
Salon.com, September 12, 2000, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.salon.com/tech/fsp/2000/09/12/chapter_7_part_one.print.html">http://www.salon.com/tech/fsp/2000/09/12/chapter_7_part_one.print.html</link>&gt;.
The competitive logic behind IBM's moves are explored in Pamela
Samuelson, &#8220; IBM's Pragmatic Embrace of Open Source,&#8221;
<i>Communications of the ACM</i> 49, no. 21 (October 2006), and Robert
P. Merges, &#8220; A New Dynamism in the Public Domain,&#8221;
<i>University of Chicago Law Review</i> 71, no. 183 (Winter 2004).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="142">
	<ocn>142</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was not long before other large tech companies realized the benefits
of going open source. Amazon and eBay both saw that they could not
affordably expand their large computer infrastructures without
converting to GNU/Linux. GNU/Linux is now used in everything from
Motorola cell phones to NASA supercomputers to laptop computers. In
2005, <i>BusinessWeek</i> magazine wrote, &#8220; Linux may bring about
the greatest power shift in the computer industry since the birth of
the PC, because it lets companies replace expensive proprietary systems
with cheap commodity servers.&#8221;<en>39</en> As many as one-third of
the programmers working on open-source projects are corporate
employees, according to a 2002 survey.<en>40</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="39">
		<number>39</number>
		<note>
			Steve Hamm, &#8220; Linux Inc.,&#8221; <i>BusinessWeek</i>, January
31, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="40">
		<number>40</number>
		<note>
			Cited by Elliot Maxwell in &#8220; Open Standards Open Source and
Open Innovation,&#8221; note 80, Berlecon Research, <i>Free/Libre Open
Source Software: Survey and Study &#8212; Firms' Open Source
Activities: Motivations and Policy Implications</i>, FLOSS Final
Report, Part 2, at www.berlecon.de/studien/downloads/200207FLOSS
_Activities.pdf.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="143">
	<ocn>143</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		With faster computing speeds and cost savings of 50 percent or more on
hardware and 20 percent on software, GNU/Linux has demonstrated the
value proposition of the commons. Open source demonstrated that it can
be cheaper and more efficacious to collaborate in the production of a
shared resource based on common standards than to strictly buy and own
it as private property.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="144">
	<ocn>144</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But how does open source work without a conventional market apparatus?
The past few years have seen a proliferation of sociological and
economic theories about how open-source communities create value. One
formulation, by Rishab Ghosh, compares free software development to a
&#8220; cooking pot,&#8221; in which you can give a little to the pot
yet take a lot &#8212; with no one else being the poorer. &#8220;
Value&#8221; is not measured economically at the point of transaction,
as in a market, but in the nonmonetary <i>flow</i> of value that a
project elicits (via volunteers) and generates (through shared
software).<en>41</en> Another important formulation, which we will
revisit later, comes from Harvard law professor Yochai Benkler, who has
written that the Internet makes it cheap and easy to access expertise
anywhere on the network, rendering conventional forms of corporate
organization costly and cumbersome for many functions. Communities
based on social trust and reciprocity are capable of mobilizing
creativity and commitment in ways that market incentives often cannot
&#8212; and this can have profound economic implications.<en>42</en>
Benkler's analysis helps explain how a global corps of volunteers could
create an operating system that, in many respects, outperforms software
created by a well-paid army of Microsoft employees.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="41">
		<number>41</number>
		<note>
			Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, &#8220; Cooking Pot Markets and Balanced Value
Flows,&#8221; in Rishab Aiyer Ghosh, ed., <i>CODE: Collaborative
Ownership and the Digital Economy</i> (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2005),
pp. 153&#8211;68.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="42">
		<number>42</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Benkler, &#8220; Coase's Penguin, or Linux and the Nature
of the Firm,&#8221; <i>Yale Law Journal</i> 112, no. 369 (2002);
Benkler, &#8220; &#8216; Sharing Nicely': On Shareable Goods and the
Emergence of Sharing as a Modality of Economic Production,&#8221; Yale
Law Journal 114, no. 273 (2004).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="145">
	<ocn>145</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A funny thing happened to free and open-source software as it matured.
It became hip. It acquired a cultural cachet that extends well beyond
the cloistered precincts of computing. &#8220; Open source&#8221; has
become a universal signifier for any activity that is participatory,
collaborative, democratic, and accountable. Innovators within
filmmaking, politics, education, biological research, and drug
development, among other fields, have embraced the term to describe
their own attempts to transform hidebound, hierarchical systems into
open, accessible, and distributed meritocracies. Open source has become
so much of a cultural meme &#8212; a self-replicating symbol and idea
&#8212; that when the Bikram yoga franchise sought to shut down
unlicensed uses of its yoga techniques, dissident yoga teachers
organized themselves into a nonprofit that they called Open Source Yoga
Unity. To tweak the supremacy of Coca-Cola and Pepsi, culture jammers
even developed nonproprietary recipes for a cola drink and beer called
&#8220; open source cola&#8221; and &#8220; open source
beer.&#8221;<en>43</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="43">
		<number>43</number>
		<note>
			Open Source Yoga Unity, &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.yogaunity.org">http://www.yogaunity.org</link>&gt;;
open-source cola, &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://alfredo.octavio.net/soft_drink_formula.pdf">http://alfredo.octavio.net/soft_drink_formula.pdf</link>&gt;;
open-source beer, Vores OI (Danish for &#8220; Our Beer&#8221;),
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vores_%C3%981">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vores_%C3%981</link>&gt;.
See also &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://freebeer.org/blog">http://freebeer.org/blog</link>&gt;
and &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.project21.ch/freebeer">http://www.project21.ch/freebeer</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="146">
	<ocn>146</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman's radical acts of dissent in the 1980s, regarded with
bemusement and incredulity at the time, have become, twenty-five years
later, a widely embraced ideal. Small-/{d}/ democrats everywhere invoke
open source to lambaste closed and corrupt political systems and to
express their aspirations for political transcendence. People invoke
open source to express a vision of life free from overcommercialization
and corporate manipulation. The term enables one to champion bracing
democratic ideals without seeming na&#239;ve or flaky because, after
all, free software is solid stuff. Moreover, despite its image as the
software of choice for granola-loving hippies, free and open-source
software is entirely compatible with the commercial marketplace. How
suspect can open source be when it has been embraced by the likes of
IBM, Hewlett-Packard, and Sun Microsystems?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="147">
	<ocn>147</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The appeal of &#8220; openness&#8221; has become so great that it is
sometimes difficult to recognize that <i>limits</i> on openness are not
only necessary but desirable. The dark side of openness is the spam
that clogs the Internet, the ability to commit fraud and identity
theft, and the opportunities for disturbed adults to prey sexually upon
children. Still, the virtues of an open environment are undeniable;
what is more difficult is negotiating the proper levels of openness for
a given realm of online life.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="148">
	<ocn>148</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Nearly twenty years after the introduction of the GPL, free software
has expanded phenomenally. It has given rise to countless FOSS software
applications, many of which are major viral hits such as Thunderbird
(e-mail), Firefox (Web browser), Ubuntu (desktop GNU/Linux), and
Asterisk (Internet telephony). FOSS has set in motion, directly or
indirectly, some powerful viral spirals such as the Creative Commons
licenses, the iCommons/free culture movement, the Science Commons
project, the open educational resource movement, and a new breed of
open-business ventures, Yet Richard Stallman sees little connection
between these various &#8220; open&#8221; movements and free software;
he regards &#8220; open&#8221; projects as too vaguely defined to
guarantee that their work is truly &#8220; free&#8221; in the free
software sense of the term. &#8220; Openness and freedom are not the
same thing,&#8221; said Stallman, who takes pains to differentiate free
software from open-source software, emphasizing the political freedoms
that lie at the heart of the former.<en>44</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="44">
		<number>44</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Richard Stallman, January 21, 2008.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="149">
	<ocn>149</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Any revolution is not just about new tools and social practices,
however. It is also about developing new ways of understanding the
world. People must begin to <i>see</i> things in a new perspective and
<i>talk</i> with a new vocabulary. In the 1990s, as Disney, Time
Warner, Viacom, and other media giants realized how disruptive the
Internet might be, the public was generally oblivious that it might
have a direct stake in the outcome of Internet and copyright policy
battles. Big Media was flexing its muscles to institute all sorts of
self-serving, protectionist fixes &#8212; copy-protection technologies,
broader copyright privileges, one-sided software and Web licenses, and
much more &#8212; and most public-interest groups and civic
organizations were nowhere to be seen.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="150">
	<ocn>150</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Fortunately, a small but fierce and keenly intelligent corps of
progressive copyright scholars were beginning to discover one another
in the 1990s. Just as the hacker community had had to recognize the
enclosure of its commons of software code, and embrace the GPL and
other licenses as defensive remedies, so progressive copyright scholars
and tech activists were grappling with how to defend against a related
set of enclosures, The relentless expansion of copyright law was
eroding huge swaths of the public domain and fair use doctrine.
Tackling this problem required asking a question that few in the legal
or political establishments considered worth anyone's time &#8212;
namely, What's so valuable about the public domain, anyway?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="151">
	<ocn>151</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		2 THE DISCOVERY OF THE PUBLIC DOMAIN
	</text>
</object>
<object id="152">
	<ocn>152</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>How a band of irregulars demonstrated that the public domain is
enormously valuable after all.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="153">
	<ocn>153</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For decades, the public domain was regarded as something of a
wasteland, a place where old books, faded posters, loopy music from the
early twentieth century, and boring government reports go to die. It
was a dump on the outskirts of respectable culture. If anything in the
public domain had any value, someone would sell it for money. Or so
goes the customary conception of the public domain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="154">
	<ocn>154</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Jack Valenti, the longtime head of the Motion Picture Association of
America, once put it this way: &#8220; A public domain work is an
orphan. No one is responsible for its life. But everyone exploits its
use, until that time certain when it becomes soiled and haggard, barren
of its previous virtues. Who, then, will invest the funds to renovate
and nourish its future life when no one owns it?&#8221;<en>45</en>
(Valenti was arguing that longer copyright terms would give film
studios the incentive to digitize old celluloid films that would
otherwise enter the public domain and physically disintegrate.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="45">
		<number>45</number>
		<note>
			Jack Valenti, &#8220; A Plea for Keeping Alive the U.S. Film
Industry's Competitive Energy, &#8221; testimony on behalf of the
Motion Picture Association of America to extend the term of copyright
protection, Senate Judiciary Committee, September 20, 1995, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://instructors.cwrl.utexas.edu/~martin/Valenti.pdf">http://instructors.cwrl.utexas.edu/~martin/Valenti.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="155">
	<ocn>155</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the great, unexplained mysteries of copyright law is how a
raffish beggar grew up to be King Midas. How did a virtually ignored
realm of culture &#8212; little studied and undertheorized&#8212;
become a subject of intense scholarly interest and great practical
importance to commoners and businesses alike? How did the actual value
of the public domain become known? The idea that the public domain
might be valuable in its own right &#8212; and therefore be worth
protecting &#8212; was a fringe idea in the 1990s and before. So how
did a transformation of legal and cultural meaning occur?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="156">
	<ocn>156</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unlike Richard Stallman's crusade to create a sustainable public domain
of code,<en>*3</en> the discovery of the public domain for cultural
works was not led by a single protagonist or group. It emerged over
time through a loose network of legal scholars, techies, activists, and
some businesses, who were increasingly concerned about worrisome
expansions of copyright and patent law. Slowly, a conversation that was
occurring in a variety of academic and tech communities began to
intensify, and then coalesce into a more coherent story.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*3">
		<symbol>*3</symbol>
		<note>
			Free software constitutes a &#8220; sustainable public domain&#8221;
because the General Public License protects the code and its
derivatives from private appropriation yet otherwise makes the code
free for anyone to use. The public domain, by contrast, is vulnerable
to private appropriation in practice if a company has sufficient market
power (e.g., Disney's appropriation of fairy tales) or if it uses the
public domain to make derivative works and then copyrights them (e.g.,
vendors who mix government data with proprietary enhancements).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="157">
	<ocn>157</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Scholarship about copyright law is not exactly gripping stuff. But it
has played an important role in the viral spiral. Before anyone could
begin to imagine how an online commons could be structured and
protected, someone needed to explain how intellectual property law had
become &#8220; uncontrolled to the point of recklessness&#8221; &#8212;
as law professor David Lange put it in 1981, well before the
proprietarian explosion of the late 1980s and 1990s.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="158">
	<ocn>158</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Fortunately, a new breed of public-spirited professors was reaching a
critical mass just as the Internet was becoming culturally important.
These professors, collaborating with programmers and activists, were
among the first to understand the ways in which copyright law,
historically an arcane backwater of law, was starting to pose serious
threats to democracy-loving citizens and Internet users. The full
complexity of this legal literature over the past generation cannot be
unpacked here, but it is important to understand how progressive
copyright scholarship played a critical role in identifying dangerous
trends in law and technology &#8212; and in constructing a new
narrative for what copyright law should be.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="159">
	<ocn>159</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This legal scholarship reconceptualized the public domain&#8212; then a
vague notion of nonproperty &#8212; and developed it into an
affirmative theory. It gave the public domain sharper definition and
empirical grounding. Thinkers like Yochai Benkler (Harvard Law School),
Lawrence Lessig (Stanford Law), and James Boyle (Duke Law) developed
bracing new theories that recognize the power of social communities,
and not just the individual, in the creative process. Others, such as
Julie Cohen (Georgetown Law Center) and Pamela Samuelson (Boalt Hall),
have respectively explored the need to develop a new social theory of
creative practice<en>46</en> and the theoretical challenges of &#8220;
mapping&#8221; the public domain.<en>47</en> All of this thinking,
mostly confined to scholarly workshops, law reviews, and tech journals,
served as a vital platform for imagining the commons in general and the
Creative Commons in particular.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="46">
		<number>46</number>
		<note>
			Julie E. Cohen, &#8220; Copyright, Commodification and Culture:
Locating the Public Domain,&#8221; in Lucie Guibaut and P. Bernt
Hugenholtz eds. <i>The Future of the Public Domain: Identifying the
Commons in Information Law</i> (The Netherlands: Kluwer Law
International, 2006), pp. 121&#8211;66.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="47">
		<number>47</number>
		<note>
			Pamela Samuelson, &#8220; Challenges in Mapping the Public
Domain,&#8221; in Guibault and Hugenholtz, eds. <i>The Future of the
Public Domain</i>, pp. 7&#8211;26.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="160">
	<ocn>160</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Elusive Quest for &#8220; Balance&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="161">
	<ocn>161</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Historically, copyright has been regarded as a &#8220; bargain&#8221;
between the public and authors. The public gives authors a set of
monopoly rights to help them sell their works and earn rewards for
their hard work. In return, the public gets the marketable output of
creators&#8212; books, films, music &#8212; and certain rights of free
access and use. The primary justification of copyright law is not to
protect the fortunes of authors; it is to promote new creative works
and innovation. By giving authors a property right in their works
&#8212; and so helping them to sell those works in the marketplace
&#8212; copyright law aims to promote the &#8220; progress of human
knowledge.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="162">
	<ocn>162</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That's the author's side of the bargain. The public's stake is to have
certain limited rights to use copyrighted works. Under the &#8220; fair
use&#8221; doctrine (or &#8220; fair dealing&#8221; in some countries),
people are entitled to excerpt copyrighted works for noncommercial
purposes such as journalism, scholarship, reviews, and personal use.
People are also entitled to resell the physical copies of copyrighted
works such as books and videos. (This right is granted under the
&#8220; first sale doctrine,&#8221; which enables libraries and DVD
rental stores to exist.) The public also has the right to use
copyrighted works for free after the term of a copyright has expired
&#8212; that is, after a work has &#8220; entered the public
domain.&#8221; This general scheme is said to establish a balance in
copyright law between the private rights of authors and the needs of
the public and future authors.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="163">
	<ocn>163</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This &#8220; balance&#8221; has been more rhetorical than real,
however. For decades, critics have complained that the public's side of
the copyright bargain is being abridged. Content industries have
steadily expanded their rights under copyright law at the expense of
the public's modest access rights.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="164">
	<ocn>164</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What is notable about the long history of seeking &#8220;
balance&#8221; in copyright law is the singular failure of critics to
make much headway (until recently) in redressing the problem. The
public's interests in copyright law &#8212; and those of authors'
&#8212; have never been given that much attention or respect. From the
authors of eighteenth-century England, whose formal rights were in
practice controlled by booksellers, to the rhythm-and-blues singers of
the 1940s whose music was exploited for a pittance by record labels, to
academics whose copyrights must often be ceded to commercial journals,
authors have generally gotten the short end of the stick. No surprise
here. Business practices and copyright policy have usually been crafted
by the wealthiest, most politically connected players: book publishers,
film studios, record labels, broadcasters, cable operators, news
organizations. The public's lack of organized political power was
reflected in its lack of a coherent language for even describing its
own interests in copyright law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="165">
	<ocn>165</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For most of the twentieth century, the forging of copyright law was
essentially an insider contest among various copyright-dependent
industries for market advantage. Congress hosted a process to oversee
the squabbling and negotiation, and nudged the players now and again.
This is what happened in the fifteen-year run-up to congressional
enactment of the Copyright Act of 1976, for example. For the most part,
Congress has preferred to ratify the compromises that industry players
hammer out among themselves. The unorganized public has been treated as
an ignorant bystander.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="166">
	<ocn>166</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Naturally, this has strengthened the hand of commercial interests.
Copyright disputes could be argued within a congenial intellectual
framework and closely managed by a priesthood of lawyer-experts,
industry lobbyists, and friendly politicians. The interests of citizens
and consumers, blessedly absent from most debates, could be safely
bracketed as marginal.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="167">
	<ocn>167</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But letting industries negotiate their own solutions has its own
problems, as Professor Jessica Litman has pointed out: &#8220; Each
time we rely on current stakeholders to agree on a statutory scheme,
they produce a scheme designed to protect themselves against the rest
of us. Its rigidity leads to its breakdown; the statute's drafters have
incorporated too few general principles to guide courts in effecting
repairs.&#8221;<en>48</en> By letting the affected industries negotiate
a series of fact specific solutions, each reflecting that moment in
history, Congress has in effect let copyright law become an
agglomeration of complex and irregular political compromises &#8212;
or, as some might say, a philosophically incoherent mess.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="48">
		<number>48</number>
		<note>
			Jessica Litman, <i>Digital Copyright</i> (Amherst, NY: Prometheus,
2000), p. 62.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="168">
	<ocn>168</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps because it is so attentive to its industry benefactors,
Congress has generally regarded the fair use doctrine and the public
domain as a sideshow. Under the Copyright Act of 1976, for example,
fair use is set forth only as an affirmative defense to accusations of
copyright infringement, not as an affirmative right. Moreover, fair use
is defined by four general statutory guidelines, which courts have
proceeded to interpret in wildly inconsistent ways. In real life,
Lawrence Lessig has quipped, fair use amounts to &#8220; the right to
hire a lawyer.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="169">
	<ocn>169</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Congress has shown a similarly low regard for the public domain. After
extending the term of copyright law eleven times since 1961, the
copyright monopoly now lasts for an author's lifetime plus seventy
years (ninety-five years for corporations). For Congress, writes
Professor Tyler Ochoa, &#8220; allowing works to enter the public
domain was something to be condemned, or at least only grudgingly
tolerated, rather than something to be celebrated.&#8221;<en>49</en>
Congress's most hostile act toward the public domain &#8212; and to the
public's rights of access &#8212; was the elimination of the
registration requirement for copyright protection.<en>50</en> Since
1978, copyright holders have not had to formally register their works
in order to receive protection. Doodle on a scratch pad, record your
guitar strumming, and it's automatically copyrighted.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="49">
		<number>49</number>
		<note>
			Tyler Ochoa, &#8220; Origins and Meanings of the Public
Domain,&#8221; <i>Dayton Law Review</i> 28, no. 215 (2002).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="50">
		<number>50</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig explains the impact of eliminating the copyright
registration requirement in Lessig, <i>Free Culture</i> (New York:
Penguin, 2004), pp. 222&#8211;23.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="170">
	<ocn>170</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Sounds great . . . but this provision had especially nasty consequences
once the digital revolution kicked into high gear in the 1990s, because
every digital byte was born, by default, as a form of property.
Automatic copyright protection dramatically reversed the previous
default, where most everything was born in the public domain and was
free to use unless registered. Today, anyone wishing to reuse a work
legally has to get permission and possibly pay a fee. To make matters
worse, since there is no longer a central registry of who owns what
copyrighted works, it is often impossible to locate the copyright
holder. Such books, films, and images are known as &#8220; orphan
works.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="171">
	<ocn>171</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Thirty years ago, the idea of throwing a net of copyright over all
information and culture was not alarming in the least. As Jessica
Litman recalled, &#8220; When I started teaching in 1984, we were at
what was about to be the crest of a high-protectionist wave. That is,
if you looked at the scholarship being written then, people were
writing about how we should expand copyright protection, not only to
cover useful articles and fashions and semiconductor chips and computer
programs, but also recombinant DNA. The Chicago School of scholarship
was beginning to be quite influential. People were reconceiving
copyright in Chicago Law and Economics terms, and things like fair use
were seen to be &#8216; free riding.' &#8221; <en>51</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="51">
		<number>51</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Jessica Litman, November 16, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="172">
	<ocn>172</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet the effects of this protectionist surge, at least for the short
term, were muted for a number of reasons. First, corporate lobbying on
copyright issues was extremely low-key. &#8220; I started going to
congressional hearings in 1986,&#8221; said Litman, &#8220; and no one
was there. There were no members of Congress; there was no press. The
witnesses would come and they'd talk, and staffers would take notes.
And that would be it.&#8221;<en>52</en> The big-ticket lobbying &#8212;
receptions, slick reports, legislative junkets, private movie
screenings with Jack Valenti &#8212; did not really begin to kick in
until the late 1980s and early 1990s, when trade associations for every
conceivable faction stepped up their Washington advocacy. When the
Internet's commercial implications became clear in the mid-1990s,
copyright-dependent industries ratcheted up their campaign
contributions and lobbying to another level entirely.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="52">
		<number>52</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="173">
	<ocn>173</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The protectionist surge in copyright law in the 1980s was mitigated by
two stalwart public servants: Representative Robert Kastenmeier of
Wisconsin, the chair of the House judiciary subcommittee that oversaw
copyright legislation, and Dorothy Schrader, the longtime general
counsel of the U.S. Copyright Office. Both considered it their job to
protect the public from grasping copyright industries. When Kastenmeier
lost his reelection bid in 1990 and Schrader retired in 1994, the film,
music, broadcast, cable, and publishing industries would henceforth
have staunch allies&#8212; sometimes their former lawyer-lobbyists
&#8212; in key congressional staff positions and copyright policy jobs.
Government officials no longer saw their jobs as protecting consumers
from overbearing, revenuehungry media industries, but as helping
copyright owners chase down and prosecute &#8220; pirates.&#8221;
Copyright law was recast as a form of industrial policy &#8212; a way
to retain American jobs and improve the U.S. balance of trade &#8212;
not as an instrument that affects social equity, consumer rights, and
democratic values.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="174">
	<ocn>174</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Ironically, the mercantilist view of copyright was gaining ground at
precisely the time when the public's stake in copyright law was
growing. An explosion of consumer electronics in the 1980s was giving
the public new reasons to care about their fair use rights and the
public domain. The introduction of the videocassette recorder, the
proliferation of cable television, personal computers, software and
electronics devices, and then the introduction of the Web in 1993 all
invited people to control their own creative and cultural lives. The
new media meant that the baroque encrustations of copyright law that
had accumulated over decades were now starting to interfere with
people's daily activities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="175">
	<ocn>175</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet rather than negotiate a new copyright bargain to take account of
the public's needs and interests, copyright industries stepped up their
demands on Congress to ram through even stronger copyright, trademark,
and patent privileges for themselves. Their basic goal was, and
generally remains, a more perfect control over all downstream uses of
works. Content industries generally do not concede that there is any
presumptive &#8220; free use zone&#8221; of culture, notwithstanding
the existence of the fair use doctrine. Works that citizens may regard
as fair-use entitlements industry often regards as chunks of
information that no one has yet figured out how to turn into marketable
property.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="176">
	<ocn>176</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Most content industries, then and now, do not see any &#8220;
imbalance&#8221; in copyright law; they prefer to talk in different
terms entirely. They liken copyrighted works to personal property or
real estate, as in &#8220; and you wouldn't steal a CD or use my house
without permission, would you?&#8221; A copyrighted work is analogized
to a finite physical object, But the essential point about works in the
digital age is that they can't be &#8220; used up&#8221; in the same
way that physical objects can. They are &#8220; nondepletable&#8221;
and &#8220; nonrival,&#8221; as economists put it. A digital work can
be reproduced and shared for virtually nothing, without depriving
another person of it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="177">
	<ocn>177</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Nonetheless, a new narrative was being launched &#8212; copyrighted
works as property. The idea of copyright law reflecting a policy
bargain between the public and authors/corporations was being
supplanted by a new story that casts copyright as property that is
nearly absolute in scope and virtually perpetual in term. In hindsight,
for those scholars who cared enough to see, a disquieting number of
federal court cases were strengthening the hand of copyright holders at
the expense of the public. James Boyle, in a much-cited essay, called
this the &#8220; second enclosure movement&#8221; &#8212; the first
one, of course, being the English enclosure movement of common lands in
medieval times and into the nineteenth century.<en>53</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="53">
		<number>53</number>
		<note>
			James Boyle, &#8220; The Second Enclosure Movement and the
Construction of the Public Domain,&#8221; <i>Law and Contemporary
Problems</i> 66 (Winter&#8211;Spring 2003), pp. 33&#8211;74, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?66+Law+&amp;+Contemp.+Probs.+33+">http://www.law.duke.edu/shell/cite.pl?66+Law+&amp;+Contemp.+Probs.+33+</link>&gt;
(WinterSpring+2003).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="178">
	<ocn>178</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Enclosure took many forms. Copyright scholar Peter Jaszi recalls,
&#8220; Sometime in the mid-1980s, the professoriate started getting
worried about software copyright.&#8221;<en>54</en> It feared that
copyrights for software would squelch competition and prevent others
from using existing code to innovate. This battle was lost, however.
Several years later, the battle entered round two as copyright scholars
and programmers sought to protect reverse-engineering as fair use. This
time, they won.<en>55</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="54">
		<number>54</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Peter Jaszi, October 17, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="55">
		<number>55</number>
		<note>
			<i>Sega Enterprises v. Accolade</i>, 977 F.2d 1510 (9th Cir. 1993).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="179">
	<ocn>179</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Then, in 1985, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that it was not fair use
for the <i>Nation</i> magazine to excerpt three hundred words from
President Ford's 200,000-word memoir. The <i>Nation</i> had acquired a
copy of Ford's book before its publication and published an article of
highlights, including a handful of quotations. The material, derived
from Ford's official duties as president, was of obvious value to the
democratic process. But by a 6-3 margin the Court held that the
<i>Nation</i> had violated Ford's copyright.<en>56</en> The proprietary
tilt of copyright law only intensified in the following years.
Companies claimed copyrights for all sorts of dubious forms of &#8220;
originality&#8221; &#8212; the page numbers of federal court decisions,
the names and numbers in telephone directories, and facts compiled in
databases.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="56">
		<number>56</number>
		<note>
			<i>Harper &amp; Row v. Nation Enterprises</i>, 471 U.S. 539 (1985).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="180">
	<ocn>180</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Great Expansion of Intellectual Property
	</text>
</object>
<object id="181">
	<ocn>181</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		These expansions of proprietary control in the 1980s proved to be a
prelude to much more aggressive expansions of copyright, patent, and
trademark law in the 1990s. Congress and the courts were granting
property rights to all sorts of things that had previously been
considered unowned or unownable. The Supreme Court had opened this door
in 1980 when it recognized the patentability of a genetically modified
bacterium. This led to ethically and economically dubious patents for
genes and life-forms. Then businesses began to win patents for &#8220;
business methods&#8221; &#8212; ideas and theoretical systems &#8212;
that would otherwise be in the public domain. Mathematical algorithms,
if embedded in software, could now be owned. Amazon.com's patent on
&#8220; one-click shopping&#8221; on its Web site became the symbol of
this trend. Boat manufacturers won a special <i>sui generis</i>
(&#8220;in a class by itself &#8221; ) form of protection for the
design of boat hulls in 1998. Celebrities and talent agencies prevailed
upon state legislatures to extend the scope of ownership of celebrity
names and likenesses, which had long been considered in the public
domain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="182">
	<ocn>182</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Companies developed still other strategies to assert greater
proprietary control over works. Software companies began to rely upon
mass-market licenses &#8212; often referred to as &#8220; shrink
wrap&#8221; contracts and &#8220; click-through&#8221; Web agreements
&#8212; to expand their rights at the expense of consumers and the
public domain. Various computer companies sought to enact a model state
law that, in Samuelson's words, would &#8220; give themselves more
rights than intellectual property law would do and avoid the burdens of
public interest limitations.&#8221;<en>57</en> Consumers could in
effect be forced to surrender their fair use rights, the right to
criticize the product or their right to sue, because of a &#8220;
contract&#8221; they ostensibly agreed to.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="57">
		<number>57</number>
		<note>
			Samuelson, &#8220; Digital Information, Digital Networks, and the
Public Domain,&#8221; p. 92.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="183">
	<ocn>183</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Trademarks, originally designed to help people identify brands and
prevent fraud in the marketplace, acquired a new power in 1995 &#8212;
the ability to control public meanings. For years, large corporations
had wanted to extend the scope of their trademark protection to include
&#8220; dilution&#8221; &#8212; a fuzzy concept that would prohibit the
use of a trademark without permission, even for legitimate public
commentary or parody, if it &#8220; dilutes&#8221; the recognized
public associations and meanings of a trademark. For a decade or more,
Kastenmeier had prevented antidilution legislation from moving forward.
After Kastenmeier left Congress, the trademark lobby succeeded in
getting Congress to enact the legislation. This made it much easier for
Mattel to threaten people who did parodies of Barbie dolls. The
<i>Village Voice</i> could more credibly threaten the <i>Cape Cod
Voice</i> for trademark infringement. Wal-Mart could prevent others
from using &#8220; its&#8221; smiley-face logo (itself taken from the
cultural commons).<en>58</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="58">
		<number>58</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., David Bollier, <i>Brand Name Bullies: The Quest to Own
and Control Culture</i> (New York: Wiley, 2005).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="184">
	<ocn>184</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The election of Bill Clinton as president in 1992 gave content
industries new opportunities to expand their copyright privileges. The
Clinton administration launched a major policy effort to build what it
called the National Information Infrastructure (NII), more commonly
known as the Information Superhighway. Today, of course, we call it the
Internet. A task force of industry heavyweights was convened to
determine what policies should be adopted to help build the
NII.<en>59</en> Vice President Al Gore cast himself as a visionary
futurist and laid out astonishing scenarios for what the NII could
deliver: access to every book in the Library of Congress, the ability
of doctors to share medical information online, new strides against
inequality as everyone goes online.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="59">
		<number>59</number>
		<note>
			Jessica Litman has an excellent historical account of the NII
campaign in her book <i>Digital Copyright</i> (Amherst, NY: Prometheus,
2000).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="185">
	<ocn>185</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The NII project was a classic case of incumbent industries trying to
protect their profit centers. Executives and lobbyists associated with
broadcasting, film, and music were being asked how to structure the
Information Superhighway. Predictably, they came up with fantasies of
digital television with five hundred channels, programs to sell
products, and self-serving scenarios of even stronger copyright
protection and penalties. Few had any inkling of the transformative
power of open networks or the power of the sharing economy &#8212; and
if they did, the possibilities certainly were not appealing to them.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="186">
	<ocn>186</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One part of the NII campaign was a working group on intellectual
property headed by Bruce Lehman, a former congressional staffer,
lobbyist for the software industry, and commissioner of patents and
trademarks. The Lehman panel spent two years developing a sweeping set
of copyright policies for the Information Superhighway. When the
panel's report was released in September 1995, anyone who cared about
open culture and democracy was livid. The White Paper, as it was
called, recommended a virtual elimination of fair use rights in digital
content and broader rights over any copyrighted transmissions. It
called for the elimination of first-sale rights for digitally
transmitted documents (which would prevent the sharing of digital
files) and endorsed digital rights management systems for digital works
(in order to monitor and prosecute illegal sharing). The White Paper
even sought to reinterpret existing law so that transient copies in the
random-access memory of computers would be considered illegal unless
they had a license &#8212; essentially outlawing Web browsing without a
license. With visions of Soviet-style indoctrination, the document also
recommended an ambitious public education program to teach Americans to
properly respect copyright laws.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="187">
	<ocn>187</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Litman wrote a revealing history of the misbegotten NII project in her
book <i>Digital Copyright</i>. Her chapter title &#8220; Copyright
Lawyers Set Out to Colonize Cyberspace&#8221; says it all.<en>60</en>
Samuelson alerted the readers of <i>Wired</i> about the outrageous
proposals of the White Paper in her devastating January 1996 article
&#8220; The Copyright Grab.&#8221;<en>61</en> If the NII proposals are
enacted, warned Samuelson, &#8220; your traditional user rights to
browse, share or make private noncommercial copies of copyrighted works
will be rescinded. Not only that, your online service provider will be
forced to snoop through your files, ready to cut you off and turn you
in if it finds any unlicensed material there. The White Paper regards
digital technology as so threatening to the future of the publishing
industry that the public must be stripped of all the rights copyright
law has long recognized &#8212; including the rights of privacy. Vice
President Al Gore has promised that the National Information
Infrastructure will dramatically enhance public access to information;
now we find out that it will be available only on a pay-per-use
basis.&#8221;<en>62</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="60">
		<number>60</number>
		<note>
			Litman, <i>Digital Copyright</i>, pp. 89&#8211;100.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="61">
		<number>61</number>
		<note>
			Pamela Samuelson, &#8220; The Copyright Grab,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>,
January 1996.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="62">
		<number>62</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="188">
	<ocn>188</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The White Paper was not just an effort by Old Media to domesticate or
eliminate the freedoms emerging on the Information Superhighway; it
sought to set the stage for the internationalization of strict
copyright norms, so that American-style copyright law would prevail
around the world. To counter this effort, American University law
professor Peter Jaszi convened a group of law professors, library
organizations, and computer and consumer electronics makers, who
promptly organized themselves as the Digital Future Coalition (DFC),
the first broad-based coalition in support of the public's stake in
copyright law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="189">
	<ocn>189</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The DFC attacked the White Paper as a copyright-maximalist nightmare
and sought to rally civil liberties groups, Internet service providers,
and electronics manufacturers. With modest industry support, the DFC
was largely responsible for slowing progress on legislation that would
have enacted Lehman's proposals. As domestic opposition grew, Lehman
shrewdly decided to push for a new global copyright treaty that would
embody similar principles. In the end, however, the World Intellectual
Property Organization demurred.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="190">
	<ocn>190</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By that time, however, the terms of debate had been set, and there was
serious congressional momentum to adopt some variant of the White Paper
agenda. The ultimate result, enacted in October 1998, was the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), the crowning achievement of the
copyright-maximalist decade. It contained dozens of highly specific
provisos and qualifications to satisfy every special pleader. The law
in effect authorized companies to eliminate the public's fair use
rights in digital content by putting a &#8220; digital lock&#8221;
around the content, however weak. Circumventing the lock, providing the
software to do so, or even telling someone how to do so became a
criminal offense.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="191">
	<ocn>191</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The DMCA has been roundly denounced by software programmers, music
fans, and Internet users for prohibiting them from making personal
copies, fair use excerpts, and doing reverse engineering on software,
even with legally purchased products. Using digital rights management
systems sanctioned by the DMCA, for example, many CDs and DVDs are now
coded with geographic codes that prevent consumers from operating them
on devices on other continents. DVDs may contain code to prevent them
from running on Linux-based computers. Digital journals may &#8220;
expire&#8221; after a given period of time, wiping out library holdings
unless another payment is made. Digital textbooks may go blank at the
end of the school year, preventing their reuse or resale.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="192">
	<ocn>192</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Critics also argue that the DMCA gives large corporations a powerful
legal tool to thwart competition and interoperability. Some companies
programmed garage door openers and printer cartridges so that the
systems would not accept generic replacements (until a federal court
found this behavior anticompetitive). Naturally, this sort of behavior,
which the DMCA facilitates, lets companies avoid open competition on
open platforms with smaller companies and entrepreneurs. It also gives
companies a legal pretext for bullying Web site owners into taking down
copyrighted materials that may in fact be legal to use.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="193">
	<ocn>193</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In her excellent history of the political run-up to the DMCA, Litman
notes, &#8220; There is no overarching vision of the public interest
animating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. None. Instead, what we
have is what a variety of different private parties were able to
extract from each other in the course of an incredibly complicated
four-year multiparty negotiation.&#8221;<en>63</en> The DMCA represents
a new frontier of proprietarian control &#8212; the sanctioning of
technological locks that can unilaterally override the copyright
bargain. Companies asked themselves, Why rely on copyrights alone when
technology can embed even stricter controls into the very design of
products?
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="63">
		<number>63</number>
		<note>
			Litman, <i>Digital Copyright</i>, pp. 144&#8211;45.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="194">
	<ocn>194</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The year 1998 was an especially bad year for the public domain. Besides
enacting the trademark dilution bill and DMCA, the Walt Disney Company
and other large media corporations succeeded in their six-year campaign
to enact the Sonny Bono Copyright Term Extension Act.<en>64</en> The
legislation, named after the late House legislator and former husband
of the singer Cher, retroactively extended the terms of existing
copyrights by twenty years. As we will see in chapter 3, this law
became the improbable catalyst for a new commons movement.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="64">
		<number>64</number>
		<note>
			See Wikipedia entry for the Copyright Term Extension Act, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Bono_Copyright_Term_Extension_Act">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sonny_Bono_Copyright_Term_Extension_Act</link>&gt;.
See also <i>Eldred v. Ashcroft</i>, 537 U.S. 186 (2003), F. 3d 849
(2001).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="195">
	<ocn>195</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Confronting the Proprietarian Juggernaut
	</text>
</object>
<object id="196">
	<ocn>196</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If there was ever a need for independent scholarship on copyright law
and activism to challenge the new excesses, this was such a time. Fred
von Lohmann, senior staff attorney for the Electronic Frontier
Foundation in San Francisco, recalls, &#8220; Peggy Radin taught the
first cyber-law class at Stanford Law School in 1995, and I was her
research assistant. And at the end of that semester, I had read
everything that had ever been written about the intersection of the
Internet and the law &#8212; not just in the legal literature, but in
almost all the literature. It filled about two boxes, and that was it.
That was all there was.&#8221;<en>65</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="65">
		<number>65</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Fred von Lohmann, March 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="197">
	<ocn>197</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In about a dozen years, those two boxes of literature have grown into
many shelves and countless filing cabinets of case law and commentary.
Much of the legal scholarship was the fruit of a new generation of
copyright professors who rose to the challenge of the time. An earlier
generation of copyright scholars &#8212; Melville Nimmer, Alan Latman,
Paul Goldstein &#8212; were highly respected titans, but they also
enjoyed busy consulting practices with the various creative industries
that they wrote about. Protecting the public domain was not their
foremost concern.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="198">
	<ocn>198</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the 1980s, as law schools become more like graduate schools and less
like professional schools, copyright commentary began to get more
scholarly and independent of the industries it studied. People like
Pamela Samuelson, Peter Jaszi, Jerome H. Reichman, Jessica Litman, L.
Ray Patterson, and Wendy Gordon were among this cohort, who were soon
joined in the 1990s by a new wave of thinkers such as James Boyle,
Lawrence Lessig, Julie Cohen, Niva Elkin-Koren, and Yochai Benkler.
Still others, such as Rosemary Coombe and Keith Aoki, approached
copyright issues from cross-cultural and globalization perspectives.
These scholars were frankly hostile to the large copyright industries,
and greatly concerned with how the law was harming democracy, science,
culture, and consumers.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="199">
	<ocn>199</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A number of activist voices were also coming forward at this time to
challenge the proprietarian juggernaut. As the Internet became a
popular medium, ordinary people began to realize that the new copyright
laws were curtailing their creative freedoms and free speech rights.
The obscure complexities of copyright law started to become a far more
public and political issue. The pioneering activist organization was
the Electronic Frontier Foundation. EFF was founded in 1990 by tech
entrepreneur Mitch Kapor, the famed inventor of the Lotus 1-2-3
spreadsheet in the 1980s; John Perry Barlow, Grateful Dead lyricist and
hacker; and John Gilmore, a leading privacy/cryptography activist and
free software entrepreneur.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="200">
	<ocn>200</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The organization was oriented to hackers and cyberlibertarians, who
increasingly realized that they needed an organized presence to defend
citizen freedoms in cyberspace. (Barlow adapted the term
<i>cyberspace</i> from science-fiction writer William Gibson in 1990
and applied it to the then-unnamed cultural life on the Internet.)
Initially, the EFF was concerned with hacker freedom, individual
privacy, and Internet censorship. It later went through some growing
pains as it moved offices, changed directors, and sought to develop a
strategic focus for its advocacy and litigation. In more recent years,
EFF, now based in San Francisco, has become the leading litigator of
copyright, trademark, and Internet free expression issues. It also has
more than ten thousand members and spirited outreach programs to the
press and public.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="201">
	<ocn>201</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		John Perry Barlow was an important visionary and populizer of the time.
His March 1994 article &#8220; The Economy of Ideas&#8221; is one of
the most prophetic yet accessible accounts of how the Internet was
changing the economics of information. He astutely realized that
information is not a &#8220; product&#8221; like most physical
property, but rather a social experience or form of life unto itself.
&#8220; Information is a verb, not a noun,&#8221; he wrote. &#8220;
Freed of its containers, information obviously is not a thing. In fact,
it is something that happens in the field of interaction between minds
or objects or other pieces of information. . . . Sharks are said to die
of suffocation if they stop swimming, and the same is nearly true of
information.&#8221;<en>66</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="66">
		<number>66</number>
		<note>
			22. John Perry Barlow, &#8220; The Economy of Ideas,&#8221;
<i>Wired</i>, March 1994, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.03/economy.ideas.html">http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/2.03/economy.ideas.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="202">
	<ocn>202</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Instead of the sober polemics of law professors, Barlow &#8212; a
retired Wyoming cattle rancher who improbably doubled as a tech
intellectual and rock hipster &#8212; spiced his analysis of
information with colorful metaphors and poetic aphorisms. Comparing
information to DNA helices, Barlow wrote, &#8220; Information
replicates into the cracks of possibility, always seeking new
opportunities for <i>Lebensraum</i>.&#8221; Digital information, he
said, &#8220; is a continuing process more like the metaphorphosing
tales of prehistory than anything that will fit in shrink-wrap.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="203">
	<ocn>203</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since hyperbole is an occupational reflex among cyberjournalists,
Barlow's <i>Wired</i> piece bore the obligatory subtitle, &#8220;
Everything you know about intellectual property is wrong.&#8221; Yet
reading Barlow more than a decade later confirms that, posturing aside,
he <i>was</i> on to the big story of our time: &#8220; Notions of
property, value, ownership and the nature of wealth itself are changing
more fundamentally than at any time since the Sumerians first poked
cuneiform into wet clay and called it stored grain. Only a very few
people are aware of the enormity of this shift, and fewer of them are
lawyers or public officials.&#8221;<en>67</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="67">
		<number>67</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="204">
	<ocn>204</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		With a nod to Professor Samuelson, Barlow was prescient enough to
compare the vulnerability of indigenous peoples to the coming
dispossession of Internet communities: &#8220; Western countries may
legally appropriate the music, designs and biomedical lore of
aboriginal people without compensation to their tribes of origins since
those tribes are not an &#8216; author' or &#8216; investors.' But soon
most information will be generated collaboratively by the cyber-tribal
hunter-gatherers of cyberspace. Our arrogant legal dismissal of the
rights of &#8216; primitives' will soon return to haunt us.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="205">
	<ocn>205</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		No account of cyberactivism in the 1990s is complete without mention of
James Love, a feisty advocate with a brilliant strategic mind and an
extraordinary ability to open up broad new policy fronts. For example,
Love, as director of the Ralph Nader&#8211;founded Consumer Project on
Technology, worked with tech activist Carl Malamud to force the U.S.
Securities and Exchange Commission to put its EDGAR database of
corporate filings online in 1994, at a time when the SEC was planning
to give the data to private vendors to sell. By prevailing at the SEC,
Love and Malamud set an important precedent that government agencies
should post their information on the Internet for free. A few years
later, in 1997, Love convened a conference to assess Microsoft's
troubling monopoly power, an event that emboldened the Department of
Justice to launch its antitrust lawsuit against the company. Love later
played a key role in persuading an Indian drugmaker to sell generic
HIV/AIDS drugs to South Africa, putting Big Pharma on the defensive for
its callous patent and trade policies and exorbitant drug prices.
Love's timely gambit in 1996 to organize broader advocacy for the
public domain failed, however. He co-founded the Union for the Public
Domain, with a board that included Richard Stallman, but the project
never developed a political following or raised much money.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="206">
	<ocn>206</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The American Library Association was the largest and bestfunded
advocate on copyright issues in the 1990s, but its collaborations with
other Washington allies tended to be modest, and its grassroots
mobilization disappointing. Libraries are respected in the public mind
precisely because they are stable, apolitical civic institutions
&#8212; that is, not activists. Despite its valuable presence on
copyright and Internet policy issues, the library lobby was
temperamentally disinclined to get too far ahead of the curve.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="207">
	<ocn>207</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the end of the decade, a muscular, dissenting discourse about
copyright law was starting to take shape. On one side was a complicated
body of industry-crafted copyright law that claimed imperial powers to
regulate more and more aspects of daily life &#8212; your Web site,
your music CDs, your electronic devices, your computer practices. On
the other side were ordinary people who loved how the Internet and
digital devices were empowering them to be creators and publishers in
their own right. They just wanted to indulge their natural human urge
to share, tinker, reuse, and transform culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="208">
	<ocn>208</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The dissent of the progressive copyright scholars and activists, though
pungent, was hardly insurrectionist. These critics were reformers, not
bomb throwers. Most objected to the overreaching scope and draconian
enforcement of copyright law, not to its philosophical foundations.
They generally argued that the problem wasn't copyright law per se, but
the misapplication and overextension of its core principles.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="209">
	<ocn>209</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		A New Story About the Public Domain
	</text>
</object>
<object id="210">
	<ocn>210</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the most notable outgrowths of all this activity was the
development of a new story about the public domain. Scholars took a
range of legal doctrines that were scattered among the sprawling oeuvre
of copyright law and consolidated them under one banner, <i>the public
domain</i>. The new framing helped give the public's rights in cultural
works a new moral standing and intellectual clarity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="211">
	<ocn>211</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even though copyright law has existed for three centuries, the term
&#8220; public domain&#8221; did not surface in a U.S. Supreme Court
decision until 1896. The public domain was first mentioned in U.S.
copyright law in 1909, and while it occasionally merited passing
reference or discussion in later decades, the concept was not the
subject of a significant law review article until 1981. That article
was &#8220; Recognizing the Public Domain,&#8221; by Professor David
Lange.<en>68</en> &#8220; David's article was an absolutely lovely
piece that sunk without a trace,&#8221; recalls Jessica Litman. &#8220;
When a bunch of us discovered [Lange's article] in the late 1980s, it
had been neither cited nor excerpted nor reprinted nor anything &#8212;
because nobody was looking for a defense of the public domain. People
were looking for arguments for extending copyright protection. David
was ahead of his time.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="68">
		<number>68</number>
		<note>
			David Lange, &#8220; Recognizing the Public Domain,&#8221; <i>Law
and Contemporary Problems</i> 44 (Autumn 1981).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="212">
	<ocn>212</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The main reason that the public domain was ignored was that it was
generally regarded as a nullity. &#8220; Public domain in the fields of
literature, drama, music and art is the other side of the coin of
copyright,&#8221; wrote M. William Krasilovsky in 1967.<en>69</en>
&#8220; It is best defined in negative terms.&#8221; Edward Samuels
wrote that the public domain &#8220; is simply whatever remains after
all methods of protection are taken into account.&#8221;<en>70</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="69">
		<number>69</number>
		<note>
			M. William Krasilovsky, &#8220; Observations on the Public
Domain,&#8221; <i>Bulletin of the Copyright Society</i> 14, no. 205
(1967).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="70">
		<number>70</number>
		<note>
			Edward Samuels, &#8220; The Public Domain in Copyright Law,&#8221;
<i>Journal of the Copyright Society</i> 41, no. 137 (1993), p. 138.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="213">
	<ocn>213</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lange himself acknowledged this conventional wisdom when he wrote that
the public domain &#8220; amounts to a dark star in the constellation
of intellectual property.&#8221; He took issue with this history,
however, and insisted upon the affirmative value of the public domain.
Lange dredged up a number of &#8220; publicity rights&#8221; cases and
commentary to shed light on the problem: Bela Lugosi's widow and son
claimed that they, not Universal Pictures, should own the rights to the
character Dracula. Representatives of the deceased Marx Brothers sought
to stop a Broadway production spoofing 1930s musicals from using the
Marx Brothers' characters. DC Comics, owner of a trademark in the
Superman character, sued to prevent a group of Chicago college students
from calling their newspaper <i>The Daily Planet</i>. And so on.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="214">
	<ocn>214</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		From such examples, Lange drove home a commonsense lesson about the
derivative nature of creativity: we all depend on others to generate
&#8220; new&#8221; works. Groucho, Chico, and Harpo Marx couldn't
&#8220; invent&#8221; their stage personas until, in classic
vaudevillian tradition, they had adapted jokes and shtick from their
peers. &#8220; In time,&#8221; Groucho wrote in his memoirs, &#8220; if
[a comedian] was any good, he would emerge from the routine character
he had started with and evolve into a distinct personality of his own.
This has been my experience and also that of my brothers, and I believe
this has been true of most of the other comedians.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="215">
	<ocn>215</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To which Lange added, &#8220; Of course, what Groucho is saying in this
passage is that although he and his brothers began as borrowers they
ended as inventors. . . . It is a central failing in the contemporary
intellectual property literature and case law that that lesson, so
widely acknowledged, is so imperfectly understood.&#8221;<en>71</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="71">
		<number>71</number>
		<note>
			Lange, &#8220; Recognizing the Public Domain,&#8221; p. 162.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="216">
	<ocn>216</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In example after example, Lange made the point that &#8220; as access
to the public domain is choked, or even closed off altogether, the
public loses too: loses the rich heritage of its culture, the rich
presence of new works derived from that culture, and the rich promise
of works to come.&#8221; Lange warned that &#8220; courts must
dispel&#8221; the &#8220; impression of insubstantiality&#8221; from
which the public domain suffers. Nothing will be resolved, he warned,
&#8220; until the courts have come to see the public domain not merely
as an unexplored abstraction but as a field of individual rights as
important as any of the new property rights.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="217">
	<ocn>217</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		What Is &#8220; Authorship&#8221;?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="218">
	<ocn>218</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Besides honoring the public domain, copyright reformers sought to
develop a second, more subversive narrative. They questioned the very
idea of individual &#8220; authorship&#8221; and &#8220;
originality,&#8221; two central pillars of copyright law, The standard
moral justification for granting authors exclusive rights in their
works is the personal originality that they supposedly show in creating
new works. But can &#8220; originality&#8221; and &#8220;
authorship&#8221; be so neatly determined? What of the role of past
generations and creative communities in enabling the creation of new
works? Don't we all, in the words of Isaac Newton, stand on the
shoulders of giants?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="219">
	<ocn>219</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The idea that sharing, collaboration, and adaptation may actually be
important to creativity, and not merely incidental, was a somewhat
daring theme in the early 1990s, if only because it had little
recognition in copyright scholarship. While this line of analysis
preceded the Internet, the arrival of the World Wide Web changed the
debate dramatically. Suddenly there was a powerful, real-life platform
for <i>collective</i> authorship. Within fifteen years, sharing and
collaboration has become a standard creative practice, as seen in
Wikipedia, remix music, video mashups, machinima films, Google map
mashups, social networking, and much else.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="220">
	<ocn>220</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Of course, in the early 1990s, the promise of online networks was only
dimly understood. But for Jessica Litman, the tightening noose of
proprietary control had troubling implications for fair use and the
ability of people to create and share culture: &#8220; Copyright law
was no longer as open and porous as it had been, so I felt compelled to
try to defend the open spaces that nobody was paying attention
to.&#8221; Litman published a major article on the public domain in
1990, instigating a fresh round of interest in it and establishing
lines of analysis that continue to this day.<en>72</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="72">
		<number>72</number>
		<note>
			Jessica Litman, &#8220; The Public Domain,&#8221; <i>Emory Law
Journal</i> 39, no. 965 (Fall 1990).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="221">
	<ocn>221</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		She made the then-startling claim, for example, that &#8220; the very
act of authorship in <i>any</i> medium is more akin to translation and
recombination than it is to creating Aphrodite from the foam of the
sea. Composers recombine sounds they have heard before; playwrights
base their characters on bits and pieces drawn from real human beings
and other playwrights' characters. . . . This is not parasitism; it is
the essence of authorship. And, in the absence of a vigorous public
domain, much of it would be illegal.&#8221; Litman argued that the
public domain is immensely important because all authors depend upon it
for their raw material, Shrink the public domain and you impoverish the
creative process.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="222">
	<ocn>222</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The problem, said Litman, is that copyright law contains a structural
contradiction that no one wants to acknowledge. The law requires
&#8220; originality&#8221; in order for a work to be protected &#8212;
but it cannot truly determine what is &#8220; original.&#8221; If
authors could assert that their works were entirely original, and
courts conscientiously enforced this notion, copyright law would soon
collapse. Everyone would be claiming property rights in material that
had origins elsewhere. Shakespeare's estate might claim that Leonard
Bernstein's <i>West Side Story</i> violates its rights in <i>Romeo and
Juliet</i>; Beethoven would prevent the Bee Gees from using the opening
chords of his Fifth Symphony.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="223">
	<ocn>223</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When one person's copyright claims appear to threaten another person's
ability to create, the courts have historically invoked the public
domain in order to set limits on the scope of copyright protection. In
this backhanded way, the public domain helps copyright law escape from
its own contradictions and ensures that basic creative elements remain
available to all. As Litman explained:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="224">
	<ocn>224</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Because we have a public domain, we can permit authors to avoid the
harsh light of a genuine search for provenance, and thus maintain the
illusion that their works are indeed their own creations. We can
tolerate the grant of overbroad and overlapping deeds through the
expedient assumption that each author took her raw material from the
commons, rather than from the property named in prior deeds.<en>73</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="73">
		<number>73</number>
		<note>
			Litman, &#8220; The Public Domain,&#8221; p. 1012.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="225">
	<ocn>225</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In effect, copyright law sets up a sleight of hand: it invites authors
to plunder the commons with the assurance that their borrowings will be
politely ignored &#8212; but then it declares the resulting work of
authorship &#8220; original&#8221; and condemns any further follow-on
uses as &#8220; piracy.&#8221; This roughly describes the early
creative strategy of the Walt Disney Company, which built an empire by
rummaging through the public domain of fairy tales and folklore, adding
its own creative flourishes, and then claiming sole ownership in the
resulting characters and stories.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="226">
	<ocn>226</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As Litman unpacked the realities of &#8220; authorship,&#8221; she
showed how the idea of &#8220; originality&#8221; serves as a useful
fiction. Any author must draw upon aspects of culture and recombine
them without ever being able to identify the specific antecedents, she
pointed out. Judges, for their part, can never really make a rigorous
factual determination about what is &#8220; original&#8221; and what is
taken from the public domain. In reality, said Litman, authorship
amounts to &#8220; a combination of absorption, astigmatism and
amnesia.&#8221; The public domain is vague and shifting precisely
because it must constantly disguise the actual limits of individual
&#8220; originality.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="227">
	<ocn>227</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		English professor Martha Woodmansee and law professor Peter Jaszi
helped expose many of the half-truths about &#8220; authorship&#8221;
and &#8220; originality.&#8221; Their 1994 anthology of essays, <i>The
Construction of Authorship</i>, showed how social context is an
indispensable element of &#8220; authorship,&#8221; one that copyright
law essentially ignores.<en>74</en> Thus, even though indigenous
cultures collectively create stories, music, and designs, and folk
cultures generate works in a collaborative fashion, copyright law
simply does not recognize such acts of collective authorship. And so
they go unprotected. They are vulnerable to private appropriation and
enclosure, much as Stallman's hacker community at MIT saw its commons
of code destroyed by enclosure.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="74">
		<number>74</number>
		<note>
			Martha Woodmansee and Peter Jaszi, eds., <i>The Construction of
Authorship: Textual Appropriation in Law and Literature</i> (Durham,
NC: Duke University Press, 1994).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="228">
	<ocn>228</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Before the Internet, the collaborative dimensions of creativity were
hardly given much thought. An &#8220; author&#8221; was self-evidently
an individual endowed with unusual creative skills. As the World Wide
Web and digital technologies have proliferated, however, copyright's
traditional notions of &#8220; authorship&#8221; and &#8220;
originality&#8221; have come to seem terribly crude and limited. The
individual creator still matters and deserves protection, of course.
But when dozens of people contribute to a single entry of Wikipedia, or
thousands contribute to an open-source software program, how then shall
we determine who is the &#8220; author&#8221;?<en>75</en> By the lights
of copyright law, how shall the value of the public domain,
reconstituted as a commons, be assessed?<en>76</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="75">
		<number>75</number>
		<note>
			Henry Miller writes: &#8220; We carry within us so many entities, so
many voices, that rare indeed is the man who can say he speaks with his
own voice. In the final analysis, is that iota of uniqueness which we
boast of as &#8216; ours' really ours? Whatever real or unique
contribution we make stems from the same inscrutable source whence
everything derives. We contribute nothing but our understanding, which
is a way of saying &#8212; our acceptance.&#8221; Miller, <i>The Books
in My Life</i> (New York: New Directions), p. 198.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="76">
		<number>76</number>
		<note>
			Rufus Pollock, &#8220; The Value of the Public Domain,&#8221; report
for Institute for Public Policy Research, London, July 2006, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.rufuspollock.org/economics/papers/value_of_public_domain.ippr.pdf">http://www.rufuspollock.org/economics/papers/value_of_public_domain.ippr.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="229">
	<ocn>229</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Bellagio Declaration, the outgrowth of a conference organized by
Woodmansee and Jaszi in 1993, called attention to the sweeping
deficiencies of copyright law as applied. One key point stated, &#8220;
In general, systems built around the author paradigm tend to obscure or
undervalue the importance of the &#8216; public domain,' the
intellectual and cultural commons from which future works will be
constructed. Each intellectual property right, in effect, fences off
some portion of the public domain, making it unavailable to future
creators.&#8221;<en>77</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="77">
		<number>77</number>
		<note>
			See James Boyle, <i>Shamans, Software, and Spleens: Law and the
Construction of the Information Society</i> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1995), p. 192.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="230">
	<ocn>230</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another fusillade of flaming arrows engulfed the fortress of &#8220;
authorship&#8221; and &#8220; originality&#8221; in 1996, when James
Boyle published <i>Shamans, Software, and Spleens</i>. With sly wit and
deep analysis, this landmark book identified many of the philosophical
paradoxes and absurdities of property rights in indigenous knowledge,
software, genes, and human tissue. Boyle deftly exposed the discourse
of IP law as a kind of M&#246;bius strip, a smooth strip of logic that
confusingly turns back on itself. &#8220; If a geography metaphor is
appropriate at all,&#8221; said Boyle, &#8220; the most likely
cartographers would be Dali, Magritte and Escher.&#8221;<en>78</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="78">
		<number>78</number>
		<note>
			James Boyle, &#8220; A Theory of Law and Information: Copyright,
Spleens, Blackmail and Insider Trading,&#8221; <i>California Law
Review</i> 80, no. 1413 (1992), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.law.duke.edu/boylesite/law&amp;info.htm">http://www.law.duke.edu/boylesite/law&amp;info.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="231">
	<ocn>231</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		&#8220; You Have No Sovereignty Where We Gather&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="232">
	<ocn>232</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The deconstruction of copyright law over the past twenty years has been
a significant intellectual achievement. It has exposed the copyright
law's philosophical deficiencies, showed how social practice deviates
from it, and revealed the antisocial effects of expanding copyright
protection. Critics knew that it would be impossible to defend the
fledgling cyberculture without first documenting how copyright law was
metastasizing at the expense of free expression, creative innovation,
consumer rights, and market competition.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="233">
	<ocn>233</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But as the millennium drew near, the tech-minded legal community
&#8212; and law-minded techies &#8212; knew that critiques and carping
could only achieve so much. A winnable confrontation with copyright
maximalists was needed. A compelling counternarrative and a viable
long-term political strategy had to be devised. And then somehow they
had to be pushed out to the wider world and made real.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="234">
	<ocn>234</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That task was made easier by the intensifying cultural squeeze. The
proprietarian lockdown was starting to annoy and anger people in their
everyday use of music, software, DVDs, and the Web. And the property
claims were growing more extreme. The American Society of Composers,
Authors and Publishers had demanded that Girl Scout camps pay a public
performance license for singing around the campfire. Ralph Lauren
challenged the U.S. Polo Association for ownership of the word
<i>polo</i>. McDonald's succeeded in controlling the Scottish prefix Mc
as applied to restaurants and motels, such as &#8220; McVegan&#8221;
and &#8220; McSleep.&#8221;<en>79</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="79">
		<number>79</number>
		<note>
			These examples can be found in Bollier, <i>Brand Name Bullies</i>.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="235">
	<ocn>235</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The mounting sense of frustration fueled a series of conferences
between 1999 and 2001 that helped crystallize the disparate energies of
legal scholarship into something resembling an intellectual movement.
&#8220; A number of us [legal scholars] were still doing our own thing,
but we were beginning to get a sense of something,&#8221; recalls
Yochai Benkler, &#8220; It was no longer Becky Eisenberg working on DNA
sequences and Pamela Samuelson on computer programs and Jamie Boyle on
&#8216; environmentalism for the 'Net' and me working on spectrum on
First Amendment issues,&#8221; said Benkler. &#8220; There was a sense
of movement.&#8221;<en>80</en> (&#8220;Environmentalism for the
'Net&#8221; was an influential piece that Boyle wrote in 1998, calling
for the equivalent of an environmental movement to protect the openness
and freedom of the Internet.)<en>81</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="80">
		<number>80</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Yochai Benkler, February 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="81">
		<number>81</number>
		<note>
			James Boyle, &#8220; A Politics of Intellectual Property:
Environmentalism for the Net,&#8221; <i>Duke Law Journal</i> 47, no. 1
(October 1997), pp. 87&#8211;116, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.law.duke.edu/boylesite/Intprop.htm">http://www.law.duke.edu/boylesite/Intprop.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="236">
	<ocn>236</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The place where things started to get even crisper,&#8221; said
Benkler, &#8220; was a conference at Yale that Jamie Boyle organized in
April 1999, which was already planned as a movement-building
event.&#8221; That conference, Private Censorship/Perfect Choice,
looked at the threats to free speech on the Web and how the public
might resist. It took inspiration from John Perry Barlow's 1996
manifesto &#8220; A Declaration of the Independence of
Cyberspace.&#8221; It is worth quoting at length from Barlow's lyrical
cri de coeur &#8212; first published in <i>Wired</i> and widely cited
&#8212; because it expresses the growing sense of thwarted idealism
among Internet users, and a yearning for greater self-determination and
self-governance among commoners. Barlow wrote:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="237">
	<ocn>237</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Governments of the Industrial World, you weary giants of flesh and
steel, I come from Cyberspace, the new home of Mind. On behalf of the
future, I ask you of the past to leave us alone, You are not welcome
among us, You have no sovereignty where we gather.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="238">
	<ocn>238</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		We have no elected government, nor are we likely to have one, so I
address you with no greater authority than that with which liberty
itself always speaks. I declare the global social space we are building
to be naturally independent of the tyrannies you seek to impose on us.
You have no moral right to rule us nor do you possess any methods of
enforcement we have true reason to fear.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="239">
	<ocn>239</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Governments derive their just powers from the consent of the governed.
You have neither solicited nor received ours. We did not invite you,
You do not know us, nor do you know our world. Cyberspace does not lie
within your borders. Do not think that you can build it, as though it
were a public construction project, You cannot. It is an act of nature
and it grows itself through our collective actions.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="240">
	<ocn>240</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		You have not engaged in our great and gathering conversation, nor did
you create the wealth of our marketplaces. You do not know our culture,
our ethics, or the unwritten codes that already provide our society
more order than could be obtained by any of your impositions.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="241">
	<ocn>241</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		You claim there are problems among us that you need to solve, You use
this claim as an excuse to invade our precincts. Many of these problems
don't exist. Where there are real conflicts, where there are wrongs, we
will identify them and address them by our means. We are forming our
own Social Contract. This governance will arise according to the
conditions of our world, not yours. Our world is different.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="242">
	<ocn>242</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As Barlow made clear, the Internet was posing profound new questions
&#8212; not just about politics, but about the democratic polity
itself. What would be the terms of moral legitimacy and democratic
process in cyberspace? Would the new order be imposed by a Congress
beholden to incumbent industries and their political action committees,
or would it be a new social contract negotiated by the commoners
themselves? In posing such questions, and doing it with such rhetorical
panache, Barlow earned comparisons to Thomas Jefferson.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="243">
	<ocn>243</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The stirrings of a movement were evident in May 2000, when Benkler
convened a small conference of influential intellectual property
scholars at New York University Law School on &#8220; A Free
Information Ecology.&#8221; This was followed in November 2001 by a
large gathering at Duke Law School, the first major conference ever
held on the public domain. It attracted several hundred people and
permanently rescued the public domain from the netherworld of &#8220;
nonproperty.&#8221; People from diverse corners of legal scholarship,
activism, journalism, and philanthropy found each other and began to
reenvision their work in a larger, shared framework.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="244">
	<ocn>244</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Over three decades, copyright scholarship had become more incisive,
impassioned, and focused on the public good &#8212; but much of the
talk remained within the rarefied circles of the academy. What to do
about the disturbing enclosures of the cultural commons remained a
vexing, open question. The 1990s saw an eclectic smattering of
initiatives, from EFF lawsuits and visionary manifestos to underfunded
advocacy efforts and sporadic acts of hacker mischief and civil
disobedience. All were worthwhile forms of engagement and exploratory
learning. None were terribly transformative. Free software was growing
in popularity in the 1990s, but its relevance to broader copyright
struggles and the Internet was not yet recognized. Congress and the
courts remained captive to the copyright-maximalist worldview. The idea
of organizing a counter-constituency to lay claim to the public domain
and forge a new social contract for cyberspace was a fantasy. Copyright
law was just too obscure to excite the general public and most creators
and techies. The commoners were too scattered and diverse to see
themselves as an insurgent force, let alone imagine they might create a
movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="245">
	<ocn>245</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		3 WHEN LARRY LESSIG MET ERIC ELDRED
	</text>
</object>
<object id="246">
	<ocn>246</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>A constitutional test case becomes the seed for a movement.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="247">
	<ocn>247</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Once the value of the public domain became evident, and a few
visionaries realized that the commons needed to be protected somehow,
an important strategic question arose: Which arena would offer the best
hope for success &#8212; politics, culture, technology, or law?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="248">
	<ocn>248</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The real answer, of course, was all of the above. Building a new
digital republic would require a wholesale engagement with the politics
of effecting democratic change and the challenges of building a
cultural movement. It would require the invention of a shared
technological infrastructure, and the development of legal tools to
secure the commons. All were intertwined. But as a practical matter,
anyone who aspired to stop the mass-media-driven expansions of
copyright law had to choose where to invest his or her energy. In the
mid-1990s, Lawrence Lessig decided that the greatest leverage would
come through law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="249">
	<ocn>249</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig, usually referred to as Larry, had the knowledge, talent, and
good timing to conceptualize the politics of digital technologies at a
ripe moment, the late 1990s, when the World Wide Web was exploding and
people were struggling to understand its significance. However, Lessig
was not content to play the sage law professor dispensing expertise at
rarefied professional and scholarly gatherings; he aimed to become a
public intellectual and highbrow activist. Through a punishing schedule
of public speaking and a series of high-profile initiatives starting in
1998 and 1999, Lessig became a roving demigod-pundit on matters of the
Internet, intellectual property, and cultural freedom.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="250">
	<ocn>250</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the course of his frequent travels, he had a particularly
significant rendezvous at the Starbucks on Church Street in Cambridge,
Massachusetts. It was November 1998. A month earlier, Congress had
enacted the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension Act. Lessig was eager to
meet with one Eric Eldred, a retired navy contractor, to see if he
would agree to be a plaintiff in the first federal case to challenge
the constitutionality of the copyright clause.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="251">
	<ocn>251</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Eldred was a book enthusiast and computer programmer who had reached
the end of his rope. Three years earlier, in 1995, he had launched a
simple but brilliant project: a free online archive of classic American
literature. Using his PC and a server in his home in New Hampshire,
Eldred posted the books of Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry James, Wallace
Stevens, and dozens of other great authors whose works were in the
public domain. Eldred figured it would be a great service to humanity
to post the texts on the World Wide Web, which was just beginning to go
mainstream.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="252">
	<ocn>252</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Eldred had previously worked for Apollo Computer and Hewlett-Packard
and was experienced in many aspects of computers and software. In the
late 1980s, in fact, he had developed a system that enabled users to
post electronic text files and then browse and print them on demand.
When the World Wide Web arrived, Eldred was understandably excited.
&#8220; It seemed to me that there was a possibility of having a system
for electronic books that was similar to what I had done before. I was
interested in experimenting with this to see if it was
possible.&#8221;<en>82</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="82">
		<number>82</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Eric Eldred, August 1, 2006; Daren Fonda, &#8220;
Copyright Crusader,&#8221; <i>Boston Globe Magazine</i>, August 29,
1999, available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.boston.com/globe/magazine/8-29/featurestory1.shtml">http://www.boston.com/globe/magazine/8-29/featurestory1.shtml</link>&gt;;
and Eric Eldred, &#8220; Battle of the Books: The Ebook vs. the
Antibook,&#8221; November 15, 1998, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.eldritchpress.org/battle.html">http://www.eldritchpress.org/battle.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="253">
	<ocn>253</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		So Eldred set out to build his own archive of public-domain books:
&#8220; I got books from the library or wherever, and I learned how to
do copyright research and how to scan books, do OCR [opticalcharacter
recognition] and mark them up as HTML [the programming language used on
the Web],&#8221; he said. &#8220; I just wanted to make books more
accessible to readers.&#8221;<en>83</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="83">
		<number>83</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Eric Eldred, August 1, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="254">
	<ocn>254</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Eldred didn't realize it at the time, but his brave little archive,
Eldritch Press, embodied a dawning cultural archetype &#8212; the
selfpublished digital work meant to be freely shared with anyone in the
world, via the Internet. Thanks to the magic of &#8220; network
effects&#8221; &#8212; the convenience and value that are generated as
more people join a network &#8212; Eldred's Web site was soon receiving
more than twenty thousand hits a day. A growing community of book
lovers came together through the site. They offered annotations to the
online books, comments, and links to foreign translations and other
materials. In 1997, the National Endowment for the Humanities
considered the site so educational and exemplary that it formally cited
Eldritch Press as one of the top twenty humanities sites on the Web.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="255">
	<ocn>255</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although it was only a one-person project, Eldritch Press was not just
an idiosyncratic innovation. The convergence of telecommunications,
personal computers, and software in the 1990s, otherwise known as the
Internet, was facilitating an explosion of new genres of public
expression. We are still grappling with how this new type of media
system is different from broadcasting and other mass media. But we do
know this: it invites mass participation because the system doesn't
require a lot of capital or professional talent to use. The system
favors decentralized interactivity over centralized control and one-way
communication. Ordinary people find it relatively inexpensive and
versatile. Since everyone has roughly the same access and distribution
capacities, the Internet is perhaps the most populist communication
platform and egalitarian marketplace in human history.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="256">
	<ocn>256</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This was not the goal of the computer scientists who invented the
Internet, of course. Working under the auspices of the U.S. military,
they were chiefly concerned with building a communications system that
would allow academic researchers to share computerized information
cheaply and easily. The idea was that intelligence and innovation would
arise from the &#8220; edges&#8221; of a &#8220; dumb&#8221; network,
and not be controlled by a centralized elite in the manner of
broadcasting or book publishing. The Internet &#8212; a network of
networks &#8212; would be a platform open to anyone who used a shared
set of freely accessible &#8220; protocols,&#8221; or standardized
code, for computer hardware and software.<en>*4</en>
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*4">
		<symbol>*4</symbol>
		<note>
			The Internet protocols that enable different computers and networks
to connect despite their differences is TCP/IP, which stands for
TransmissionControl Protocol/Internet Protocol. These protocols enabled
the commons known as the Internet to emerge and function, and in turn
to host countless other commons &#8220; on top&#8221; of it.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="257">
	<ocn>257</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What was radically new about the network architecture was its freedom:
No special qualifications or permissions were needed to communicate or
&#8220; publish.&#8221; No one needed to pay special fees based on
usage. Anyone could build her own innovative software on top of the
open protocols, It is a measure of the system's power that it has
spawned all sorts of innovations that were not foreseen at the outset:
in the 1990s, the World Wide Web, instant messaging, peer-to-peer file
sharing, and Web logs, and, in the 2000s, podcasts, wikis, social
networking software, and countless other applications. The open, shared
protocols of the Internet provided an indispensable communications
platform for each of these innovations to arise.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="258">
	<ocn>258</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In building his online archive, Eric Eldred was part of this new
cultural cohort of innovators. He not only shared Richard Stallman's
dream &#8212; to build an open, sharing community. He also came to
share Stallman's contempt for the long arm of copyright law. The
problem, in Eldred's case, was the corporate privatization of large
portions of the public domain. In the 1990s, the Walt Disney Company
was worried that its flagship cartoon character, Mickey Mouse, would
enter the public domain and be freely available for anyone to use.
Mickey, originally copyrighted in 1928, was nearing the end of his
seventy-five-year term of copyright and was due to enter the public
domain in 2003.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="259">
	<ocn>259</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Disney led a concerted campaign to extend the term of copyrights by
twenty years. Under the new law, all works copyrighted after January 1,
1923, would be privately controlled for another twenty years.
Corporations would be able to copyright their works for ninety-five
years instead of seventy-five years, and the works of individual
authors would be a private monopoly for the author's lifetime plus
seventy years. Thousands of works that were expected to enter the
public domain in 1999 and following years would remain under copyright
until 2019 and beyond.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="260">
	<ocn>260</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Congress readily enacted this twenty-year giveaway of monopoly rights
on a unanimous vote, and without any public hearings or debate. Disney
was the most visible beneficiary of the law, prompting critics to dub
it the Mickey Mouse Protection Act. But its more significant impact was
to deprive Americans of access to an estimated four hundred thousand
cultural works from the 1920s and 1930s. Books by Sherwood Anderson,
music by George Gershwin, poems by Robert Frost, and tens of thousands
of other works would remain under private control for no good reason.
The law was the eleventh time in the course of four decades that
Congress had extended the term of copyright protection. American
University law professor Peter Jaszi complained that copyright
protection had become &#8220; perpetual on the installment plan.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="261">
	<ocn>261</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The law was astonishingly inefficient and inequitable as well. To
preserve the property rights of the 2 percent of works from this period
that still had commercial value, the law also locked up the remaining
98 percent of works (whose owners are often unknown or unable to be
located in order to grant permissions). Indeed, it was these &#8220;
orphan works&#8221; &#8212; works still under copyright but not
commercially available, and with owners who often could not be found
&#8212; that represent an important &#8220; feedstock&#8221; for new
creativity. The Sonny Bono Act showered a windfall worth billions of
dollars to the largest entertainment businesses and authors' estates.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="262">
	<ocn>262</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At a more basic level, the copyright term extension showed contempt for
the very rationale of copyright law. Copyrights are intended as an
inducement to authors to create works. It is a government grant of
monopoly property rights meant to help authors earn money for producing
books, music, film, and other works. But, as Lessig pointed out,
&#8220; You can't incent a dead person. No matter what we do, Hawthorne
will not produce any more works, no matter how much we pay him.&#8221;
Jack Valenti replied that longer copyright terms would give Hollywood
the incentive to preserve old films from deteriorating and make them
available.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="263">
	<ocn>263</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The copyright term extension act privatized so many of the public
domain books on the Eldritch Press Web site, and so offended Eldred's
sense of justice, that in November 1998 he decided to close his site in
protest. The new law meant that he would not be able to add any works
published since 1923 to his Web site until 2019. &#8220; I can no
longer accomplish what I set out to do,&#8221; said Eldred.<en>84</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="84">
		<number>84</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="264">
	<ocn>264</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As luck had it, Larry Lessig was looking for an Everyman of the
Internet. Lessig, then a thirty-seven-year-old professor at Harvard Law
School, was looking for a suitable plaintiff for his envisioned
constitutional test case. He had initially approached Michael S. Hart,
the founder of Project Gutenberg, the first producer of free electronic
books. At the time, the project had nearly six thousand public-domain
books available online. (It now has twenty thousand books; about 3
million books are downloaded every month.) Hart was receptive to the
case but had his own ideas about how the case should be argued. He
wanted the legal complaint to include a stirring populist manifesto
railing against rapacious copyright holders. Lessig demurred and went
in search of another plaintiff.<en>85</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="85">
		<number>85</number>
		<note>
			Richard Poynder interview with Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; The Basement
Interviews: Free Culture,&#8221; April 7, 2006, p. 26, available at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://poynder.blogspot.com/2006/03/basement-interviews.html">http://poynder.blogspot.com/2006/03/basement-interviews.html</link>&gt;.
See also Steven Levy, &#8220; Lawrence Lessig's Supreme
Showdown,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>, October 2002, pp. 140&#8211;45,
154&#8211;56, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.10/lessig.html">http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/10.10/lessig.html</link>&gt;.
Project Gutenberg is at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wwwgutenberg.org">http://wwwgutenberg.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="265">
	<ocn>265</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After reading about Eldred's protests in the <i>Boston Globe</i>, and
meeting with him over coffee, Lessig asked Eldred if he would be
willing to be the plaintiff in his envisioned case. Eldred readily
agreed. As a conscientious objector and draft resister during the
Vietnam War, he was ready to go to great lengths to fight the Sonny
Bono Act. &#8220; Initially, I volunteered to violate the law if
necessary and get arrested and go to jail,&#8221; Eldred said. &#8220;
But Larry told me that was not necessary.&#8221; A good thing, because
under the No Electronic Theft Act, passed in 1997, Eldred could be
charged with a felony. &#8220; I could face jail, fines, seizure of my
computer, termination of my Internet service without notice &#8212; and
so all the e-books on the Web site could be instantly lost,&#8221; he
said.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="266">
	<ocn>266</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was the beginning of a landmark challenge to the unchecked expansion
of copyright law. The case would turbocharge Lessig's unusual career
and educate the press and public about copyright law's impact on
democratic culture. Most significantly, it would, in time, spur the
growth of an international free culture movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="267">
	<ocn>267</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Larry Lessig's Improbable Journey
	</text>
</object>
<object id="268">
	<ocn>268</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since Lessig looms so large in this story, it is worth pausing to
understand his roots. Raised by culturally conservative, rock-ribbed
Republican parents in central Pennsylvania, Lessig was a bright kid
with a deep enthusiasm for politics. &#8220; I grew up a right-wing
lunatic Republican,&#8221; Lessig told journalist Steven Levy, noting
that he once belonged to the National Teen Age Republicans, ran a
candidate's unsuccessful campaign for the Pennsylvania state senate,
and attended the 1980 Republican National Convention, which nominated
Ronald Reagan for president. Larry's father, Jack, was an engineer who
once built Minuteman missile silos in South Dakota (where Lessig was
born in 1961), and who later bought a steelfabrication company in
Williamsport, Pennsylvania.<en>86</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="86">
		<number>86</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lessig">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lessig</link>&gt;;
Levy, &#8220; Lawrence Lessig's Supreme Showdown.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="269">
	<ocn>269</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig initially thought he would follow in his father's footsteps, and
so he went to the University of Pennsylvania to earn degrees in
economics and management. Later, studying philosophy at Trinity College
in Cambridge, England, he faced growing doubts about his deep-seated
libertarian worldview. Hitchhiking through Eastern Bloc countries,
Lessig gained a new appreciation for the role of law in guaranteeing
freedom and making power accountable. &#8220; There were many times
when people in Eastern Europe would tell me stories about the history
of the United States that I had never been taught: things like the
history of how we treated Native Americans; and the history of our
intervention in South America; and the nature of our intervention in
South East Asia,&#8221; Lessig told Richard Poynder in 2006. &#8220;
All of those were stories that we didn't tell ourselves in the most
accurate and vivid forms.&#8221; These experiences, said Lessig,
&#8220; opened up a channel of skepticism in my head.&#8221;<en>87</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="87">
		<number>87</number>
		<note>
			Poynder interview with Lessig, April 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="270">
	<ocn>270</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig's sister Leslie once told a reporter that Larry came back from
Cambridge a very different person: &#8220; His views of politics,
religion, and his career had totally flipped.&#8221;<en>88</en> No
longer aspiring to be a businessman or a philosopher, Lessig set his
sights on law and entered the University of Chicago Law School in 1986.
He transferred the next year to Yale Law School (to be near a
girlfriend), groomed himself to be a constitutional law scholar, and
graduated in 1989.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="88">
		<number>88</number>
		<note>
			Levy, &#8220; Lawrence Lessig's Supreme Showdown.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="271">
	<ocn>271</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although he now considered himself a liberal, Lessig spent the next two
years in the service of two of the law's most formidable conservatives.
He clerked for circuit court judge Richard Posner in 1988&#8211;89,
followed by a year clerking for Supreme Court justice Antonin Scalia
during the 1990&#8211;91 term. His educational odyssey complete, the
thirty-year-old Lessig settled into the life of a tenured law professor
at the University of Chicago Law School.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="272">
	<ocn>272</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of Lessig's early scholarly concerns &#8212; adjudication &#8212;
was not exactly a warm-up for tub-thumping activism. But it did
curiously prefigure his later interest in using law as a tool to effect
political change. In a 1993 law review article, Lessig wondered how
courts should interpret the law when public sentiment and practice have
changed. If a judge is going to be true to the original meaning of a
law, Lessig argued, he must make a conscientious &#8220;
translation&#8221; of the law by taking account of the contemporary
context. A new translation of the law is entirely justified, and should
supplant an old interpretation, Lessig argued, if prevailing social
practices and understandings have changed, The important thing in
interpreting law, therefore, is &#8220; fidelity in
translation.&#8221;<en>89</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="89">
		<number>89</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; Fidelity in Translation,&#8221; <i>Texas
Law Review</i> 71, no. 1165 (May 1993).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="273">
	<ocn>273</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig elaborated on this theme in a 1997 article that spent
twenty-seven dense pages pondering how two different Supreme Courts,
separated by nearly a century, could look to identical words in the
Constitution and reach precisely opposite conclusions.<en>*5</en> It is
not as if one Court or the other was unprincipled or wrong, Lessig
wrote. Rather, any court must take account of contemporary social norms
and circumstances in &#8220; translating&#8221; an old law for new
times. Lessig called this dynamic the "<i>Erie</i>-effect," a reference
to the U.S. Supreme Court's 1938 ruling in <i>Erie Railroad Co. v.
Tompkins</i>. The <i>Erie</i>-effect is about the emergence of &#8220;
a kind of contestability about a practice within a legal
institution,&#8221; which prompts &#8220; a restructuring of that
practice to avoid the rhetorical costs of that
contestability.&#8221;<en>90</en>
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*5">
		<symbol>*5</symbol>
		<note>
			The Erie ruling held that federal common law, previously recognized
by the U.S. Supreme Court in 1842, was unconstitutional.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="90">
		<number>90</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; Erie-Effects of Volume 110: An Essay on
Context in Interpretive Theory,&#8221; <i>Harvard Law Review</i> 110,
no. 1785 (1997).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="274">
	<ocn>274</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig described how an <i>Erie</i>-effect might be exploited to
catalyze a political shift (paraphrased here): <i>identify</i> a
socially contested law, aim to <i>force</i> the conflicting social
practice into the foreground by <i>inflaming</i> conventional
discourse, and then <i>argue</i> for a change in legal interpretation
in order to relieve the contestability that has been
alleged.<en>91</en> If the conflict between the law and actual social
practice can be made vivid enough, a court will feel pressure to
reinterpret the law. Or the court will defer to the legislature because
the very contestability of the law makes the issue a political question
that is inappropriate for a court to resolve. One notable instance of
the <i>Erie</i>-effect in our times, Lessig pointed out, was the
successful campaign by feminist law scholar Catherine MacKinnon to
define sexual harassment in the workplace as a form of illegal
discrimination. The point was to transform popular understanding of the
issue and then embody it in law.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="91">
		<number>91</number>
		<note>
			Ibid., p. 1809.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="275">
	<ocn>275</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig was not especially focused on tech issues until he ran across
Julian Dibbell's article &#8220; A Rape in Cyberspace,&#8221; which
appeared in the <i>Village Voice</i> in December 1993.<en>92</en> The
piece described the social havoc that ensued in an online space,
LambdaMOO, hosted at Xerox Palo Alto Research Center. One pseudonymous
character &#8220; raped&#8221; another in the virtual space, using
cruel words and graphic manipulations. The incident provoked an uproar
among the thousand members of LambdaMOO, and had real emotional and
social consequences. Yet, as Dibbell pointed out, &#8220; No bodies
touched. Whatever physical interaction occurred consisted of a mingling
of electronic signals sent from sites spread out between New York City
and Sydney, Australia.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="92">
		<number>92</number>
		<note>
			Julian Dibbell, &#8220; A Rape in Cyberspace: How an Evil Clown, a
Haitian Trickster Spirit, Two Wizards, and a Cast of Dozens Turns a
Database into a Society,&#8221; <i>Village Voice</i>, December 21,
1993, pp. 36&#8211;42, reprinted in Mark Stefik, <i>Internet Dreams:
Archetypes, Myths, and Metaphors</i> (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997),
pp. 293&#8211;315, Dibbell quote at p. 296.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="276">
	<ocn>276</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Lessig, the LambdaMOO &#8220; rape&#8221; had an obvious resonance
with Catherine MacKinnon's arguments in her 1993 book <i>Only
Words</i>. Does a rape in cyberspace resemble the harms inflicted on
real women through pornography? Lessig saw intriguing parallels:
&#8220; I really saw cyberspace as a fantastic opportunity to get
people to think about things without recognizing the political
valences. That's all I was interested in; it was purely
pedagogical.&#8221;<en>93</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="93">
		<number>93</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, March 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="277">
	<ocn>277</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To explore the issues further, Lessig developed one of the first
courses on the law of cyberspace. He taught it in the spring semester
of 1995 at Yale Law School, where he was a visiting professor, and
later at the University of Chicago and Harvard law schools. During the
Yale class, an exchange with a student, Andrew Shapiro, jarred his
thinking in a new direction: &#8220; I was constantly thinking about
the way that changing suppositions of constitutional eras had to be
accounted for in the interpretation of the Constitution across time.
Andrew made this point about how there's an equivalent in the technical
infrastructure [of the Internet] that you have to think about. And then
I began to think about how there were norms and law and infrastructure
&#8212; and then I eventually added markets into this &#8212; which
combine to frame what policymaking is in any particular
context.&#8221;<en>94</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="94">
		<number>94</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="278">
	<ocn>278</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This line of analysis became a central theme of Lessig's startling
first book, <i>Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace</i>, published in
1999.<en>95</en> <i>Code</i> took on widespread assumptions that the
Internet would usher in a new libertarian, free-market utopia.
Cyberlibertarian futurists such as Alvin Toffler, Esther Dyson, George
Gilder, and John Gilmore had routinely invoked cyberspace as a
revolutionary force that would render government, regulation, and
social welfare programs obsolete and unleash the transformative power
of free markets.<en>96</en> In the libertarian scenario, individual
freedom can flourish only if government gets the hell out of the way
and lets individuals create, consume, and interact as they see fit,
without any paternalistic or tyrannical constraints. Prosperity can
prevail and scarcity disappear only if meddling bureaucrats and
politicians leave the citizens of the Internet to their own devices. As
Louis Rossetto, the founder and publisher of <i>Wired</i>, bluntly put
it: &#8220; The idea that we need to worry about anyone being &#8216;
left out' is entirely atavistic to me, a product of that old economics
of scarcity and the 19th century social thinking that grew out of
it.&#8221;<en>97</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="95">
		<number>95</number>
		<note>
			Lessig, <i>Code and Other Laws of Cyberspace</i> (New York: Basic
Books, 1999).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="96">
		<number>96</number>
		<note>
			Esther Dyson, George Gilder, George Keyworth, and Alvin Toffler,
&#8220; Cyberspace and the American Dream: A Magna Carta for the
Knowledge Age,&#8221; Progress and Freedom Foundation, August 1994,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.pff.org/issues-pubs/futureinsights/fil.2magnacarta.html">http://www.pff.org/issues-pubs/futureinsights/fil.2magnacarta.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="97">
		<number>97</number>
		<note>
			David Hudson, interview with Louis Rossetto, &#8220; What Kind of
Libertarian,&#8221; <i>Rewired</i> (Macmillan, 1997), p. 255.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="279">
	<ocn>279</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig was more wary. In <i>Code</i>, he constructed a sweeping
theoretical framework to show how freedom on the Internet must be
actively, deliberately constructed; it won't simply happen on its own.
Inspired by conversations with computer programmer Mitch Kapor, who
declared that &#8220; architecture is politics&#8221; in 1991, Lessig's
book showed how software code was supplanting the regulatory powers
previously enjoyed by sovereign nation-states and governments. The
design of the Internet and software applications was becoming more
influential than conventional sources of policymaking &#8212; Congress,
the courts, federal agencies. <i>Code is law</i>, as Lessig famously
put it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="280">
	<ocn>280</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What was worrisome, Lessig warned, was how relatively small changes in
software code could alter the &#8220; architecture of control&#8221;
governing the Internet. The current architecture was not necessarily
stable and secure, in other words. Moreover, any future changes were
likely to be animated by private, commercial forces and not publicly
accountable and democratic ones. Lessig illustrated this point with a
disarmingly simple drawing of a dot representing an individual, whose
range of behaviors is affected by four distinct forces: software
architecture, the market, law, and social norms. Each of these factors
conspires to regulate behaviors on the Internet, Lessig argued &#8212;
and commercial forces would clearly have the upper hand.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="281">
	<ocn>281</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Code</i> was a powerful and sobering rebuttal to libertarian
assumptions that &#8220; keeping government out&#8221; would safeguard
individual freedom. Its analysis quickly became the default conceptual
model for talking about governance on the Internet. It helped situate
many existing policy debates &#8212; Internet censorship, digital
privacy, copyright disputes &#8212; in a larger political and policy
framework. Although many readers did not share Lessig's pessimism,
<i>Code</i> helped expose an unsettling truth &#8212; that a great many
legislators, federal agencies, and courts were largely oblivious to the
regulatory power of software code. They didn't have a clue about the
technical structures or social dynamics affecting life on the Internet,
let alone how existing law would comport with this alien domain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="282">
	<ocn>282</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Code</i> was widely praised and widely read. But it was only one
project of that period that catapulted Lessig to international
prominence. In the mid-1990s, Charles Nesson, a bold-thinking,
highflying evidence professor at Harvard Law School, was organizing the
Berkman Center for Internet &amp; Society. The new project aspired to
study &#8220; the most difficult and fundamental problems of the
digital age,&#8221; and show public-interest leadership in addressing
them. Nesson, who had become modestly famous for his role in the W. R.
Grace litigation chronicled in Jonathan Harr's <i>A Civil Action</i>,
recruited Lessig to be the Berkman Center's marquee star in 1997. It
was an irresistibly prestigious and visible perch.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="283">
	<ocn>283</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This was demonstrated within months, when Judge Penfield Jackson tapped
Lessig to be a &#8220; special master&#8221; in one of the most
important antitrust cases in a generation, <i>U.S. v.
Microsoft</i>.<en>98</en> Lessig's assignment was to sift through the
welter of technical claims and counterclaims in the case and produce a
report with recommendations to the court. The government alleged that
Microsoft had abused its monopoly power in its sales of its operating
system and Web browser, particularly in &#8220; bundling&#8221; the
browser with the Windows operating system.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="98">
		<number>98</number>
		<note>
			Steven Levy, &#8220; The Great Liberator,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>,
October 2002, and Poynder interview with Lessig, April 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="284">
	<ocn>284</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Microsoft soon raised questions about Lessig's neutrality as a special
master. Among other objections, the company cited his book's claim that
software code is political and a passage that said Microsoft was
&#8220; absolutely closed&#8221; compared to an open-standards body. It
also dredged up an e-mail in which Lessig facetiously equated using
Micosoft's Internet Explorer with &#8220; selling one's soul.&#8221;
After nearly eight weeks on the job, the Court of Appeals, citing a
technicality, took Lessig off the case, to his enduring disappointment.
He has been deeply frustrated by the implication that he had been
removed for bias (the court made no such finding) and by his abrupt
banishment from a plum role in a landmark case.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="285">
	<ocn>285</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Waging the <i>Eldred</i> Case
	</text>
</object>
<object id="286">
	<ocn>286</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Back at the Berkman Center, however, there were plenty of opportunities
to influence the digital future. The center was a hothouse of
venturesome ideas and eccentric visionaries. It was a place where John
Perry Barlow could drop by to talk with Lessig and Berkman co-founder
Jonathan Zittrain, one of the early cyberlaw experts. The center drew
upon the ideas of intellectual property guru William (Terry) Fisher;
Charles Nesson, who specialized in launching Big Ideas; and a
self-renewing batch of bright law students eager to make their mark on
a hip and emerging field of law. Richard Stallman at nearby MIT was an
occasional visitor, as was MIT computer scientist Hal Abelson, who
combined deep technical expertise with an appreciation of the social
and democratic implications of digital technologies. It was during this
time, in 1998, that Lessig and Abelson jointly taught The Law of
Cyberspace: Social Protocols at Harvard Law School. The class was an
attempt to make sense of some novel legal quandaries exploding on the
Internet, such as computer crime, identity authentication, digital
privacy, and intellectual property.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="287">
	<ocn>287</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While nourished by the work of his academic colleagues, Lessig was
determined to come up with ingenious ways to <i>do something</i> about
the distressing drift of copyright law. It was important to take the
offensive. Notwithstanding the pessimism of <i>Code</i>, Lessig's
decidedly optimistic answer was to gin up a constitutional challenge to
copyright law. Many legal experts and even sympathetic colleagues were
skeptical. Peter Jaszi, a leading intellectual law professor at
American University, told a reporter at the time, &#8220; It's not so
much that we thought it was a terrible idea but that it was just
unprecedented. Congress has been extending copyright for 180 years, and
this is the first time someone said it violated the
Constitution.&#8221;<en>99</en> Others worried that an adverse ruling
could set back the larger cause of copyright reform.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="99">
		<number>99</number>
		<note>
			David Streitfeld, &#8220; The Cultural Anarchist vs. the Hollywood
Police State,&#8221; <i>Los Angeles Times Magazine</i>, September 22,
2002, p. 32.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="288">
	<ocn>288</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the spirit of the commons, Lessig and his Berkman Center colleagues
decided that the very process for mounting the <i>Eldred</i> lawsuit
would be different: &#8220; Rather than the secret battles of lawyers
going to war, we will argue this case in the open. This is a case about
the commons; we will litigate it in the commons. Our arguments and
strategy will be developed online, in a space called &#8216;
openlaw.org.' Key briefs will be drafted online, with participants
given the opportunity to criticize the briefs and suggest other
arguments. . . . Building on the model of open source software, we are
working from the hypothesis that an open development process best
harnesses the distributed resources of the Internet community. By using
the Internet, we hope to enable the public interest to speak as loudly
as the interests of corporations.&#8221;<en>100</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="100">
		<number>100</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; Commons Law,&#8221; June 24, 1999, posted
on www.intellectu alcapital.com/issues/issue251/item5505.asp, and Open
Law archive at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/openlaw">http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/openlaw</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="289">
	<ocn>289</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Emulating the open-source development model was a nice touch, and
perhaps useful; dozens of people around the world registered at the
Openlaw site and posted suggestions. Some of the examples and legal
critiques were used in developing the case, and the model was later
used by lawyers in the so-called DeCSS case, in which a hacker broke
the encryption of a DVD. But it turns out that open, distributed
creativity has its limits in the baroque dance of litigation; it can't
work when secrecy and confidentiality are important, for example.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="290">
	<ocn>290</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The case, <i>Eldred v. Reno</i> &#8212; later renamed <i>Eldred v.
Ashcroft</i> when the Bush II administration took office &#8212; was
filed in federal district court in Washington, D.C., on January 11,
1999.<en>101</en> The complaint argued that the Copyright Term
Extension Act violated Article 1, section 8, clause 8, of the
Constitution, which provides that copyright protection shall be of
limited duration. It also argued that the Term Extension Act violated
the free speech clause of the First Amendment. In some respects, the
case could never have been waged without the foundation of legal
scholarship produced in the 1990s, which rehearsed a great many of the
arguments presented to the Court. In opposition were motion picture
studios, the music industry, and book publishers. They argued that
Congress had full authority under the Constitution to extend copyright
terms, as it had done since the beginning of the republic.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="101">
		<number>101</number>
		<note>
			<i>Eldred v. Reno</i> (later, Eldred v. Ashcroft), 537 U.S. 186
(2003), affirming 239 F. 3d 372.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="291">
	<ocn>291</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In October 1999, the U.S. District Court brusquely dismissed the case
without even holding a trial. Lessig and his Berkman colleagues were
not entirely surprised, and quickly set about filing an appeal with the
U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit. Going
beyond the Openlaw experiment at Berkman, they enlisted the support of
several lawyers at Jones, Day, Reavis &amp; Pogue. On appeal, Lessig
was allowed to argue the case personally to a panel of judges. But once
again, in February 2001, the case was dismissed. Lessig considered it a
significant victory that it was a 2-1 ruling, however, which meant that
a further appeal was possible. Lessig was also encouraged that the
dissenter had been the court's most conservative member, Judge David
Sentelle. Lessig requested that the full circuit court hear the case
&#8212; a petition that was also rejected, this time after picking up
support from a liberal dissenter, Judge David Tatel.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="292">
	<ocn>292</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Normally, this would have been the end of the road for a case. Very few
appeals court cases are accepted for review by the U.S. Supreme Court,
particularly when the case has not even been argued at trial and no
other courts have passed judgment on the statute. So it was quite
surprising when the Supreme Court, in February 2002, accepted
<i>Eldred</i> for review and scheduled oral arguments for October 2002.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="293">
	<ocn>293</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At this point, Lessig realized he needed the advice and support of some
experienced Supreme Court litigators. He enlisted help from additional
lawyers at Jones, Day; Alan Morrison of Public Citizen Litigation
Group; Kathleen Sullivan, the dean of Stanford Law School; and Charles
Fried, a former solicitor general under President Reagan. Professor
Peter Jaszi and the students of his law clinic drafted an amicus brief.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="294">
	<ocn>294</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A key concern was how to frame the arguments. Attorney Don Ayer of
Jones, Day repeatedly urged Lessig to stress the dramatic harm that the
Bono Act was inflicting on free speech and free culture. But as Lessig
later confessed, &#8220; I hate this view of the law. . . . I was not
persuaded that we had to sell our case like soap.&#8221;<en>102</en>
Lessig was convinced that the only way <i>Eldred</i> could prevail at
the Supreme Court would be to win over the conservative justices with a
matter of principle. To Lessig, the harm was obvious; what needed
emphasis was how the Sonny Bono Act violated &#8220; originalist&#8221;
principles of jurisprudence. (Originalist judges claim to interpret the
Constitution based on its &#8220; original&#8221; meanings in 1791,
which includes a belief that Congress has strictly enumerated powers,
not broad legislative discretion.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="102">
		<number>102</number>
		<note>
			Lessig, &#8220; How I Lost the Big One,&#8221; <i>Legal
Affairs</i>, March/April 2004, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.legalaffairs.org/issues/March-April-2004/story_lessig_marapr04.msp">http://www.legalaffairs.org/issues/March-April-2004/story_lessig_marapr04.msp</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="295">
	<ocn>295</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; We tried to make an argument that if you were an
originalist&#8212; in the way these conservative judges said they were
in many other cases &#8212; then you should look to the original values
in the Copyright Clause,&#8221; said Lessig. &#8220; And we argued that
if you did that then you had to conclude that Congress had wildly
overstepped its constitutional authority, and so the law should be
struck down.&#8221;<en>103</en> Flaunting the harm caused by the
copyright term extension struck Lessig as showy and gratuitous; he
considered the harm more or less selfevident. In the aftermath of a
public debate that Lessig once had with Jack Valenti, a questioner on
Slashdot, a hacker Web site, suggested that Lessig would be more
persuasive if he asserted &#8220; a clear conception of direct harm . .
. than the secondary harm of the copyright holders getting a really
sweet deal.&#8221; Lessig conceded that such a focus &#8220; has been a
weakness of mine for a long time. In my way of looking at the world,
the point is a matter of principle, not pragmatics. . . . There are
many others who are better at this pragmatism stuff. To me, it just
feels insulting.&#8221;<en>104</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="103">
		<number>103</number>
		<note>
			Lessig interview with Richard Poynder, April 7, 2006, p. 25.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="104">
		<number>104</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Lawrence Lessig Answers Your Questions,&#8221;
Slashdot.org, December 21, 2001, Question 1, &#8220; The question of
harm,&#8221; posted by &#8220; caduguid,&#8221; with Lessig response,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221">http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="296">
	<ocn>296</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		And so, despite warnings to the contrary, Lessig's legal strategy
relied on a call to uphold originalist principles. Having clerked for
Justice Scalia and Judge Posner, Lessig felt that he understood the
mind-set and sympathies of the conservative jurists. &#8220; If we get
to the Supreme Court,&#8221; Lessig told Slashdot readers in December
2001, &#8220; I am certain that we will win. This is not a left/right
issue. The conservatives on the Court will look at the framers'
Constitution&#8212; which requires that copyrights be granted for
&#8216; limited times' &#8212; and see that the current practice of
Congress . . . makes a mockery of the framers' plan. And the liberals
will look at the effect of these never-ending copyrights on free
speech, and conclude that Congress is not justified in this regulation
of speech. The Supreme Court doesn't give a hoot about Hollywood; they
will follow the law.&#8221;<en>105</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="105">
		<number>105</number>
		<note>
			Lessig response to question 11, Slashdot.org, &#8220; Will the
extension of copyright continue?&#8221; posed by &#8220;
Artifice_Eternity,&#8221; available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221">http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="297">
	<ocn>297</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig took pride in the fact that thirty-eight amicus briefs were
filed on behalf of <i>Eldred</i>. They included a wide range of
authors, computer and consumer electronics companies, and organizations
devoted to arts, culture, education, and journalism. Besides the usual
suspects like the Free Software Foundation, Electronic Frontier
Foundation, and Public Knowledge, supporting briefs were filed by
fifteen economists including Kenneth Arrow and Milton Friedman, Phyllis
Schlafly of the Eagle Forum, and the Intel Corporation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="298">
	<ocn>298</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At oral arguments, Lessig immediately confronted a skeptical bench.
Justice Sandra Day O'Connor worried about overturning years of previous
copyright term extensions. Justice William Rehnquist proposed. &#8220;
You want the right to copy verbatim other people's books, don't
you?&#8221; And when Justice Anthony Kennedy invited Lessig to expound
upon the great harm that the law was inflicting on free speech and
culture, Lessig declined the opportunity. He instead restated his core
constitutional argument, that copyright terms cannot be perpetual.
&#8220; This was a correct answer, but it wasn't the right
answer,&#8221; Lessig later confessed in a candid postmortem of the
case. &#8220; The right answer was to say that there was an obvious and
profound harm. Any number of briefs had been written about it. Kennedy
wanted to hear it. And here was where Don Ayer's advice should have
mattered. This was a softball; my answer was a swing and a
miss.&#8221;<en>106</en> No justices spoke in defense of the Sonny Bono
Act.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="106">
		<number>106</number>
		<note>
			See &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.supremecourtus.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcripts/01-618.pdf">http://www.supremecourtus.gov/oral_arguments/argument_transcripts/01-618.pdf</link>&gt;.
See also Lessig, &#8220; How I Lost the Big One,&#8221; and Linda
Greenhouse, &#8220; Justices Hear Arguments in Challenge to
Copyrights,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, October 10, 2002. A number of
Supreme Court opinions in the <i>Eldred</i> case can be found at the
Openlaw archive at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/openlaw/eldredvreno">http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/openlaw/eldredvreno</link>&gt;.
The <i>Loyola Los Angeles Law Review</i> held a symposium on <i>Eldred
v. Ashcroft</i>, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v36-issue1">http://llr.lls.edu/volumes/v36-issue1</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="299">
	<ocn>299</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet they had clear reservations about the Supreme Court's authority to
dictate the length of copyright terms.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="300">
	<ocn>300</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A few months later, on January 15, 2003, the Supreme Court announced
its ruling: a 7-2 defeat for Eldred. The majority opinion, written by
Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, did not even raise the &#8220; enumerated
powers&#8221; argument or engage with originalist philosophy. &#8220;
We are not at liberty to second-guess Congressional determinations and
policy judgments of this order, however debatable or arguably unwise
they may be,&#8221; Ginsburg wrote.<en>107</en> She likewise ignored
the idea that there is a &#8220; copyright bargain&#8221; between the
American people and copyright holders, which entitles the public to
certain rights of access to the public domain. As for copyright's
impact on free speech, Ginsburg invoked the fair use doctrine and the
&#8220; idea/expression dichotomy&#8221; (the notion that ideas are
freely available but expression can be copyrighted) as sufficient
protections for the public. She ignored the fact that both doctrines
were (and are) under fierce assault.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="107">
		<number>107</number>
		<note>
			537 U.S. 186 (1993). See also &#8220; Court Majority Says It Won't
Second-Guess Congress,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, January 16, 2007,
p. A22.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="301">
	<ocn>301</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Justices Stephen Breyer and John Paul Stevens accepted Lessig's
arguments, and wrote separate dissents. Breyer &#8212; a respected
scholar of copyright law since his famous 1970 essay &#8220; The Uneasy
Case for Copyright&#8221;<en>108</en> &#8212; agreed that copyright
terms had effectively become perpetual, and that the law was therefore
unconstitutional. Stevens complained that the majority decision reneged
on the copyright bargain and made copyright law &#8220; for all intents
and purposes judicially unreviewable.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="108">
		<number>108</number>
		<note>
			Stephen Breyer, &#8220; The Uneasy Case for Copyright,&#8221;
<i>Harvard Law Review</i> 84, no. 281 (1970).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="302">
	<ocn>302</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In assessing the broad impact of the <i>Eldred</i> ruling, copyright
scholar Siva Vaidhyanathan cited law professor Shubha Ghosh's
observation that the <i>Eldred</i> ruling had effectively &#8220;
deconstitutionalized&#8221; copyright law. <i>Eldred</i> pushed
copyright law
	</text>
</object>
<object id="303">
	<ocn>303</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		farther into the realm of policy and power battles and away from
principles that have anchored the system for two centuries. That means
public interest advocates and activists must take their battles to the
public sphere and the halls of Congress. We can't appeal to the
Founders' wishes or republican ideals. We will have to make pragmatic
arguments in clear language about the effects of excessive copyright on
research, teaching, art and journalism. And we will have to make naked
mass power arguments with echoes of &#8220; we want our MP3&#8221; and
&#8220; it takes an industry of billions to hold us
back.&#8221;<en>109</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="109">
		<number>109</number>
		<note>
			Siva Vaidhyanathan, &#8220; After the Copyright Smackdown: What
Next?&#8221; <i>Salon</i>, January 17, 2003, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2003/01/17/copyright.print.html">http://www.salon.com/tech/feature/2003/01/17/copyright.print.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="304">
	<ocn>304</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		A Movement Is Born
	</text>
</object>
<object id="305">
	<ocn>305</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The <i>Eldred</i> case had a paradoxical effect. Early on, Lessig had
said, &#8220; We didn't want to make it a big political cause. We just
wanted to make it an extension of the existing Supreme Court
jurisprudence, because we realized that the only way to win the case
was to win the conservatives' view, and the conservatives were not
likely to be motivated by great attacks on media
concentration.&#8221;<en>110</en> The upshot of the Court's ruling was
to intensify the political battles over copyright law. While such
resistance was already growing, the <i>Eldred</i> ruling and the
publicity surrounding it spawned a new generation of &#8220;
copyfighters.&#8221; Lessig had wanted to protect the commons through
law, only to find that the courts were unwilling to offer any help. Any
answers would now have to be pursued through politics, culture, and
technology &#8212; and ingenious uses of law where feasible. How to
proceed in this uncharted territory became the next challenge, as we
see in chapter 4.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="110">
		<number>110</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Poynder, April 7, 2006, p. 25.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="306">
	<ocn>306</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After four years of relentless work, Lessig was frustrated and
dejected. &#8220; I had failed to convince [the Supreme Court] that the
issue was important,&#8221; he wrote in a frank confessional, &#8220;
and I had failed to recognize that however much I might hate a system
in which the court gets to pick the constitutional values that it will
respect, that is the system we have.&#8221;<en>111</en> For a
constitutional law scholar, it was a rude awakening: constitutional
originalists could not be taken at their word! Scalia and fellow
justice Clarence Thomas had declined to stand behind their
jurisprudential principles.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="111">
		<number>111</number>
		<note>
			Lessig, &#8220; How I Lost the Big One.&#8221; See also Lessig,
<i>Free Culture</i> (New York: Penguin, 2004), pp. 228&#8211;48.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="307">
	<ocn>307</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet Lessig had certainly been correct that <i>Eldred</i> would not
succeed unless it convinced the Court's conservative majority. The fact
that the originalist gambit failed was perhaps the strongest message of
all: <i>nothing</i> would convince this Court to rein in the excesses
of copyright law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="308">
	<ocn>308</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even before the Supreme Court had delivered its ruling, Lessig admitted
his misgivings about the power of law to solve copyright's failings:
&#8220; The more I'm in this battle, the less I believe that
constitutional law on its own can solve the problem. If Americans can't
see the value of freedom without the help of lawyers, then we don't
deserve freedom.&#8221;<en>112</en> Yet mobilizing freedom-loving
Americans to seek redress from Congress was also likely to be doomed.
Hollywood film studios and record companies had showered some $16.6
million and $1.8 million, respectively, on federal candidates and
parties in 1998. Legislators know who butters their bread, and the
public was not an organized influence on this issue. No wonder a
progressive copyright reform agenda was going nowhere.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="112">
		<number>112</number>
		<note>
			Lessig response to Question 11, &#8220; Cyberspace
Amendment,&#8221; posed by &#8220; kzinti,&#8221; in Slashdot,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221">http://interviews.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=01/12/21/155221</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="309">
	<ocn>309</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Four years after the <i>Eldred</i> ruling, Lessig had some second
thoughts about the &#8220; Mickey Mouse&#8221; messaging strategy.
Opponents of the copyright term extension, including Lessig, had often
flaunted Mickey motifs in their dealings with the press and railed at
the &#8220; Mickey Mouse Protection Act.&#8221; Yet in 2006, Lessig
lamented to one interviewer that &#8220; the case got framed as one
about Mickey Mouse. Whereas the reality is, who gives a damn about
Mickey Mouse? The really destructive feature of the Sonny Bono law is
the way it locks up culture that has no continuing commercial value at
all. It orphaned culture. So by focusing on Mickey Mouse, the Court
thought this was an issue of whether you believed in property or not.
If, however, we had focused people on all the culture that is being
lost because it is locked up by copyright, we might have
succeeded.&#8221;<en>113</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="113">
		<number>113</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Poynder, April 7, 2006, pp. 26&#8211;27.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="310">
	<ocn>310</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The lasting impact of the <i>Eldred</i> case, ironically, may have less
to do with the law than with the cultural movement it engendered. The
lawsuit provided a powerful platform for educating the American people
about copyright law. A subject long regarded as arcane and complicated
was now the subject of prominent articles in the <i>New York Times</i>,
<i>Salon</i>, computer magazines, wire services, and countless other
publications and Web sites. A cover story for the <i>Los Angeles
Times</i>'s Sunday magazine explained how the case could &#8220; change
the way Hollywood makes money &#8212; and the way we experience
art.&#8221; <i>Wired</i> magazine headlined its profile of Lessig
&#8220; The Great Liberator.&#8221; Lessig himself barnstormed the
country giving dozens of presentations to librarians, technologists,
computer programmers, filmmakers, college students, and many others.
Even Lessig's adversary at the district court level, Arthur R. Miller,
a Harvard Law School professor, agreed, &#8220; The case has sparked a
public discussion that wasn't happening before.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="311">
	<ocn>311</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig's orations often provoked the fervor of a revival meeting
&#8212; and led to more than a few conversions. This may appear
surprising because Lessig, with his receding hairline and wireframe
glasses, strikes an unprepossessing pose. In the professorial
tradition, he can sometimes be didactic and patronizing. But on the
stage, Lessig is stylish, poised, and mesmerizing. His carefully
crafted talks are intellectual but entertaining, sophisticated but
plainspoken&#8212; and always simmering with moral passion. He
typically uses a customized version of Keynote, a Macintosh-based
program similar to PowerPoint, to punctuate his dramatic delivery with
witty visuals and quick flashes of words. (Experts in professional
presentations have dubbed this style the &#8220; Lessig Method,&#8221;
and likened it to the Takahashi Method in Japan because slides often
use a single word, short quote, or photo.)<en>114</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="114">
		<number>114</number>
		<note>
			Garr Reynolds's blog on professional presentation design, &#8220;
The &#8216; Lessig Method' of Presentation,&#8221; October 5, 2005,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://presentationzen.blogs.com/presentationzen/2005/10/the_lessig_meth.html">http://presentationzen.blogs.com/presentationzen/2005/10/the_lessig_meth.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="312">
	<ocn>312</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		More than a sidebar, Lessig's public speaking has been an important
aspect of his leadership in building a commons movement. His talks have
helped some fairly sequestered constituencies in technical fields
&#8212; computer programming, library science, Internet policy,
copyright law &#8212; understand the larger political and cultural
significance of their work. The results have sometimes been
galvanizing. As one veteran hacker told me in 2006, &#8220; There's a
whole connoisseurship of Lessig talks. He's a little past his peak
right now &#8212; but there was a period where, like when he gave the
lecture at OSCON [a conference of open-source programmers], when he was
done, they wanted to start a riot. People were literally milling
around, looking for things to smash. He was saying to these people who
worked on open source, &#8216; There's a larger world context to your
work. The government is doing things &#8212; and you can stop them!'
&#8221; <en>115</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="115">
		<number>115</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Aaron Swartz, October 10, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="313">
	<ocn>313</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Following oral arguments before the Supreme Court, the movement &#8212;
such as it was &#8212; had a rare gathering of its leaders. Public
Knowledge co-hosted a luncheon for those who had aided the lawsuit. The
diners spanned the worlds of libraries, computers, Internet publishing,
public-interest advocacy, and many other fields. The event was held at
Washington's Sewall-Belmont House, where the National Woman's Party
once led the fight for women's suffrage. This prompted Gigi Sohn,
president of Public Knowledge, to declare, &#8220; We, too, are
building a movement.&#8221;<en>116</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="116">
		<number>116</number>
		<note>
			Amy Harmon, &#8220; Challenge in Copyright Case May Be Just a
Beginning,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, October 14, 2002.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="314">
	<ocn>314</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		So after arguing &#8212; and losing &#8212; before the U.S. Supreme
Court, what does a copyright superstar do for an encore?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="315">
	<ocn>315</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A seed had already been planted at the Starbucks meeting four years
earlier. Eldred recalls telling Lessig, &#8220; I think this case is
very important, and I think you're the right guy for this. But at the
same time, I'd like to talk to you about something else. I really think
that we need to start up some sort of a copyright conservancy, which
would be sort of like a nature conservancy. It would allow people to
donate books to the public domain; we could then take ownership of
them. They could maybe have a tax deduction for them, and we could
&#8212; instead of having the book privately owned &#8212; they would
be in the public domain, maybe before the copyright term expired. We
could sort of have an independent group maintain this conservancy, and
allow the books to be put on the Internet for free.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="316">
	<ocn>316</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Eldred remembers that Lessig &#8220; was sort of stunned. He didn't
have anything to say for a little while. We sort of looked at each
other, and I think he was very shocked and surprised that I said that.
And he said, &#8216; I don't think we can do it until we've done the
work on the copyright term extension act suit, but I promise to do
it.'&#8221;<en>117</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="117">
		<number>117</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Eric Eldred, August 1, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="317">
	<ocn>317</ocn>
	<text class="h2">
		PART II
	</text>
</object>
<object id="318">
	<ocn>318</ocn>
	<text class="h3">
		The Rise of Free Culture
	</text>
</object>
<object id="319">
	<ocn>319</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To the commoners seeking to build a new cultural universe, the failure
of the <i>Eldred</i> case in the U.S. Supreme Court was both depressing
and liberating. It confirmed what the legal scholars of the 1990s had
long suspected&#8212; that both Congress and the courts were captives
to a backward-looking vision of copyright law. Government was tacitly
committed to a world of centralized and commercial mass media managed
by elite gatekeepers. That was not likely to change soon.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="320">
	<ocn>320</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As for helping build a new digital republic with a more open,
democratic character, the Clinton administration made its intentions
clear in its infamous White Paper. It wanted to convert the gift
economy of the Internet into a wall-to-wall marketplace. It wanted to
give sellers absolute control over content and limit the disruptions of
innovative newcomers. The government, acting on behalf of the film,
record, and book industries, had no desire to legitimize or fortify the
sharing culture that was fast gaining a hold on the Internet. Quite the
contrary: strengthening the public's fair use rights, access to the
public domain, and online free speech rights might interfere with the
perceived imperatives of electronic commerce. <i>Freedom</i> would
therefore have to be defined as the freedom of consumers to buy what
incumbents were selling, not as a robust civic freedom exercised by a
sovereign citizenry.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="321">
	<ocn>321</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the conclusion of <i>Eldred</i>, in 2003, it was clear that the
copyright dissidents were not just confronting one policy battle or
another; they were confronting an antiquated and entrenched worldview.
While Lessig, Eldred, and the growing band of commoners realized that
it was important to pay close attention to pending legislation and
lawsuits, many of them also realized that the real challenge was to
develop a new vision &#8212; and then try to actualize it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="322">
	<ocn>322</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A more affirmative, comprehensive vision was needed to supersede the
limited intellectual parameters of copyright law.Copyright law was a
mode of property discourse, after all, and that discourse simply could
not adequately express the aspirations of hackers, citizen-journalists,
librarians, academics, artists, democrats, and others trying to secure
open online spaces for themselves. The online insurgents acknowledged
the great importance of fair use and the public domain, but they also
considered such doctrines to be vestiges of an archaic, fraying legal
order. It was time to salvage what was valuable from that order, but
otherwise instigate a new language, a new aesthetic, a new legal
regime, a new worldview.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="323">
	<ocn>323</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This meant venturing into risky, unknown territory. Law professors
accustomed to working within the comfort of the academy would have to
clamber onto public stages and set forth idealistic, politically
inflected scenarios for Internet culture. Activists accustomed to
rhetorical critiques would have to initiate pragmatic, results-driven
projects. Free software hackers would have to invent new software and
digital protocols. Volunteers would need to be enlisted and organized
and funding secured to sustain bare-boned organizational structures.
Wholly new constituencies would have to be imagined and mobilized and
brought together into something resembling a new movement. Part II, The
Rise of Free Culture, describes the building of this foundation from
2000 to 2005.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="324">
	<ocn>324</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		4 INVENTING THE CREATIVE COMMONS
	</text>
</object>
<object id="325">
	<ocn>325</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>A public-spirited cabal schemes for a way to legalize sharing.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="326">
	<ocn>326</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Larry Lessig remembers his Starbucks conversation with Eric Eldred as a
&#8220; crystallizing moment,&#8221; a revelation that the stakes in
copyright reform were much higher than he had originally imagined. Both
Lessig and Eldred obviously wanted to win the lawsuit and recognized
its importance. But Eldred had made clear that he didn't just want to
roll back regressive laws; he wanted to develop an affirmative and
sustainable alternative.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="327">
	<ocn>327</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This got Lessig thinking: &#8220; So, okay &#8212; you get the Supreme
Court to strike the laws down, but you still live in a world where
people think that everything is property and has to be owned. If nobody
has a political awareness about why the judicial response makes sense,
then it's a pretty empty result.&#8221;<en>118</en> Throughout the
<i>Eldred</i> case, paradoxically enough, Lessig says he was &#8220;
skeptical&#8221; of the traditional liberal strategy of seeking redress
through the courts.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="118">
		<number>118</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, March 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="328">
	<ocn>328</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The turning point for him, Lessig recalled, was in recognizing that
Eldred was not just a plaintiff in a test case but &#8220; someone
trying to build a movement around a practice of making things available
in a way that took advantage of the infrastructure of the
Net.&#8221;<en>119</en> True, Eldritch Press resembled an old-style
archive of canonical works. Yet Eldred's goal all along had been to
host an active social community of book lovers, not just provide a
repository for old texts. The Web site's real importance was in the
social activity it represented &#8212; the fact that thousands of
participant-readers could come together around a self-selected amateur
eager to build a new type of social community and information genre.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="119">
		<number>119</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="329">
	<ocn>329</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig told me that when he recognized Eldred's Web site as a new type
of social practice, it helped define the challenge: &#8220; The
question became a very technical, legal one: How could we instantiate
that movement?&#8221; Lessig said he needed to find a way to &#8220;
disambiguate the social practice.&#8221; By that bit of tech-legalese,
he meant, How could the practices and values animating Eldred's Web
site be articulated in law, denoted on the Web, and thereby be seen for
what they were: a new mode of social practice and cultural freedom?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="330">
	<ocn>330</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It helps to remember that in 1998 and the following years, the legality
of sharing online works and downloading them was highly ambiguous.
Prevailing legal discourse set forth a rather stark, dualistic world:
either a work is copyrighted with &#8220; all rights reserved,&#8221;
or a work is in the public domain, available to anyone without
restriction. The mental categories of the time offered no room for a
&#8220; constituency of the reasonable,&#8221; in Lessig's words.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="331">
	<ocn>331</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Copyright law made nominal provisions for a middle ground in the form
of the fair use doctrine and the public domain. But Lessig realized
that fair use was &#8220; just a terrible structure on which to build
freedom. There are basically no bright lines; everything is a constant
debate. Of course, we don't want to erase or compromise or weaken
[these doctrines] in any sense. But it's very important to build an
infrastructure that doesn't depend upon four years of
litigation.&#8221; Or as Lessig was wont to put it in his impassioned
performances on the stump: &#8220; Fuck fair use.&#8221;<en>120</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="120">
		<number>120</number>
		<note>
			Robert S. Boynton, &#8220; Righting Copyright: Fair Use and Digital
Environmentalism,&#8221; <i>Bookforum</i>, February/March 2005,
available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.robertboynton.com/articleDisplay.php?article_id=1">http://www.robertboynton.com/articleDisplay.php?article_id=1</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="332">
	<ocn>332</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This was a theatrical flourish, of course. Back in Palo Alto, Lessig in
2001 had launched the Center for Internet &amp; Society at Stanford Law
School, which actively takes on lawsuits seeking to vindicate the
public's fair use rights, among other things. One notable case was
against Stephen Joyce, the grandson of novelist James Joyce. As
executor of the Joyce literary estate, Stephen Joyce steadfastly
prevented dozens of scholars from quoting from the great writer's
archive of unpublished letters.<en>121</en> (After losing a key court
ruling in February 2007, the Joyce estate settled the case on terms
favorable to a scholar who had been denied access to the Joyce papers.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="121">
		<number>121</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., D. T. Max, &#8220; The Injustice Collector,&#8221;
<i>New Yorker</i>, June 19, 2006, pp. 34ff.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="333">
	<ocn>333</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But Lessig's intemperance toward fair use has more to do with the
almost subliminal void in legal discourse and political culture. There
was no way to talk about the social behaviors exemplified by Eldred's
Web site except through crabbed, legalistic rules. The only available
language, the default vocabulary, is copyright law and its sanctioned
zones of freedom, such as fair use. Lessig wanted to open up a new,
more bracing line of discourse. &#8220; We wanted to rename the social
practice,&#8221; he said. It sounds embarrassingly grandiose to state
it so bluntly, but in later years it became clear to Lessig and his
loose confederation of colleagues that the real goal was to <i>imagine
and build a legal and technical infrastructure of freedom</i>.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="334">
	<ocn>334</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Initially, the goal was more exploratory and improvisational &#8212; an
earnest attempt to find leverage points for dealing with the
intolerable constraints of copyright law. Fortunately, there were
instructive precedents, most notably free software, which by 2000, in
its opensource guise, was beginning to find champions among corporate
IT managers and the business press. Mainstream programmers and
corporations started to recognize the virtues of GNU/Linux and
opensource software more generally. Moreover, a growing number of
people were internalizing the lessons of Code, that the architecture of
software and the Internet really does matter.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="335">
	<ocn>335</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even as he sought to prevail in <i>Eldred</i>, Lessig understood that
enduring solutions could not be conferred by the U.S. Supreme Court;
they had to be made real through people's everyday habits. The
commoners needed to build a new set of tools to actualize freedom on
the Internet, and to develop a new language, a new epistemology, a new
vision, for describing the value proposition of sharing and
collaboration. The big surprise, as we will see in chapter 6, was the
latent social energies poised to support this vision.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="336">
	<ocn>336</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		What If . . . ?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="337">
	<ocn>337</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Shortly after the <i>Eldred</i> case was filed in January 1999, a
number of Harvard Law students working with Lessig announced the
formation of a new group, &#8220; Copyright's
Commons.&#8221;<en>122</en> Led by Jennifer Love and Ashley Morgan,
Copyright's Commons published a monthly Web newsletter that provided
updates on the progress of the <i>Eldred</i> case and miscellaneous
news about the public domain.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="122">
		<number>122</number>
		<note>
			The Copyright's Commons Web site is now defunct but can be found at
the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/cc">http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/cc</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="338">
	<ocn>338</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Copyright's Commons described itself as &#8220; a coalition devoted to
promoting the public availability of literature, art, music, and
film.&#8221; It was actually a named plaintiff in the <i>Eldred</i>
case.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="339">
	<ocn>339</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That spring, Copyright's Commons announced a new project that it called
the &#8220; counter-copyright [cc] campaign.&#8221; Billed as &#8220;
an alternative to the exclusivity of copyright,&#8221; the campaign
invited the general public to &#8220; show your support for the public
domain by marking your work with a [cc] and a link to the Copyright's
Commons website. . . . If you place the [cc] icon at the end of your
work, you signal to others that you are allowing them to use, modify,
edit, adapt and redistribute the work that you created.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="340">
	<ocn>340</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The project may have been an imaginative call to arms, but there was no
infrastructure behind it except one Web page, and no background
material except a Web link to the Open Source Initiative. Wendy
Seltzer, a Harvard Law student at the time, recalled that the [cc]
symbol produced by Copyright's Commons &#8220; was supposed to be a
public domain dedication, but nobody had yet gone through all of the
thinking about what was actually required to put something into the
public domain, and did this satisfy the &#8216; affirmative act'
requirements [of the law]? Part of the germ of the Creative Commons was
thinking about what would it take to make this &#8212; the [cc] symbol
&#8212; an actual, meaningful, legally binding
statement.&#8221;<en>123</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="123">
		<number>123</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Wendy Seltzer, September 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="341">
	<ocn>341</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig, in the meantime, was keeping a frenetic schedule. He was
overseeing the progress of the <i>Eldred</i> lawsuit; traveling to give
speeches to dozens of conferences and forums every year; promoting his
book Code; and writing a monthly column in the <i>Industry Standard</i>
until it went under with the tech bubble collapse in 2001. The year
before, Kathleen Sullivan of Stanford Law School persuaded Lessig to
join its faculty and supervise a new law clinic, the Center for
Internet and Society.<en>124</en> Along the way Lessig also got married
to Bettina Neuefeind, a human rights lawyer.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="124">
		<number>124</number>
		<note>
			Ross Hanig, &#8220; Luring Lessig to Stanford Law School,&#8221;
<i>Recorder</i>, October 17, 2001, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.law.com">http://www.law.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="342">
	<ocn>342</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Work on <i>Eldred</i> intensified after the district court dismissed
the case in October 1999. Lessig embarked on a new round of legal
strategizing with colleagues to prepare the appeals court brief, which
was submitted in May 2000. Throughout this period, intellectual
property (IP) thinkers and tech activists &#8212; especially those in
the Lessig/Cambridge/Stanford axis &#8212; were highly attuned to the
gathering storm in copyright and software policy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="343">
	<ocn>343</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the most tumultuous developments was Napster, a homemade
file-sharing software program that had become an international
sensation. Released in June 1999, Napster was the creation of hacker
Shawn Fanning, then a student at Northeastern University in Boston.
Within a year, the free program had been downloaded by an estimated 70
million users, drawing fierce denunciations by the recording industry
and Washington officials. Napster used centralized file directories on
the Internet to connect users to music files on thousands of individual
computers. By enabling people to download virtually any recorded music
in existence, for free, it was as if the fabled &#8220; cosmic
jukebox&#8221; had arrived. Of course, much of the copying was
blatantly illegal. Yet consumers welcomed Napster as one of the few
vehicles they had for thumbing their nose at a reactionary music
industry that refused to offer digital downloads. The Recording
Industry Association of America (RIAA) sued Napster in December 1999,
and succeeded in shutting it down in July 2001.<en>125</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="125">
		<number>125</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napster">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Napster</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="344">
	<ocn>344</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Napster craze intensified the polarized property discourse that
Lessig and his colleagues were trying to transcend. Napster encouraged
an either/or debate by suggesting that a song is either private
property or contraband; there was no middle ground for fair use or the
public domain. While the RIAA and acts like Metallica and Madonna
railed against massive copyright infringements, defenders of Napster
were quick to point out its promotional power. An album produced by the
English rock band Radiohead, for example, was downloaded for free by
millions of people before its release &#8212; a fact that many credit
with pushing the album, Kid A, to the top of the Billboard CD sales
chart. But such claims carried little weight against those defending
what they considered their property rights.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="345">
	<ocn>345</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The controversy over Napster was clearly influential in shaping the
debate over how to protect the public domain. Berkman Center
co-director Jonathan Zittrain recalls, &#8220; If we're trying to hang
the hopes of the community on the right just to copy stuff, we're going
to lose &#8212; and maybe we should. [The issue] is actually about the
right to manipulate the symbols and talismans of our culture&#8221;
&#8212; what Professor Terry Fisher likes to call &#8220; semiotic
democracy.&#8221;<en>126</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="126">
		<number>126</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Jonathan Zittrain, September 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="346">
	<ocn>346</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The problem was that copyright discourse, at least in the hands of the
record and film industries, refused to acknowledge that the sharing and
reuse of works might be necessary, desirable, or legal. The concept did
not compute. There was a conspicuous void in the prevailing terms of
debate. So the challenge facing the Cambridge copyright cabal was
really a riddle about epistemology, law, and culture rolled into one.
How could a new type of free culture, independent of the market, be
brought into existence? And how could the creative works of this
imagined culture be made legally &#8220; shareable&#8221; instead of
being automatically treated as private property?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="347">
	<ocn>347</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This was an unprecedented challenge. When culture was chiefly a set of
analog media &#8212; books, records, film &#8212; there had been
affirmative legal limits on the scope of copyright. Before 1978, the
law regulated only commercial uses of a work and only works that had
been formally registered, which meant that most works automatically
remained in the public domain. Moreover, there was a natural, physical
&#8220; friction&#8221; preventing copyright holders from
over-controlling how a work could circulate and be used. When words
were fixed in books and sounds embedded in vinyl, people could
circulate those objects freely, without having to ask permission from
copyright holders. In the digital world, however, the physical
constraints of analog media disappeared. Copyright holders now claimed
that every digital blip, however transient, constituted a &#8220;
copyright event&#8221; subject to their unilateral control. In
practice, this greatly weakened the rights a person could enjoy under
the fair use doctrine.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="348">
	<ocn>348</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In a sense, the entire legal and cultural framework for free culture
needed to be reimagined so it could function in the digital
environment. The terms of fair use essentially had to be renegotiated
&#8212; an undertaking that copyright law had never had to tackle in
the past. But how might that be achieved when both Congress and the
courts were beholden to the copyright maximalists' worldview?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="349">
	<ocn>349</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Such were the kinds of conversations that swirled around the Berkman
Center, Harvard Law School, MIT, and a handful of progressive
intellectual property circles. Such discussions had been going on for
years, especially in the context of free software and public-domain
scholarship, but now they were reaching the lay public. The Napster and
<i>Eldred</i> cases were vehicles for educating the press and the
public, and Lessig's book <i>Code</i> was becoming must reading for
anyone who cared about Internet governance and digital culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="350">
	<ocn>350</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Amid this swirl of copyright controversy, MIT professor Hal Abelson had
lunch with Lessig at the Harvard Faculty Club in July 2000. The two had
co-taught a class on cyberlaw two years earlier and shared many
interests in the confluence of copyright and technology. One topic that
day was Eric Eldred's idea of a copyright conservancy &#8212; a &#8220;
land trust&#8221; for public-domain works. On August 1, 2000, Abelson
sent Zittrain an e-mail:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="351">
	<ocn>351</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		<i>Here's an idea that we might be able to get going, and where the
Berkman Center could help.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="352">
	<ocn>352</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		<i>Let's set up a tax-free, charitable foundation to which artists and
record label companies could donate the copyright for recorded music.
I'm thinking of all the old music for which there isn't currently an
active market.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="353">
	<ocn>353</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		<i>The foundation would arrange for this stuff to be loaded for free
onto the internet and give the public permission to use it. The artists
and record labels get a tax writeoff. The RIAA and Napster hug and
kiss, and everyone goes home happy.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="354">
	<ocn>354</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		<i>What do you think?</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="355">
	<ocn>355</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		<i>Hal</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="356">
	<ocn>356</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Zittrain loved the idea, and suggested that it might make a great
clinical project for Harvard Law students that fall. But he wondered if
the Copyright Clearinghouse Center &#8212; a licensing and permissions
organization for music &#8212; already offered such a service (it
didn't). Lessig proposed that Stanford and Harvard law schools jointly
develop the program. He immediately identified one glaring problem: it
would be difficult to &#8220; establish a process for valuing gifts of
copyrighted stuff that would be clearly understood and would be
accepted by the IRS.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="357">
	<ocn>357</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What ensued was a lengthy and irregular series of e-mail conversations
and social encounters through which the idea was chewed over and
refined. Lessig acted as the &#8220; supernode&#8221; among a small
group of participants that initially included Zittrain, Eldred, Nesson,
and Diane Cabell, a lawyer and administrator at the Berkman Center.
Within a month, others were invited into the conversation: Richard
Stallman; Duke Law professors James Boyle and Jerome H. Reichman; and
documentary film producer Eric Saltzman, who had just become director
of the Berkman Center.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="358">
	<ocn>358</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A digital archive for donated and public-domain works had great appeal.
Just as land trusts acted as trustees of donated plots of land, so the
Copyright's Commons (as Lessig proposed that it be named) would be a
&#8220; conservancy&#8221; for film, books, music, and other works that
were either in the public domain or donated. Six weeks after Abelson's
original suggestion, Lessig produced a &#8220; Proposal for an
Intellectual Property Conservancy&#8221; for discussion
purposes.<en>127</en> He now called the concept &#8220; an IP
commons&#8221; &#8212; &#8220; the establishment of an intellectual
property conservancy to facilitate the collection and distribution
under a GPL-like license of all forms of intellectual property.&#8221;
As elaborated by two Harvard Law School students, Chris Babbitt and
Claire Prestel, &#8220; The conservancy will attempt to bridge the gap
between authors, corporate copyright holders and public domain
advocates by providing a repository of donated works which we believe
will create a more perfect &#8216; market' for intellectual
property.&#8221;<en>128</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="127">
		<number>127</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; Proposal for the Intellectual Property
Conservancy,&#8221; e-mail to ipcommons group, November 12, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="128">
		<number>128</number>
		<note>
			Chris Babbitt and Claire Prestel, &#8220; Memorandum to Michael
Carroll, Wilmer Cutler Pickering, &#8216; IP Conservancy,' &#8221;
October 24, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="359">
	<ocn>359</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Friendly critiques started arriving immediately. Stallman considered
the proposal a &#8220; good idea overall,&#8221; but as usual he
objected to the words, such as &#8220; intellectual property&#8221; and
&#8220; copyright protection,&#8221; which he considered &#8220;
propaganda for the other side.&#8221;<en>129</en> Abelson, a friend and
colleague of Stallman's at MIT, was not finicky about word choices, but
he did believe that software donations should be directed to the Free
Software Foundation, not to the envisioned project. FSF already
existed, for one thing, but in addition, said Abelson, &#8220; It may
be detrimental to have people initially associate this [new project]
too closely with the FSF. . . . We need to craft a public position that
will unify people. An FSF-style &#8216; let's undo the effects of all
those evil people licensing software' is not what we want
here.&#8221;<en>130</en> Some people suggested attracting people to the
conservancy by having &#8220; jewels&#8221; such as material from the
estates of deceased artists. Another suggested hosting special
licenses, such as the Open Audio License, a license issued by the
Electronic Frontier Foundation in 2001 that lets musicians authorize
the copying and reuse of their songs so long as credit is given and
derivative songs can be shared.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="129">
		<number>129</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Richard Stallman to Lessig, September 11, 2000. See
also &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html">http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html</link>&gt;.
Stallman suggested calling the project the &#8220; Copyright and Patent
Conservancy.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="130">
		<number>130</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Hal Abelson to Lessig, September 12, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="360">
	<ocn>360</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The most difficult issue, said Abelson, was the economics of the
project. The care and maintenance of donations, such as the master
version of films, could be potentially huge expenses. Digitizing
donated works could also be expensive. Finally, there were questions
about the economic incentives to potential donors. Would people really
wish to donate works that have significant cash value?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="361">
	<ocn>361</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Answers to such questions were hardly self-evident, but there were
encouraging signs. After Lessig gave a speech at the University of
Michigan in September 2000, a man came up to him and announced, &#8220;
I'm one of the people who benefited by the Mickey Mouse Protection
Act.&#8221; It was Robert Frost, Jr., son of the great poet. Frost
said, &#8220; I obviously need to check with my family, but we may be
interested in becoming a contributor to your
conservancy.&#8221;<en>131</en> If Robert Frost's estate could come
forward with his literary legacy, perhaps there were others willing to
do the same.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="131">
		<number>131</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Lawrence Lessig to ipcommons group, September 8, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="362">
	<ocn>362</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When Berkman Center director Eric Saltzman joined the conversation, he
raised a series of difficult questions about the whole idea:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="363">
	<ocn>363</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Why would a person or corp. donate copyrighted materials? Larry's draft
implies a benefit to the IP owner &#8212; does this mean broader
Internet facilitated use, and not merely a tax deduction? Under what
circumstances, if any, does the Conservancy charge for use of its IP?
If a user modifies a story, say, producing a screenplay, to whom does
that screenplay belong? Would a motion picture based upon that
screenplay owe $$ to the Conservancy? If so, how much (this is the
damages phase of the <i>Rear Window</i> case)?<en>132</en> Wouldn't a
new, hopeful band prefer to allow free use of its song(s) on a
commercially promoted site like MP3.com rather than the Conservancy
site? All asking: How to make the Conservancy into a useful garden, not
a well-meaning weed patch of unwanted, neglected IP?<en>133</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="132">
		<number>132</number>
		<note>
			This case, <i>Stewart v. Abend</i>, 100 S. Ct. 1750 (1990),
required the copyright owners of Alfred Hitchcock's movie <i>Rear
Window</i> to pay damages to the author of a book upon which the film
was based. Saltzman was concerned that the conservancy would be liable
for any illicit derivative works. See Daniel A. Saunders, &#8220;
Copyright Law's Broken Rear Window: An Appraisal of Damage and Estimate
of Repair,&#8221; <i>California Law Review</i> 80, no. 1 (January
1992), pp. 179&#8211;245.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="133">
		<number>133</number>
		<note>
			E-mail to ipcommons group, September 18, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="364">
	<ocn>364</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By early October 2001, some of these questions had been provisionally
answered. For example: Only digital works would be accepted initially.
No limitations or restrictions would be set on the use of donated
works. Prospective academic partners would include the University of
California at Berkeley, Duke, Harvard, MIT, and Stanford. Lessig
suggested both Richard Stallman and Jack Valenti as possible board
members. The central goal was to develop a new sort of noncommercial
space in cyberspace for the sharing and reuse of music, visual art,
film, literature, nonfiction, academic work, software, and
science.<en>134</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="134">
		<number>134</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Lawrence Lessig to ipcommons group, November 12, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="365">
	<ocn>365</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But many questions still hung in the air. Could the free software ethic
really translate to other creative genres? Would tax incentives elicit
donations of works? Would independent appraisals of donated works be
needed? How would the conservancy search the titles of works and get
permissions clearances?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="366">
	<ocn>366</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For all of its brainpower and commitment, Lessig's rump caucus might
not have gotten far if it had not found a venturesome source of money,
the Center for the Public Domain. The center &#8212; originally the Red
Hat Center &#8212; was a foundation created by entrepreneur Robert
Young in 2000 following a highly successful initial public offering of
Red Hat stock. As the founder of Red Hat, a commercial vendor of
GNU/Linux, Young was eager to repay his debt to the fledgling
public-domain subculture. He also realized, with the foresight of an
Internet entrepreneur, that strengthening the public domain would only
enhance his business prospects over the long term. (It has; Young later
founded a print-on-demand publishing house, Lulu.com, that benefits
from the free circulation of electronic texts, while making money from
printing hard copies.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="367">
	<ocn>367</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The director of the center, Laurie Racine, a former geneticist and
business professor, was skilled at making shrewd strategic grants and
&#8220; character bets&#8221; in public-domain activism. Because the
center was not hobbled by the bureaucracy or timidity that afflicts
many large foundations, it was able to make swift decisions and bold
bets on innovative projects. (I came to work closely with Racine on a
number of projects, including the co-founding of Public Knowledge, in
2001.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="368">
	<ocn>368</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig met with Racine in October 2000. On a napkin, he sketched his
idea for expanding copyright for authors. He came away with funding for
a meeting at the Berkman Center and, later, a $100,000 commitment to
launch the IP conservancy; the Center for the Public Domain eventually
put up $1 million to get the project going, well before other funders
saw the promise of the idea. Racine wanted her new center to be
associated with &#8220; a project that has broad vision, credibility,
range and staying power.&#8221; She saw Lessig's project as having all
of those things.<en>135</en> The grant was based more on the concept
than a specific plan, however. At the time it was not entirely clear if
the project would own and manage digital works, host Web services that
made things freely available, or provide legal and software tools
&#8212; or something else.<en>136</en> There was, nonetheless, a great
sense of mission and urgency to get under way.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="135">
		<number>135</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Lawrence Lessig to ipcommons group, October 11, 2000,
which contained e-mail from Laurie Racine to Lessig, October 25, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="136">
		<number>136</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Lawrence Lessig to ipcommons group, November 12, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="369">
	<ocn>369</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Interestingly, two similar initiatives were also in the early stages of
development. The Knowledge Conservancy, led by David Bearman at
Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, had a similar model of
accepting donations of materials and making them available online. It
focused more on sponsorship donations and memberships, while Lessig's
group was more oriented toward legal research and Web hosting of works.
Another project, OpenCulture.org, planned to compensate artists for
contributions to the public domain, but apparently it never took
off.<en>137</en> Lessig and his group were not averse to joining forces
with others, but they were intent on vetting their own business model,
such as it was, before joining anyone else's venture.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="137">
		<number>137</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://Openculture.org">http://web.archive.org/web/*/http://Openculture.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="370">
	<ocn>370</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One turning point came in January 2001 after Saltzman had met with
several lawyers at Wilmer, Cutler &amp; Pickering, a prominent law firm
in Washington, D.C.<en>138</en> After conversations with attorneys
David Johnson and Michael W. Carroll, it became clear that a nonprofit
trust managing donated material could face considerable liability if it
turned out that the donors did not actually own the works. To explore
this issue, Carroll produced a much-praised legal memo that raised a
red flag: &#8220; What if we were fools, and the person who gave us the
rights [to a work] actually never had the rights and suddenly we get
sued for infringement?&#8221; asked Carroll.<en>139</en> One successful
lawsuit could sink the whole enterprise.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="138">
		<number>138</number>
		<note>
			Contained in e-mail from Christina Ritchie to ipcommons group,
December 15, 2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="139">
		<number>139</number>
		<note>
			Michael Carroll, &#8220; Potential Copyright Liability and DMCA
Safe Harbor Relief for Creative Commons,&#8221; appendix to &#8220;
Briefing Book for Creative Commons Inaugural Meeting,&#8221; May 7,
2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="371">
	<ocn>371</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The project was caught in a conundrum. It wanted to legalize a whole
set of social practices for sharing and reusing creative works &#8212;
but establishing a content intermediary for that purpose appeared to be
financially prohibitive under the law. It could be hugely expensive to
clear titles and indemnify the organization and future users against
copyright infringement risks.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="372">
	<ocn>372</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For a few months, various people in Lessig's orbit suggested
complicated schemes to try to finesse the legal problems. For example,
one way that the conservancy could reduce its liability would be to
simply point to the Web locations of public-domain materials, in the
style of Napster's centralized index of songs. This would also avoid
the nuisance and expense of clearing titles on thousands of works.
Another idea was to create a &#8220; three zone system&#8221; of
content &#8212; Zone A for content that the conservancy owned and
licensed; Zone B for content that was merely hosted at the conservancy
site with no copyright representations; and Zone C, a simple search
engine with links to public-domain content. Each of these zones, in
turn, raised a flurry of complicated, speculative legal
issues.<en>140</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="140">
		<number>140</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Eric Saltzman to ipcommons group, January 19, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="373">
	<ocn>373</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		None of the proposed alternatives got much traction, especially when
Saltzman took a closer look at the realities of tax deductions for
donors. Saltzman came to see that tax breaks would have very little
incentive value for most potential donors, and establishing the cash
value of donations would be difficult in any case. Moreover, if donors
were getting little in return for their donations, they would be wary
of signing a form indemnifying the conservancy against legal liability.
On top of all this, Saltzman, like others, had misgiving about &#8220;
the idea of the federal treasury contributing public money [in the form
of tax expenditures].&#8221; In short, the conservancy approach seemed
plagued with many complicated and perhaps insoluble problems.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="374">
	<ocn>374</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As if to keep the pot boiling, newcomers kept adding new thoughts. Two
leading thinkers about the public domain in science, Paul Uhlir and
Jerome H. Reichman, urged that the group expand its mission to include
scientific research and take an international perspective.<en>141</en>
(Uhlir directs the international scientific and technical information
programs at the National Academy of Sciences/ National Research
Council; Reichman is an intellectual property professor at Duke Law
School.) Both were keenly aware of the dangers to scientific progress
if copyright and patent protection continued to expand.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="141">
		<number>141</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Paul Uhlir and Jerry Reichman, January 30, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="375">
	<ocn>375</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In January 2001, the caucus reached one point of consensus&#8212; that
the primary function of this commons should be &#8220; to facilitate
free/low-cost public use of original works.&#8221; It also agreed upon
a name. Asked to vote on a name from a list that included IP Commons,
Dot-commons, Sui Generous, IP Conservancy, and Public Works, Saltzman
piped up, &#8220; May I suggest another name? CREATIVE COMMONS.&#8221;
When the final poll results were counted, Creative Commons was the
clear winner with five votes, with one vote apiece for the remaining
names. A later poll pitted &#8220; The Constitution's Commons&#8221;
against &#8220; Creative Commons&#8221; (CC) in a final runoff. The
vote tally is lost to history, but we do know which name
prevailed.<en>142</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="142">
		<number>142</number>
		<note>
			E-mails from ipcommons listserv to ipcommons group, January 11, 12,
13, 16, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="376">
	<ocn>376</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Viewpoints quickly diverged on how a commons ought to be structured and
what metrics of success should be used. Should it seek to maximize the
number of donations or the number of downloads? Should it develop
quality holdings in a given field or provide the widest possible
breadth of content? Should it focus on social interaction and creative
reuses of works? Should the focus be on producers or consumers of
intellectual property? Should the organization focus on individuals or
institutions? And how would it be different from other rights clearance
organizations and content archives? The group seemed mired in a great
cloud of uncertainty.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="377">
	<ocn>377</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For the next nine months, the group intensified its debate about how to
build the envisioned conservancy. After law student Dotan Oliar
sketched out possible &#8220; business models,&#8221; Saltzman
persuaded a friend at McKinsey &amp; Company, the consulting firm, to
provide a pro bono assessment.<en>143</en> &#8220; The McKinsey folks
were very skeptical and, I think, had a hard time fitting this into
their [business] framework,&#8221; recalled one student at the meeting,
Chris Babbitt. After the meeting, he was convinced that Creative
Commons could not possibly host a content commons: &#8220; It would
just be huge amounts of material, huge costs, and we didn't have the
money for that.&#8221; <en>144</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="143">
		<number>143</number>
		<note>
			Dotan Oliar, &#8220; Memo on Creative Commons &#8212; Towards
Formulating a Business Plan,&#8221; March 19, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="144">
		<number>144</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Chris Babbitt, September 14, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="378">
	<ocn>378</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Feeling the need to force some concrete decisions, Saltzman and Lessig
convened twenty-eight people for an all-day meeting in Hauser Hall at
Harvard Law School, on May 11, 2001, to hash out plans. &#8220; What
we're trying to do here is <i>brand the public domain</i>,&#8221;
Lessig said. A briefing book prepared by Chris Babbitt posed a pivotal
question to the group: Should Creative Commons be structured as a
centralized Web site or as an distributed, open-source licensing
protocol that would allow content to be spread across cyberspace? The
centralized model could be &#8220; an eBay for opensource IP&#8221; or
a more niche-based commons for out-of-print books, film, or poetry. A
mock Web site was actually prepared to illustrate the scenario. The
home page read: &#8220; The member sites listed on the CommonExchange
have been certified by Creative Commons to offer high-quality,
non-infringing content on an unrestricted basis. Please feel free to
use and pass these works along to others. We invite you to donate works
of your own to help maintain the digital Commons.&#8221;<en>145</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="145">
		<number>145</number>
		<note>
			The mock-up can be found at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/creativecommons/site.htm">http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/creativecommons/site.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="379">
	<ocn>379</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The distributed commons model would resemble the Chicago Mercantile
Exchange or the New York Stock Exchange &#8212; &#8220; a trusted
matchmaker to facilitate the transaction of securing rights,&#8221;
according to the briefing book. &#8220; Just as corporations or
commodities producers must meet certain criteria before they are listed
on the Exchange, we could condition &#8216; listing' in the Commons on
similar criteria, albeit reflecting open source rather than financial
values.&#8221;<en>146</en> The virtue of the distributed model was that
it would shift costs, quality control, and digitization to users.
Creative Commons would serve mostly as a credentialing service and
facilitator. On the other hand, giving up control would be fraught with
peril &#8212; and what if Creative Commons' intentions were ignored?
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="146">
		<number>146</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Briefing Book for Creative Commons Inaugural
Meeting,&#8221; May 7,2001, p.10.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="380">
	<ocn>380</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Several participants remember Lessig, Nesson, and Zittrain pushing for
the distributed model, which seemed a bolder and riskier option.
&#8220; Larry was the lead advocate for a distributed commons, where it
would be focused on a license mechanism that we then would release to
the world, and we let the world do with it what it will,&#8221; one
attendee recalled. &#8220; At the time, I think, XML-type capabilities
were just coming around, and Larry was very confident that that was the
direction to go.&#8221;<en>147</en> XML, or Extensible Markup Language,
is a programming language that uses self-created &#8220; tags&#8221;
that help Internet users aggregate and share digital content residing
on different computer systems. Lessig envisioned XML tags embedded in
any Creative Commons&#8211;licensed work, which could then be used to
identify shareable content on the Internet.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="147">
		<number>147</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Chris Babbitt, September 14, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="381">
	<ocn>381</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This perspective carried the day, and the &#8220; conservancy&#8221;
model of the commons was formally abandoned. CC would serve as a
licensing agent. The licenses would enable authors' works to be made
available online in an easy, low-cost way without the full restrictions
of copyright law. A standardized set of licenses would overcome the
ambiguities of the fair use doctrine without overriding it. Creators
could voluntarily forfeit certain copyright rights in advance&#8212;
and signal that choice &#8212; so that others could freely reuse,
share, and distribute CC-licensed works.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="382">
	<ocn>382</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Jonathan Zittrain remembers being skeptical at first: &#8220; So this
whole thing is just about some tags? It's about <i>licensing</i>? How
boring.&#8221; Upon reflection, however, he saw the value of CC
licensing as a way to create a new default. &#8220; As soon as you
realize &#8212; &#8216; Well, wait a minute! It's just about authors
being able to express their desires!'&#8221;<en>148</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="148">
		<number>148</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Jonathan Zittrain, September 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="383">
	<ocn>383</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		More than a menu of individual choices, the licenses would constitute
an embryonic cultural order &#8212; a &#8220; constitutional
system&#8221; to direct how text, images, and music could circulate in
the online world, based on authors' individual choices. But the new
focus on licenses raised its own set of novel quandaries. What options
should an author be able to choose? What suite of licenses made sense?
While licensing terms may be boring and legalistic, the architecture
could have potentially profound implications for cultural freedom
&#8212; which is why the legal minds involved in the licenses spent so
much time arguing seemingly obscure points.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="384">
	<ocn>384</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		However these debates were resolved, everyone agreed that it was time
to incorporate Creative Commons as a nonprofit group, assemble a board,
recruit a chief executive officer, and of course raise more money. The
stated goal: &#8220; to expand the shrinking public domain, to
strengthen the social values of sharing, of openness and of advancing
knowledge and individual creativity.&#8221;<en>149</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="149">
		<number>149</number>
		<note>
			Oren Bracha and Dotan Oliar, &#8220; Memo: May 7th Consensus
Regarding the Creative Commons Project,&#8221; August 20, 2001, p. 1.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="385">
	<ocn>385</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There was a certain audacity if not unreality to the whole venture. Law
professors don't go around inventing ambitious public projects to
revamp the social applications of copyright law. They don't generally
muck around with software, contract law, and artists to build an
imagined &#8220; sharing economy.&#8221; &#8220; There was always this
lingering suspicion in the back of my mind,&#8221; recalled Babbitt in
2006, &#8220; that it [Creative Commons] would be kind of a rich man's
folly, and this would just be some little thing &#8212; a niche
experiment &#8212; that really wouldn't turn out to have merited the
sort of sustained interest of this high-caliber group of
people.&#8221;<en>150</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="150">
		<number>150</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Chris Babbitt, September 14, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="386">
	<ocn>386</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Crafting the Licenses
	</text>
</object>
<object id="387">
	<ocn>387</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If Creative Commons licenses were going to enable artists to determine
future uses of their works &#8212; on less restrictive terms than
copyright law &#8212; what did actual artists think of the whole idea?
To get a crude baseline of opinion, Laura Bjorkland, a friend of
Lessig's and manager of a used-book store in Salem, Massachusetts,
conducted an unscientific survey. She asked about a dozen writers,
photographers, painters, filmmakers, and a sculptor if they would be
interested in donating their works to a commons, or using material from
one? Most of them replied, &#8220; I've never even <i>thought</i> of
this before. . . .&#8221;<en>151</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="151">
		<number>151</number>
		<note>
			Laura Bjorkland, &#8220; Regarding Creative Commons: Report from
the Creative Community,&#8221; in &#8220; Briefing Book for Creative
Commons Inaugural Meeting,&#8221; May 7, 2001, pp. 16&#8211;19.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="388">
	<ocn>388</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A classical composer said he &#8220; loved the idea of a Nigerian high
school chamber group playing one of my string quartets without paying
royalties . . . but I would not want a film studio or pop song writer
using one of my themes on a commercial project, even if my name's
attached, without royalties.&#8221; Some artists worried about others
making money off derivatives of their work. Many complained that
artists earn so little anyway, why should they start giving away their
work? Others were reluctant to see their work altered or used for
violence or pornography. Photographers and visual artists found it
&#8220; a little scary&#8221; to let their signature style be used by
anyone.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="389">
	<ocn>389</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In short, there was no stampede for starting a public-domain
conservancy or a set of licenses. Some worried that the CC licenses
would be a &#8220; case of innovation where's there's no current
demand.&#8221; Another person pointed out, more hopefully, that it
could be a case of &#8220; changing the market demand with a new
model.&#8221;<en>152</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="152">
		<number>152</number>
		<note>
			Oren Bracha and Dotan Oliar, &#8220; Memo: May 7th Consensus
Regarding the Creative Commons Project,&#8221; August 20, 2001, p. 3,
note 9.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="390">
	<ocn>390</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Lessig caucus was clearly struggling with how best to engage with
the networked environment. Napster had demonstrated that, in the
dawning Internet age, creativity would increasingly be born,
distributed, and viewed on the Web; print and mass media would be
secondary venues. For a society still deeply rooted in print and mass
media, this was a difficult concept to grasp. But Michael Carroll, the
Washington lawyer who had earlier vetted the conservancy's liability
issues, shrewdly saw network dynamics as a potentially powerful tool
for building new types of digital commons. In 2001, he had noticed how
a bit of Internet folk art had become an overnight sensation. Mike
Collins, an amateur cartoonist from Elmira, New York, had posted the
cartoon below on Taterbrains, a Web site.<en>153</en> The image
suddenly rocketed throughout the cyberlandscape. Everyone was copying
it and sharing it with friends.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="153">
		<number>153</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://politicalhumor.about.com/od/funnypictures/ig/100-Funny-Pictures/Confusing-Florida-Ballot.htm">http://politicalhumor.about.com/od/funnypictures/ig/100-Funny-Pictures/Confusing-Florida-Ballot.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="391">
	<ocn>391</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<image xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:actuate="onLoad" xlink:show="embed"
xlink:href="../_sisu/image/vs_db_1.png" width="430" height="316"
/>[vs_db_1.png]
	</text>
</object>
<object id="392">
	<ocn>392</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Carroll observed:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="393">
	<ocn>393</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		[Collins] distributed his design initially without a motive to profit
from it. But the scale of distribution surpassed what he imagined, and
in a subsequent interview he expressed some resentment over those who
had made money from T-shirts and other paraphernalia using his design.
But he appears to have taken no actions to enforce his copyright, the
notice notwithstanding. Copyright lawyers would consider the unlicensed
distribution of this work &#8220; leakage&#8221; &#8212; that is, a
violation of law but not worth pursuing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="394">
	<ocn>394</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		But if we could take steps to make it cheap, easy and desirable for the
Mike Collinses of the world to stick a CC tag on something like this
before sending it out, &#8220; leakage&#8221; becomes legal, changing
the terms of the debate.<en>154</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="154">
		<number>154</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Michael Carroll to Molly Van Houweling and Larry
Lessig, October 15, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="395">
	<ocn>395</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		CC tags could make nonproprietary culture the default, reversing the
presumption of copyright law. Everyone agreed with this general
approach, but implementing it was rife with difficult questions. As
Saltzman recalled: &#8220; What kind of relationship did we want to
encourage between the creator/licensor and the user? Should it be
totally automated? Should it invite some back-and-forth? Should there
be a requirement that licensors provide contact
information?&#8221;<en>155</en> The General Public License for software
had shown the feasibility of a license for safeguarding a commons of
shared code. Could it work in other creative sectors? It would be
critical to strike the right balance. As law student Chris Babbitt put
it, &#8220; Too little protection for the donor's interests and no one
will donate; too little room for the users to use the work, and the
service is useless.&#8221;<en>156</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="155">
		<number>155</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Eric Saltzman, April 11, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="156">
		<number>156</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Briefing Book,&#8221; p. 12.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="396">
	<ocn>396</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If there were going to be several licenses, the next question was how
many, and of what sort? There are many different types of creativity,
after all. Should each one have its own set of special licenses? The
Berkman conclave agreed that there should be a publicdomain license
enabling creators to grant a nonexclusive, royaltyfree license on their
works, without the viral conditions of the GPL. As for other licenses,
five ideas were put on the table for consideration: a license
authorizing free reuses of a work so long as proper attribution is
given to the author; a license authorizing noncommercial uses; and a
license authorizing free reuses but prohibiting derivative uses. Other
suggestions included a license authorizing academic uses only and a
&#8220; timed donations&#8221; license, which would allow an artist to
revoke a work from the commons after a stipulated number of
years.<en>157</en> Neither of these two licenses gained support from
the group.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="157">
		<number>157</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="397">
	<ocn>397</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There were also lots of open questions about how to structure the
specific terms of the licenses. Should they be perpetual? Will the
licensor be liable for &#8220; downstream&#8221; uses of a work that
are deemed an infringement? Will licensors be required to identify
themselves? Should licensors be able to add their own separate
warranties and representations? Crafting the licenses meant going
beyond the abstract rhetoric of the commons. These licenses had to be
serious, operational legal instruments that courts would recognize as
valid.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="398">
	<ocn>398</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another concern was making the new CC licenses compatible with existing
licenses seeking similar goals. MIT had produced the first such license
for its OpenCourseWare initiative, which allows Internet users to use
the university's curricula and syllabi (see chapter 12). To ensure that
CC- and MIT-licensed content would be compatible, the CC lawyers
deliberately wrote a license that would meet MIT's needs. Another
license, the GNU Free Documentation License (FDL), was being used on
Wikipedia, among other online sites. But the FDL, originally intended
for software documentation materials, was incompatible with the CC
licenses. Stallman refused to alter the FDL, and Wikpedia was already
under way and committed to the FDL. This quirk of history meant that
Wikipedia content and CC-licensed content could not legally be
combined. As we will see in chapter 9, this was the beginning of a
rancorous schism in the free culture world, and the beginning of a
heated philosophical/ political debate over which licenses truly
promote &#8220; freedom.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="399">
	<ocn>399</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As this overview suggests, licensing complexities can quickly soar out
of control and become overwhelming. Yet the very point of the Creative
Commons licenses was to simplify the sharing and reuse of digital
material. CC planners wanted to help ordinary people bypass the layers
of mind-numbing legalese that make copyright law so impenetrable and
inaccessible. The Creative Commons was all about empowering individuals
and avoiding lawyers. A proliferation of licensing choices would only
lead to license incompatibilities, a Balkanization of content on the
Internet, and more lawyers. Sharing and interoperability go together,
as Stallman's early experiences with his Emacs Commune showed.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="400">
	<ocn>400</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Somehow, therefore, the licenses had to thread three needles at once.
They needed to align (1) the technical dynamics of the Internet with
(2) the legal realities of copyright law and (3) the everyday needs of
people. The ingenious solution was to create licenses on three layers:
a &#8220; lawyer-readable&#8221; license that could stand up in court,
a &#8220; human-readable&#8221; license that could be understood by
ordinary people, and a &#8220; machine-readable&#8221; license that
could be recognized by search engines and other software on the
Internet. Each &#8220; layer&#8221; expressed the same license terms in
a different way &#8212; an unexpected twist on Lessig's concern for
&#8220; fidelity in translation.&#8221; The formal license was called
the &#8220; Legal Code&#8221; (or &#8220; legal source code&#8221;);
the machine-readable translation of the license was called &#8220;
Digital Code&#8221;; and the plain-language summary of the license,
with corresponding icons, was the &#8220; Commons Deed&#8221; (or the
&#8220; happy deed&#8221;).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="401">
	<ocn>401</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Branding the Public Domain in Code
	</text>
</object>
<object id="402">
	<ocn>402</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the lawyers brooded and debated the licensing terms, another
complicated debate was unfolding on the tech side of CC: how to brand
the public domain in software code. If code is law, then it was
imperative for Creative Commons to find some way to represent CC
licenses in digital code. Abelson, Lessig, and others understood that
the future of the Internet was likely to include all sorts of
automated, computer-to-computer functions. One of the best ways to
promote a new body of &#8220; free content&#8221; on the Web,
therefore, would be to develop machine-readable code that could be
inserted into any digital artifact using a Creative Commons license.
That way, search engines could more easily identify CC-licensed works
by their terms of use, and help assemble a functionally accessible
oeuvre of digital content that was free to use.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="403">
	<ocn>403</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At this time, in 2001, the founder of the World Wide Web, Tim
Berners-Lee, and others at the World Wide Web Consortium, based at MIT,
were trying to conceptualize the protocols for a new &#8220; logical
layer&#8221; of code on top of the World Wide Web. They called it the
Semantic Web. The idea is to enable people to identify and retrieve
information that is strewn across the Internet but not readily located
through conventional computer searches. Through a software format known
as RDF/XML,<en>*6</en> digital content could be tagged with
machine-readable statements that would in effect say, &#8220; This
database contains information about x and y.&#8221; Through Semantic
Web protocols and metatags on content, it would be possible to conduct
searches across many types of digital content &#8212; Web pages,
databases, software programs, even digital sensors &#8212; that could
yield highly specific and useful results.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*6">
		<symbol>*6</symbol>
		<note>
			RDF, or Resource Description Framework, is a way to make a statement
about content in a digital artifact. XML, or Extensible Markup
Language, is a way to write a specialized document format to send
across the Web, in which certain content can be marked up, or
emphasized, so that other computers can &#8220; read&#8221; it.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="404">
	<ocn>404</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unfortunately, progress in developing the Semantic Web has been bogged
down in years of technical disagreement and indifference among the
larger Web community. Some critics argue that the project has stalled
because it was being driven by a small corps of elite software
theorists focused on databases, and not by a wider pool of
decentralized Web practitioners. In any case, the Creative Commons
became one of the first test cases of trying to implement RDF/XML for
the Semantic Web.<en>158</en> The project was led initially by Lisa
Rein, a thirty-three-year-old data modeler who met Lessig at an
O'Reilly open-source software conference. Lessig hired her as CC's
first technical director in late 2001 to embed the CC legal licenses in
machine-readable formats.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="158">
		<number>158</number>
		<note>
			For background, see &#8220; The Semantic Web: An
Introduction,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://infomesh.net/2001/swintro">http://infomesh.net/2001/swintro</link>&gt;;
Aaron Swartz and James Hendler, &#8220; The Semantic Web: A Network of
Content for the Digital City,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://blogspace.com/rdf/SwartzHendler">http://blogspace.com/rdf/SwartzHendler</link>&gt;;
and John Markoff, &#8220; Entrepreneurs See a Web Guided by Common
Sense,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, November 12, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="405">
	<ocn>405</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Writing the XML code was not so difficult, said Rein; the real
challenge was &#8220; deciding what needed to be included and how you
represent the licenses as simply as possible.&#8221;<en>159</en> This
required the lawyers and the techies to have intense dialogues about
how the law should be faithfully translated into software code, and
vice versa. Once again, there were complicated problems to sort
through: Should there be a central database of CC-licensed content? How
could machine-readable code be adapted if the legal licenses were later
modified?
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="159">
		<number>159</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lisa Rein, December 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="406">
	<ocn>406</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Rein got an unexpected assist in the project from programming whiz
Aaron Swartz, who had heard about Creative Commons and volunteered to
help write the RDF/XML code. Swartz was an esteemed member of the RDF
core working group at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), and so was
intimately involved in Semantic Web deliberations. He was also a
fifteen-year-old junior high school student living with his parents in
Chicago. &#8220; I remember these moments when I was sitting in the
locker room, typing on my laptop, in these [W3C] debates, and having to
close it because the bell rang and I had to get back to class,&#8221;
Swartz recalled. At CC, he was given the title of &#8220; Volunteer
Metadata Coordinator.&#8221; His job was &#8220; to design the RDF
schema and what the XML documents would look like, and work that out
with my friends at the W3C and get their approval on
things.&#8221;<en>160</en> For his troubles, Swartz received an in-kind
donation of a laptop computer and travel expenses, rather than a
salary. &#8220; At the time, I felt bad,&#8221; said Swartz. &#8220;
They were a nonprofit doing work I believe in. I didn't feel I should
be taking their money when I didn't need it.&#8221; With later help
from Ben Adida, the CC team managed to develop an RDF that could attach
CC licenses to Web pages. But since the Semantic Web protocols were
still in flux, and not widely used, the effort amounted to a
speculative gamble on future and widespread adoption of those
protocols.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="160">
		<number>160</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Aaron Swartz, October 10, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="407">
	<ocn>407</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although inspired by the Semantic Web and by Lessig's analysis in
<i>Code</i>, the RDF/XML coding was also provoked by the growing
specter of digital rights management (DRM), the reviled systems used by
film and music companies to lock up their content. The Creative Commons
dreamed of developing an &#8220; anti-DRM&#8221; code to express the
idea, &#8220; This content is and shall remain free.&#8221; Professor
Hal Abelson remembered that &#8220; we even used the phrase, &#8216;
DRM of the public domain.'&#8221;<en>161</en> The coinage that Lessig
later popularized is &#8220; digital rights expression&#8221; &#8212;
metadata that indicate that a digital object can be shared and reused.
There was a passing fear that CC's digital rights expression code might
infringe on DRM patents; one company known for its aggressive patent
defense raised concerns. But once it was made clear that the CC's RDF
code amounted to a label, and did not execute online rights on a
person's computer, the problem disappeared.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="161">
		<number>161</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Hal Abelson, April 14, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="408">
	<ocn>408</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The machine-readable CC licenses were one of the first major buildouts
of RDF protocols. Swartz ruefully recalled the reaction of his friends
at W3C: &#8220; I got the sense that they thought it was sort of a
silly project, that they were thinking about bigger and longer-term
things.&#8221; Adida, who later replaced Swartz as the CC
representative at the W3C, played a major role in helping develop the
metatags and protocols.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="409">
	<ocn>409</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The RDF/XML coding was part of a larger CC strategy to brand the public
domain via software code. Since RDF code alone is like a nail without a
hammer, Creative Commons decided to develop a specialized search engine
so that Internet users could locate CC-licensed content. Without such a
search engine, Lessig said in April 2002, &#8220; there will be no way
to demonstrate that we've produced anything useful.&#8221;<en>162</en>
Swartz, who was not involved in the project, said, &#8220; I was
impressed that they did it, because it was probably the biggest
programming job I'd seen them do at the time.&#8221; In the meantime,
the CC began a series of overtures to Google and Yahoo in an attempt to
get their search engines to search for CC-licensed content. After years
of lukewarm interest, both Google and Yahoo added CC-search
capabilities in 2005. Creative Commons also nurtured the hope that once
enough content contained CC metadata, software developers would develop
new applications to let people browse, use, and distribute CC-tagged
content.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="162">
		<number>162</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Lawrence Lessig to Hal Abelson, April 22, 2002.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="410">
	<ocn>410</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Action Shifts to Palo Alto
	</text>
</object>
<object id="411">
	<ocn>411</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the fall of 2001, Creative Commons was still an idea without
definition. The project gained new momentum in September 2001 when
Lessig hired a former student, Molly Shaffer Van Houweling, to be the
first director of the organization. Van Houweling, a sophisticated yet
plainspoken law scholar with strong executive skills, had just finished
clerking for Supreme Court justice David Souter. She set about
incorporating the Creative Commons, organizing the board, building a
Web site, and hammering out final versions of the licenses.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="412">
	<ocn>412</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Once a key foundation grant was secured &#8212; $1 million from the
Center for the Public Domain &#8212; the Creative Commons was
incorporated in Massachusetts (home to many key backers of the project)
on December 21, 2001. The first board members included several legal
scholars (Boyle, Carroll, Lessig), a computer scientist (Abelson), two
filmmakers (Saltzman and Davis Guggenheim, a friend of Lessig's), and a
Web publisher (Eldred). Charged with breathing life into a fragile
idea, Van Houweling settled into a small office on the third floor of
Stanford Law School (before the project was reassigned to basement
offices).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="413">
	<ocn>413</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In January 2002, Glenn Otis Brown, a lawyer and former student of
Lessig's, was hired as assistant director. Brown had been a law student
at Harvard Law School, where he had known Van Houweling and taken a
constitutional law course from Lessig. An affable Texan who had flirted
with a journalism career, Brown had just finished a year of clerking
for a circuit court judge. He was due to start a job in New York City
the following week when he got a call from Van Houweling. &#8220; She
and Larry were starting something to do with copyright at
Stanford,&#8221; recalled Brown. &#8220; I knew pretty much nothing
else about it except it was a nonprofit and it was going to be a
fulltime job. . . . The next thing I knew, I was moving to
California.&#8221;<en>163</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="163">
		<number>163</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, June 9, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="414">
	<ocn>414</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig, Van Houweling, and Brown took the menu of licenses proposed by
two graduate students, Dotan Oliar and Oren Bracha, and sought to
refine them and make them as legally bulletproof as
possible.<en>164</en> They were torn about the process to adopt.
&#8220; We didn't want to do a collective drafting process with the
entire Internet community,&#8221; said Van Houweling. &#8220; That
didn't seem practical. And yet we were a little nervous, I think, about
not knowing what our potential user base would want to use.&#8221;
Lessig was unfazed. Release of the licenses &#8220; isn't going to be
like a movie premiere,&#8221; he told Van Houweling, but more of an
evolutionary process. The idea was to get the licenses in circulation,
monitor their progress, and make changes as necessary.<en>165</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="164">
		<number>164</number>
		<note>
			Oren Bracha and Dotan Oliar, &#8220; Memo: Presentation of Two
Possible Creative Commons Layer 1 Architectures,&#8221; October 1,
2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="165">
		<number>165</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Molly Van Houweling, March 21, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="415">
	<ocn>415</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Two of the most prestigious law firms in Silicon Valley, Cooley Godward
Kronish and Wilson, Sonsini, offered pro bono legal assistance to the
effort. Attorney John Brockland, an expert in opensource software
licenses at Cooley Godward and a former student of Lessig's, was the
architect of the final licenses, assisted by Catherine Kirkman, a
licensing attorney at Wilson, Sonsini. Brockland recalled, &#8220; One
of the drafting challenges was to write something that could be broadly
useful across a wide range of copyrighted works and would not be tied
to particular nuances of the way the copyright statute
works.&#8221;<en>166</en> Most copyright licenses are drafted for
specific clients and particular circumstances, not for the general
public and all types of copyrighted works.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="166">
		<number>166</number>
		<note>
			Interview with John Brockland, January 5, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="416">
	<ocn>416</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Much of the discussion, said Van Houweling, &#8220; revolved around the
values that we wanted to embed in the licenses, and what were the outer
limits of those values?&#8221; Ultimately, she said, &#8220; we opted
for a menu of licenses that was weighted toward the nonproprietary
[content]. . . . We wanted to subsidize a certain set of choices that
are otherwise underserved.&#8221;<en>167</en> The point was to
facilitate the rise of a sharing culture, after all, not to replicate
the baroque dysfunctions of copyright law.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="167">
		<number>167</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Molly Van Houweling, March 21, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="417">
	<ocn>417</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since the CC licenses were trying to articulate a new &#8220; middle
ground&#8221; of voluntary choices for sharing, it had to grapple with
all sorts of fine legal complexities. How exactly should they define a
derivative work? What should be considered a noncommercial reuse of a
work? Can you dedicate a work to the public domain?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="418">
	<ocn>418</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Some artists felt that they ought to be able to prohibit derivative
uses of their works in pornography or hate speech. Hal Abelson
adamantly disagreed. If the licenses had an &#8220; offensive
uses&#8221; clause, as either a standard or optional term, it would
open up a can of worms and put Creative Commons on the side of censors.
That view readily prevailed.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="419">
	<ocn>419</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A primary concern was anticipating how the licenses might be
interpreted by the courts. Wendy Seltzer was worried that the CC
licenses might become entangled with court cases involving the fair use
doctrine. She wanted to make sure that the CC licenses were not seen as
limiting or waiving a person's fair use rights in any way. Her concern,
shared by many others, resulted in an explicit disclaimer stating that
intention. &#8220; I'm really glad that we did that,&#8221; recalled
Glenn Brown, then the assistant director of CC, &#8220; because we
ended up pointing to that over and over and over again &#8212; to make
clear that this was something that went above and beyond fair
use.&#8221;<en>168</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="168">
		<number>168</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, June 9, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="420">
	<ocn>420</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To ensure that the licenses would be enforceable, the CC lawyers built
on the same legal base as the GPL; the licenses were crafted not as
contracts, but as conditional permissions based on copyright law. A
contract requires that the licensee have the opportunity to accept or
reject the terms of an agreement, which would not be the case here. A
conditional permission, by contrast, is the legal prerogative of a
copyright holder. She is simply offering advance permission to use a
CC-licensed work (to share, modify, distribute, etc.) so long as the
specified terms are respected.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="421">
	<ocn>421</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Countless lawyerly refinements of a very technical nature were made to
the licenses to ensure that they would be specific as needed, vague
enough to be versatile, and rigorous enough to survive a court's
scrutiny.<en>169</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="169">
		<number>169</number>
		<note>
			The lawyers also wrestled with a host of imponderables that had no
obvious answers, such as: What if people started spoofing the licenses
by using them in inappropriate ways? Should the Creative Commons
establish a central registry for CC-licensed works as a way to ensure
the credibility of the project? (After long debate, the idea was
ultimately rejected.) Would the Creative Commons be held liable for
contributory negligence if someone used a CC license on a copyrighted
song? (The CC took its chances.) Would the Creative Commons lose its
trademark if it allowed anyone to use its trademarked logo? (Several
lawyers warned that CC licensing of its trademark could not be properly
policed.) Glenn Otis Brown worried that the board might be sued for
facilitating the unauthorized practice of law. &#8220; I don't know how
long I spent calling up different insurance brokers trying to get a
quote,&#8221; he recalled. &#8220; People had no idea what I was
talking about. We ended up going all the way to Lloyd's of London to
ask them,&#8221; said Brown, laughing. &#8220; They wrote back and
said, &#8216; You can't insure that.' &#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="422">
	<ocn>422</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The first set of licenses, version 1.0, was completed in the spring of
2002 and included eleven choices. The six basic licenses, listed here
in order of least restrictive to most restrictive, included:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="423">
	<ocn>423</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution (BY).</b> Authorizes free reuses (download,
distribution, modifications, commercial uses, etc.) so long as the
author is credited for the original creation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="424">
	<ocn>424</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>ShareAlike (SA).</b> Authorizes free reuses so long as credit is
given and the new work is licensed under the same terms.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="425">
	<ocn>425</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>No Derivatives (ND).</b> Authorizes free reuses so long as the new
work is unchanged and in whole.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="426">
	<ocn>426</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>NonCommercial (NC).</b> Authorizes free reuses so long as they are
not commercial in nature.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="427">
	<ocn>427</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>NonCommercial ShareAlike (NC-SA).</b> Requires free reuses so long
as the new work is passed along on the identical terms as the original
work (so, for example, works that use a NonCommercial ShareAlike work
will also have to be distributed as NonCommercial ShareAlike works).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="428">
	<ocn>428</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>NonCommercial No Derivatives (NC-ND).</b> Authorizes free reuses so
long as credit is given, no changes are made, the work is kept intact,
and it is not used commercially. This is the most restrictive CC
license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="429">
	<ocn>429</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Because each of these six basic choices can be combined with other CC
licenses, copyright holders had five additional choices:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="430">
	<ocn>430</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution-ShareAlike (BY-SA).</b> Authorizes free reuses so long
as the author is credited and the new work is licensed under the same
terms.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="431">
	<ocn>431</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution-NonCommercial (BY-NC).</b> Authorizes free reuses so
long as the author is credited and the new work is used for
noncommercial purposes.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="432">
	<ocn>432</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution NonCommercial-ShareAlike (BY-NCSA).</b> Authorizes free
reuses so long as the author is credited, the new work is used for
noncommercial purposes, and the new work is passed along using this
same license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="433">
	<ocn>433</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution-No Derivatives (BY-ND).</b> Authorizes free reuses so
long as the author is credited and the new work is unchanged and in
whole.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="434">
	<ocn>434</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b>Attribution No Derivatives-ShareAlike (BY-ND-SA).</b> Authorizes
free reuses so long as the author is credited, the new work is
unchanged and in whole, and the new work is passed along using this
same license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="435">
	<ocn>435</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It soon became clear that very few people were choosing any of the five
licenses that did not require attribution of the author (the SA, ND,
NC, NC-SA, and NC-ND licenses). So in May 2004 Creative Commons decided
to &#8220; retire&#8221; those licenses, leaving the six most commonly
used ones today (BY, BY-SA, BY-NC, BY-NC-SA, BY-ND, and BY-ND-SA).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="436">
	<ocn>436</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Still another choice was offered to copyright holders, a &#8220; public
domain dedication,&#8221; which is not a license so much as &#8220; an
overt act of relinquishment in perpetuity&#8221; of any rights in the
work. The public domain dedication places no restrictions whatsoever on
subsequent reuses of the work.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="437">
	<ocn>437</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To the first-time user, the licenses may seem a little
daunting.<en>170</en> The full implications of using one or another
license are not immediately obvious. The tagline for the licenses,
&#8220; Some Rights Reserved,&#8221; while catchy, was not really
self-explanatory. This became the next big challenge to Creative
Commons, as we see in chapter 6: how to educate creators about a
solution when they may not have realized they even had a problem.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="170">
		<number>170</number>
		<note>
			A FAQ at the Creative Commons Web site answers the most frequent
user questions about the licenses. It is available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/">http://wiki.creativecommons.org/</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="438">
	<ocn>438</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By December 2002, the three levels of code &#8212; legal, digital, and
human &#8212; had been coordinated and finalized as version 1.0. The
organization was set to go public, which it did at a splashy coming-out
party in San Francisco. The gala featured appearances by the likes of
rapper DJ Spooky (an ardent advocate for remix culture) and a London
multimedia jam group, People Like Us. Lessig proudly introduced the
licenses as &#8220; delivering on our vision of promoting the
innovative reuse of all types of intellectual works, unlocking the
potential of sharing and transforming others' work.&#8221;<en>171</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="171">
		<number>171</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/press-releases/entry/3476">http://creativecommons.org/press-releases/entry/3476</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="439">
	<ocn>439</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps the biggest surprise was a set of video testimonials from both
ends of the copyright spectrum &#8212; John Perry Barlow of Electronic
Frontier Foundation and Jack Valenti of the Motion Picture Association
of America. With uncharacteristic solemnity, Barlow said: &#8220; I
personally think there is something deeply oxymoronic about the term
&#8216; intellectual property.' But as long as we have set up a huge
matrix of laws and social understandings that traffic in that
assumption, we have to meet the conditions as we have found them and
use what exists to preserve the human patrimony.&#8221; The silvermaned
Valenti saluted the &#8220; Lessig compact&#8221; that is both &#8220;
respectful of, and supports, copyright&#8221; while allowing people
&#8220; to give up some of their copyrighted material, or all of it,
and put it on the creative commons for others to view it or hear
it.&#8221; &#8220; Larry, I hope that my supporting you in this doesn't
ruin your reputation,&#8221; Valenti joked.<en>172</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="172">
		<number>172</number>
		<note>
			See &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://mirrors.creativecommons.org/cc-barlow-valenti.mov">http://mirrors.creativecommons.org/cc-barlow-valenti.mov</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="440">
	<ocn>440</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Many copyfighters were not thrilled to have an arch-adversary like
Valenti praise their efforts at their moment of triumph. Yet that was a
deliberate part of Lessig's strategy: to assert a politically neutral
middle ground from which to remake the social landscape of creativity.
The question raised in some people's mind was whether something so
politically unassailable could have significant impact. Still others
saw it as a welcome base upon which to build a new sharing economy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="441">
	<ocn>441</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC launch party can be seen as a watershed moment in the struggle
to protect the public domain. It announced a novel gambit to transcend
the political impasse over copyright reform, a way to address copyright
abuses without getting embroiled in a pitched and unwinnable
confrontation. It legitimized all sorts of activities that had
historically been seen as morally problematic, if not illegal. While
building on the idea of the public domain developed over the preceding
twenty years, Creative Commons inaugurated a new story about the
commons, creativity, and the value of sharing. Watching the rocking
party and savoring the hard work completed, Glenn Brown remembers a
friend musing to him, &#8220; I wonder if we'll see another legal hack
like this in our careers.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="442">
	<ocn>442</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		5 NAVIGATING THE GREAT VALUE SHIFT
	</text>
</object>
<object id="443">
	<ocn>443</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Amateurs discover new tools for creating value: open networks and
self-organized commons.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="444">
	<ocn>444</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; It was never really clear to me what was going to happen after
we launched the licenses,&#8221; recalled Glenn Otis Brown. &#8220;
Would our work be done?&#8221; The intense push to craft the licenses
and release them now over, Brown and his colleagues were only too happy
to ease up in their work. (Van Houweling had left in 2002 to teach law;
she is now at the University of California at Berkeley.) Despite his
enthusiasm for the licenses, Brown had his private doubts about their
future success. &#8220; To be honest, I was pretty scared,&#8221; he
said. &#8220; I was worried they were going to go nowhere, and that I
was going to be blamed for that.&#8221;<en>173</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="173">
		<number>173</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, August 10, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="445">
	<ocn>445</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In January 2003, a month after the CC licenses were announced, however,
the project took on a new urgency. The Supreme Court handed down its
<i>Eldred</i> ruling, sending a clear signal that the courts were not
much interested in reforming copyright law. Soon after this crushing
disappointment, Lessig began to intensify his focus on the Creative
Commons. &#8220; The pressure really increased,&#8221; said Brown,
&#8220; but that's also when things started to get a lot more fun.
That's when the staff started working on things <i>all the time</i> and
we got a stable, permanent staff, instead of contractors.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="446">
	<ocn>446</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What began as a modest licensing experiment began to take on the
character of a permanent campaign. Working from the themes in <i>The
Future of Ideas</i>, Lessig came to see the Creative Commons as more
than a nonprofit custodian of some free public licenses; it was a
champion for a bracing new vision of culture. This broader orientation
meant reaching out to various creative sectors and the general public
with messages that were both practical (&#8220;here's how to use the
licenses&#8221;) and idealistic (&#8220;you, too, can build a better
world&#8221;).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="447">
	<ocn>447</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The band of enterprising law scholars and techies who once saw their
challenge as one of bolstering the public domain began to widen their
gaze to the vast world of creativity and democratic culture. Social
practice, not theory, became the animating force in their work.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="448">
	<ocn>448</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This meant reaching out to writers, musicians, filmmakers,
photographers, librarians, academics, and other creators. All faced
worrisome threats to their freedoms in the digital environment, as we
saw in chapter 2. Lessig and the small Creative Commons staff made it
their job to speak to these threats, promote the licenses, and set
forth an alternative to the corporate media's vision of culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="449">
	<ocn>449</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Our single, overarching aim,&#8221; said Lessig in December
2002, &#8220; is to build the public domain, by building projects that
expand the range of creative work available for others to build
upon.&#8221;<en>174</en> In an attempt to credential the licenses, the
Creative Commons touted endorsements by a number of educational
institutions (MIT, Rice University, Stanford Law School),
public-spirited tech enterprises (iBiblio, the Internet Archive,
O'Reilly &amp; Associates), and venturesome musicians (DJ Spooky, Roger
McGuinn of the Byrds).
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="174">
		<number>174</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, Creative Commons press release, December 19, 2002;
&#8220; CC in Review: Lawrence Lessig on How It All Began&#8221;
[weekly e-mail series], October 12, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="450">
	<ocn>450</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As if by spontaneous replication, people from far-flung corners of the
Internet began to use the licenses on their blogs, their MP3 music
files, their photographs, their books. Week after week, the Creative
Commons's blog trumpeted the new recruits &#8212; the blog for book
designers (Foreword), the database of metadata about music
(MusicBrainz), the online storytelling Web site (Fray), the 2004
presidential campaign of Dennis Kucinich.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="451">
	<ocn>451</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But the larger challenge for Creative Commons was finding ways to reach
new constituencies who knew little about technology or copyright law.
Why should they bother to use a CC license? This was a major public
education challenge. Besides appearing at many conferences and
cultivating press coverage, Glenn Brown spent a lot of time developing
a Web site that could explain the licenses clearly. Great pains were
taken to develop a precise, intuitive user interface to help people
learn about the licenses and choose the right one for them. Copyright
law was complicated enough; the CC licenses had to be seen as a simple
alternative.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="452">
	<ocn>452</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Advertisers have plenty of trouble communicating the virtues of
mouthwash in a crowded public sphere. Could something as dry and
forbidding as copyright law ever be made lucid and even hip? Although
not a trained marketer, Glenn Brown had a knack for communicating
things simply.Working with graphic designer Ryan Junell and Web
designer Matt Haughey, Brown developed a site that combined a certain
institutional authority with contemporary pizzazz. This style was on
abundant display in a series of jaunty and entertaining Flash
animations that explained the rationale for Creative Commons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="453">
	<ocn>453</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Junell designed the now-familiar CC logo as a deliberate counterpoint
to the copyright logo, &#169; . &#8220; I thought that Creative Commons
should have something like the copyright logo since it deals with the
same stuff,&#8221; said Junell. &#8220; It should be something really
simple and pure.&#8221;<en>175</en> Junell set his sights on making the
CC logo a standard, ubiquitous symbol. He hoped that it would
eventually be incorporated into the Unicode, an international registry
for every character in any language used in software, from % to ∆ to
≠.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="175">
		<number>175</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Ryan Junell, September 23, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="454">
	<ocn>454</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In promoting its licenses, Creative Commons fashioned itself as a
neutral, respectable defender of individual choice. &#8220; Our tools
are just that &#8212; tools,&#8221; said Haughey, who was then
developing the CC Web site. &#8220; Our model intentionally depends on
copyright holders to take responsibility for how they use those tools.
Or how they don't use them: If you're unsure and want to keep your full
copyright, fine. If you choose to allow others to re-use your work,
great.&#8221;<en>176</en> While many CC users were enthusiastically
bashing copyright law, Lessig and the CC staff made it a point to
defend the basic principles of copyright law &#8212; while extolling
the value of collaborative creativity and sharing under CC licenses.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="176">
		<number>176</number>
		<note>
			Matthew Haughey, &#8220; Blogging in the Public Domain,&#8221;
Creative Commons blog post, February 5, 2003, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3601">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3601</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="455">
	<ocn>455</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Despite praise by the heads of the Motion Picture Association of
America and the Recording Industry Association of America, the licenses
nonetheless did attract critics. Some in the music industry regarded
the licenses as a Trojan horse that would dupe unsuspecting artists.
David Israelite, president and CEO of the National Music Publishers'
Association, told <i>Billboard</i>, &#8220; My concern is that many who
support Creative Commons also support a point of view that would take
away people's choices about what to do with their own
property.&#8221;<en>177</en> <i>Billboard</i> went on to cite the
cautionary tale of a songwriter who was being kept alive by his AIDS
medications, thanks to the royalties from a highly successful song.
&#8220; No one should let artists give up their rights,&#8221; said
Andy Fraser of the rock group Free. Other critics, such as John Dvorak
of <i>PC Magazine</i>, called the CC licenses &#8220; humbug&#8221; and
accused them of adding &#8220; some artificial paperwork and complexity
to the mechanism [of copyright],&#8221; while weakening the rights that
an author would otherwise enjoy.<en>178</en> Still others had cultural
scores to settle and criticized &#8220; anything advocated by clever,
sleek young lawyers.&#8221;<en>179</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="177">
		<number>177</number>
		<note>
			Susan Butler, &#8220; Movement to Share Creative Works Raises
Concerns in Music Circles,&#8221; <i>Billboard</i>, May 28, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="178">
		<number>178</number>
		<note>
			John C. Dvorak, &#8220; Creative Commons Humbug: This Scheme
Doesn't Seem to Benefit the Public,&#8221; PC Magazine, July 28, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="179">
		<number>179</number>
		<note>
			Researchers at the Economic Observatory of the University of
Openness, &#8220; Commercial Commons,&#8221; on the online journal
<i>Metamute</i>, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.metamute.org/?q=en/Commercial-Commons">http://www.metamute.org/?q=en/Commercial-Commons</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="456">
	<ocn>456</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Putting aside such quibbles and prejudices, the CC licenses seemed a
benign enough idea. Given its reliance on copyright law, how could any
entertainment lawyer object? Yet the real significance of the licenses
was only appreciated by those who realized that a Great Value Shift was
kicking in. For them, the licenses were a useful legal tool and
cultural flag for building a new sharing economy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="457">
	<ocn>457</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Great Value Shift
	</text>
</object>
<object id="458">
	<ocn>458</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In retrospect, the CC licenses could not have been launched at a more
propitious moment. Networked culture was exploding in 2003. Broadband
was rapidly supplanting dial-up Internet access, enabling users to
navigate the Web and share information at much faster speeds. Prices
for personal computers were dropping even as computing speeds and
memory capacity were soaring. Sophisticated new software applications
were enabling users to collaborate in more powerful, user-friendly
ways. The infrastructure for sharing was reaching a flashpoint.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="459">
	<ocn>459</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Put another way, the original promise of the Internet as a gift economy
was coming into its own. Originally built as a platform for efficient
sharing among academic researchers, the Internet by 2003 was being used
by some 600 million people worldwide.<en>180</en> The open framework
for sharing was no longer just a plaything of technophiles and
academics; it was now insinuated into most significant corners of the
economy and social life. As it scaled and grew new muscles and limbs,
the Internet began to radically change the ways in which wealth is
generated and allocated.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="180">
		<number>180</number>
		<note>
			Nielsen/Net Ratings estimated 585 million Internet users in 2002;
the International Telecommunications Union estimated 665 million. See
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www2.sims.berkeley.edu/research/proiects/how-much-info-2003/internet.htm">http://www2.sims.berkeley.edu/research/proiects/how-much-info-2003/internet.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="460">
	<ocn>460</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I call this the Great Value Shift &#8212; a deep structural change in
how valuable things are created for commerce and culture. The shift is
not only a fundamental shift in business strategy and organizational
behavior, but in the very definition of wealth. On the Internet, wealth
is not just financial wealth, nor is it necessarily privately held.
Wealth generated through open platforms is often <i>socially created
value</i> that is shared, evolving, and nonmonetized. It hovers in the
air, so to speak, accessible to everyone.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="461">
	<ocn>461</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Creative Commons had the good fortune to introduce its licenses just as
the Great Value Shift was picking up momentum. The types of distributed
innovation first seen in free software were now popping up in every
imaginable corner of cyberspace. The social content was not just about
listservs and newsgroups, but instant messaging networks, Web logs,
podcasts, wikis, social networking sites, collaborative archives,
online gaming communities, and much else.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="462">
	<ocn>462</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; What we are seeing now,&#8221; wrote Yochai Benkler in his
book, <i>The Wealth of Networks</i>, &#8220; is the emergence of more
effective collective action practices that are decentralized but do not
rely on either the price system or a managerial structure for
coordination.&#8221; Benkler's preferred term is &#8220; commons-based
peer production.&#8221; By that, he means systems that are
collaborative and non-proprietary, and based on &#8220; sharing
resources and outputs among widely distributed, loosely connected
individuals who cooperate with each other.&#8221;<en>181</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="181">
		<number>181</number>
		<note>
			Yochai Benkler, <i>The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production
Transforms Markets and Freedom</i> (New Haven, CT: Yale University
Press, 2006), p. 60.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="463">
	<ocn>463</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Informal social relationships, working in the unregimented, free space
of open platforms, were beginning to change economic production and
culture. &#8220; Behaviors that were once on the periphery&#8212;
social motivations, cooperation, friendship, decency &#8212; move to
the very core of economic life,&#8221; Benkler argued.<en>182</en>
Money and markets do not necessarily control the circulation of
creativity; increasingly, online communities &#8212; large numbers of
people interacting with one another on open platforms &#8212; are the
engines that create value.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="182">
		<number>182</number>
		<note>
			Benkler at the iCommons Summit, Dubrovnik, Croatia, June 15, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="464">
	<ocn>464</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC licenses were launched at a moment when the new modes of value
creation were just gaining a foothold.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="465">
	<ocn>465</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		We do not yet have well-accepted theoretical models for understanding
this new &#8220; socioeconomic space&#8221;; the online environments
are still so new, and much is still in flux.<en>183</en> But it has not
escaped the notice of major corporations that online social dynamics
can result in some radically more effective models for organizing
employees and engaging with customers. A <i>BusinessWeek</i> cover
story touted &#8220; The Power of Us&#8221; in June 2005, profiling the
ways in which companies like Procter &amp; Gamble use mass
collaboration for R&amp;D; Hewlett-Packard had created a virtual stock
market among its staff to gather collective estimates that have
improved sales forecasts.<en>184</en> The <i>Economist</i> has written
about the &#8220; fortune of the commons&#8221; that can result when
there are open technical standards, and business professors such as
Henry Chesbrough have examined new &#8220; open business
models.&#8221;<en>185</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="183">
		<number>183</number>
		<note>
			An excellent overview of these new spaces is Don Tapscott and
Anthony D. Williams, <i>Wikinomics: How Mass Collaboration Changes
Everything</i> (New York: Portfolio, 2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="184">
		<number>184</number>
		<note>
			Robert D. Hof, &#8220; The Power of Us: Mass Collaboration on the
Internet Is Shaking Up Business,&#8221; <i>BusinessWeek</i>, June 20,
2005, pp. 73&#8211;82.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="185">
		<number>185</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; The Fortune of the Commons,&#8221; Economist, May 8, 2003;
Henry Chesbrough, <i>Open Business Models: How to Thrive in the New
Innovation Landscape</i> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School Press,
2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="466">
	<ocn>466</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Before looking at the many creative sectors that have adopted the CC
licenses &#8212; the focus of chapter 6 &#8212; it helps to understand
the Great Value Shift that open networks have catalyzed. In one market
after another, open networks have helped new competitors slash all
sorts of business costs while enhancing their capacity to innovate and
respond to changing consumer demand. Open networks have also given rise
to new types of social platforms on the Web, often known as Web 2.0,
which are making it economically attractive to serve niche markets.
This is the so-called Long Tail. Yet even these sweeping changes in
market structure are facing a qualitatively different kind of
competition &#8212; from the commons sector. It turns out that informal
online communities based on trust, reciprocity, and shared social norms
can perform a great many tasks more efficiently than markets, and with
some measure of social pleasure and fun.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="467">
	<ocn>467</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Endangered Economics of Centralized Media
	</text>
</object>
<object id="468">
	<ocn>468</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The dominant systems of communications in the twentieth century &#8212;
radio, broadcast and cable television, recorded music, theatrical film
&#8212; required large amounts of centralized capital, corporate
management, and professional control. These media have very different
business models and practices, but they all rely upon centralized
control of capital and distribution to large, fairly undifferentiated
audiences. Each depends upon efficiencies derived from high-volume
sales and a limited spectrum of commercial choices.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="469">
	<ocn>469</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Centralized Media also dictate certain economic and social identities
for people. There are &#8220; sellers,&#8221; who are the prime source
of expertise, innovation, and production, and there are &#8220;
consumers,&#8221; who passively buy, or don't buy, what is offered.
Sellers mostly determine what choices are offered to buyers, and they
tend to have greater market power and information than consumers.
Interactions between sellers and consumers are mostly brief and
transactional; there is little ongoing conversation or relationship
between seller and buyer.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="470">
	<ocn>470</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Much of the strength of the Centralized Media derives from its control
of critical &#8220; choke points&#8221; of product development and
distribution. By controlling the technical standards for a product, its
retail distribution or its brand identity, a company can maximize its
competitive advantages and limit competition. The high concentration of
capital needed to communicate through a Centralized Media outlet is
itself a useful way to limit competition. No surprise that only large,
publicly traded corporations and rich individuals own and control
Centralized Media &#8212; and that their messages tend to be overtly
commercial or commercial-friendly.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="471">
	<ocn>471</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While this paradigm is obviously quite attractive for those investors
with a piece of the action, it also entails some very large costs that
are not readily evident. Companies have to spend a lot on advertising
to build a brand identity that can enhance sales. Their &#8220;
blockbuster&#8221; business model entails large upfront costs in order
to reap large financial returns. Centralized Media require expensive
systems for finding, recruiting, and developing stars; an elaborate
marketing apparatus to find and retain customers; and legal and
technological means to identify and prosecute &#8220; piracy&#8221; of
creative works.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="472">
	<ocn>472</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In a more static environment, this model worked fairly well. But as the
Internet revolution proceeded in the 2000s, distributed media started
to undercut the economic logic of Centralized Media. Your personal
computer, connected to other computers via inexpensive
telecommunications and software, can do things more cheaply.
Distributed online media not only avoid the costly overhead needed by
Centralized Media, they can generate dynamic, interactive, and sociable
types of communication: <i>user-generated content!</i> While this
amateur content is wildly variable in quality, it does have this
virtue: it is more culturally diverse and authentic than the
homogenous, overproduced programming of Centralized Media. And because
distributed media are not economically driven to amass large,
undifferentiated audiences, the content can be more idiosyncratic,
passionate, and, in its own ways, creative. There is no &#8220;
fifty-seven channels and nothing on&#8221; problem. The problem is how
to locate what you want from among millions of choices.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="473">
	<ocn>473</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For all these reasons &#8212; but mostly because of the
economics&#8212; conventional media are becoming more vulnerable to the
most advanced Internet-based competitors (Amazon, eBay, Google, Yahoo)
as well as to new types of nonmarket social production (e.g.,
Craigslist, Wikipedia, special-interest affinity groups). We may even
be approaching a point at which the historic cost structures and risk
management strategies of major media companies are no longer
sustainable. Some analysts fret about the long-term viability of
American newspapers, whose stock value fell by 42 percent, or $23
billion, between 2005 and 2008. Broadcast and cable television have
similar fears. They worry, correctly, that Internet venues are
siphoning away &#8220; eyeballs&#8221; by providing more timely and
convenient alternatives. While the amateur videos of YouTube may not
have the production quality of NBC, broadcast and cable television
cannot ignore an upstart platform that in 2006 was attracting more than
100 million video downloads <i>per day</i> and had a market valuation
of $1.65 billion when bought by Google that year. No wonder Cable News
Network co-hosted a presidential debate with YouTube in 2007; it needed
to reassert its cultural relevance.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="474">
	<ocn>474</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Large media companies are struggling to support some huge financial,
administrative, and marketing burdens simply to &#8220; tread
water&#8221; and retain some measure of their customary market
dominance. This helps explain why Centralized Media are so keenly
focused on influencing Congress and the Federal Communications
Commission. They want to lock in competitive advantages through
regulation. (Consider the fierce battles over media ownership rules,
spectrum allocation policies, anticopying technology mandates such as
the &#8220; broadcast flag,&#8221; new copyright and trademark
protections, must-carry rules for cable operators, and on and on.)
Centralized Media's great interest in securing legal and regulatory
privileges for themselves suggests their relative weakness and decline.
For them, it is easier to chase market advantages through political
interventions than through innovation, superior performance, and price.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="475">
	<ocn>475</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Economic Advantages of Open Media
	</text>
</object>
<object id="476">
	<ocn>476</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By contrast, a profusion of new ventures are finding that a company can
thrive on the open networks of the Internet. Even a startup without
brand recognition or regulatory preferences can compete on the merits
&#8212; price, quality, responsiveness &#8212; against entrenched
giants. They can leverage user-generated content and the vast reservoir
of value previously known as the public domain. The success of
thousands of new Internet businesses reflects an epochal shift in the
terms of competition &#8212; a Great Shift in how value is created.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="477">
	<ocn>477</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The most significant shifts in the history of capitalism have come when
new mechanisms lower the costs of managing risk and serving latent
market demand. We are apparently in such a stage of economic
transformation today. The genius of the Renaissance banks and the Dutch
insurance and shipping companies, for example, was to reinvent the
structure of markets through new financial and legal instruments that
enabled commercial trust and transparency to work on a larger scale.
The limited liability corporation was also a powerful innovation for
diversifying risk, coordinating people, and deploying capital on a
scale that was previously impossible.<en>186</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="186">
		<number>186</number>
		<note>
			I am indebted to my friend John Clippinger for this insight, as
explained in his book <i>A Crowd of One: The Future of Individual
Identity</i> (New York: Public Affairs, 2007), chapter 7, &#8220;
Transforming Trust: Social Commerce in Renaissance Florence,&#8221; pp.
97&#8211;114.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="478">
	<ocn>478</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In like fashion, the Internet is now facilitating some deep shifts in
the cost structures and scale of markets. Innovative online business
models are significantly undercutting the (expensive) cost structures
of traditional Centralized Media, and in the process sometimes creating
entirely new sorts of markets (search engine advertising, discounted
travel, specialty niches) and more open, competitive markets.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="479">
	<ocn>479</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the most intriguing developments is a set of &#8220; open
business models&#8221; that shun closed, proprietary technical
standards and content restrictions. Unlike the classic industrial
business models of the twentieth century, the new open business models
make money by aggressively insinuating themselves into open networks.
They are able to identify new trends, mobilize talent, interact with
customers, and develop customized products more rapidly than
competitors. They are also building ingenious new business models
&#8220; on top of &#8221; social behaviors of online users. (See
chapter 10.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="480">
	<ocn>480</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		MySpace, for example, hosts a social network of more than 100 million
&#8220; friends&#8221; (a claim that, even if inflated by inactive user
accounts, is indisputably huge). eBay consolidated the world's garage
sales and flea markets into a more efficient market by developing
Web-based software that &#8220; manages&#8221; social trust and
reputation and evolves with user interests. Amazon has become a premier
online retail Web site by hosting a platform open to all sorts of
online vendors and spurred by the recommendations and collective
purchase records of buyers. Google devised its famous PageRank search
algorithms to aggregate the Web-surfing &#8220; wisdom of the
crowd,&#8221; making online searches vastly more useful.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="481">
	<ocn>481</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The basic point is that open media platforms are significantly reducing
business coordination and communication costs by leveraging people's
natural social behaviors in ways that conventional businesses simply
cannot. Open Web platforms allow large and diverse groups to organize
themselves and their projects more easily. Individuals have greater
self-defined choice and the capacity to express their own market
demand; they need not be constrained by the choices presented to them
in the market. The Internet has opened up gushing channels of virtual
word of mouth, which is a more trusted form of consumer information
than advertising. Those companies with excellent products use favorable
word of mouth to reduce their marketing and distribution costs. &#8220;
Smart mobs&#8221; can elevate obscure bloggers and Web sites because
they regard them as more trustworthy, expert, and authentic (or
entertaining) than those of Centralized Media. Many conservatives now
trust the Drudge Report and Free Republic more than CBS News, just as
many liberals trust DailyKos and Huffington Post more than CBS News.
Indeed, the very genre of &#8220; objective journalism&#8221; &#8212;
an artifact of the economic necessity of appealing to broad,
lowest-commondenominator audiences &#8212; is now in jeopardy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="482">
	<ocn>482</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As people migrate to the Web, advertising revenues for Centralized
Media are eroding further, setting off a scramble to devise new
advertising vehicles to reach fugitive Internet users. It is a chase
that cannot be avoided because that's where the eyeballs are. Moreover,
the value proposition of open networks is too attractive to ignore. But
because that value proposition is so radically different from
conventional media &#8212; a company must revamp its organizational
structures, strategies, marketing, etc. &#8212; it raises some
wrenching choices for Centralized Media: Should they &#8220; go
native&#8221; and let their products loose on open networks? Or would
that destroy their entrenched business models for television shows,
theatrical films, music CDs, and other content? The vast infrastructure
and business practices of Centralized Media cannot be summarily
abandoned, but neither can they remain economically tenable over the
long haul without significant changes. For now, Centralized Media are
attempting an ungainly straddle of both worlds.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="483">
	<ocn>483</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Web 2.0: A New Breed of Participatory Media
	</text>
</object>
<object id="484">
	<ocn>484</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At the time, Eric Eldred's Web repository of public-domain books could
be seen as a modest little experiment. In retrospect, it can be seen as
a dawning cultural archetype. It betokened the power of the
amateur.<en>187</en> While Centralized Media continue to have greater
resources, talent, and political clout, amateurs are finding their
voices and new online venues. A significant cultural emancipation is
under way. Creative expression need no longer cater to corporate
gatekeepers and the imperatives of the mass market. A no-name amateur
can produce useful and influential work without having to go through
New York, Los Angeles, London, or Tokyo. The do-ityourself culture is
flourishing and expanding. With little money or marketing, anyone can
launch a viral spiral that, with enough luck and panache, can sweep
across global culture.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="187">
		<number>187</number>
		<note>
			Dan Hunter and F. Gregory Lastowka, &#8220;
Amateur-to-Amateur,&#8221; <i>William and Mary Law Review</i> 46, no.
951 (December 2004).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="485">
	<ocn>485</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is only now dawning on some media chieftains that the biggest threat
to Centralized Media is not piracy or online competitors, but
<i>nonmarket alternatives</i>: you, me, and the online friends that we
can attract. Hollywood and record labels might rail against &#8220;
pirates&#8221; and demand stronger copyright protection, but the real
longterm threat to their business models is the migration of consumer
attention to amateur creativity and social communication. Social
production on open networks has become a powerful creative and economic
force in its own right. Ordinary people can now find their own voices
and develop folk cultures of their own that may or may not use the
market.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="486">
	<ocn>486</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After the tech bubble of 2000&#8211;2001 burst, the surviving techies
and entrepreneurs developed a remarkable range of cheap, versatile
software that took to heart the lessons of free software and open
networks. Blogs, wikis, social networking software, peer-to-peer
file-sharing and metadata tools began to migrate from the tech fringe
to the mainstream. There have been many conceptual frames and buzzwords
associated with this new order &#8212; &#8220; smart mobs&#8221;
(Howard Rheingold), &#8220; the wisdom of crowds&#8221; (James
Surowiecki), &#8220; wikinomics&#8221; (Don Tapscott and Anthony D.
Williams) &#8212; but the catchphrase that has gained the most currency
is &#8220; Web 2.0,&#8221; a term launched by Tim O'Reilly in a
canonical 2003 essay.<en>188</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="188">
		<number>188</number>
		<note>
			Tim O'Reilly, &#8220; What Is Web 2.0: Design Patterns and Business
Models for the Next Generation of Software,&#8221; O'Reilly Media Web
site, September 30, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.oreilly.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-isweb-20.html">http://www.oreilly.com/pub/a/oreilly/tim/news/2005/09/30/what-isweb-20.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="487">
	<ocn>487</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		O'Reilly, a prominent publisher of books on open-source software,
coined Web 2.0 to describe the fluid social dynamics that occur on open
Web platforms &#8212; wikis, blogs, social networking Web sites, and
other open, collaborative platforms &#8212; where people have the
freedom to share and reuse work. Web 2.0 amounts to a worldview that
celebrates open participation as a way to create valuable collective
resources. It regards open technical protocols and content as the basis
for this process (whether managed as a commons or a business), and
dismisses closed, proprietary regimes as both socially and economically
questionable. In essence, Web 2.0 honors socially created value as the
basis for value creation, which market players may or may not be able
to exploit.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="488">
	<ocn>488</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Blogging is more of a social medium than is generally supposed, for
example. It is not just the outburst of some ranter in his pajamas, as
the stereotype has it, but a social medium that connects people in new
ways. Most blogs have a blogroll &#8212; a list of admired blogs&#8212;
which enables the readers of one blog to identify other bloggers
engaged in similar conversations. Permalinks &#8212; stable Web
addresses for blog content &#8212; enable people to make reliable Web
citations of content, which means that people can coalesce around a
shared body of work. And RSS feeds&#8212; &#8220; Really Simple
Syndication&#8221; &#8212; allow people to &#8220; subscribe&#8221; to
individual blogs and Web sites, enabling them to keep abreast of a
sprawling set of communities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="489">
	<ocn>489</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The rise of blog-tracking companies like Technorati and Alexa has also
helped blogging become a durable social genre. These companies
inventory and rank blogs, and help people discover blogs for virtually
any subject of interest &#8212; cocktail mixing, high-energy physics,
needlework design. By 2007, there were an estimated 100 million blogs
in existence (although many were inactive or abandoned), making the
blogosphere a powerful cultural force in its own right. There was also
a flood of online &#8220; news aggregators&#8221; &#8212; Web sites
that cherry-pick their own mix of pieces from the wire services,
newspapers, Web sites, blogs, and other online sources. With huge
audiences, news aggregators like the Drudge Report (1.6 million unique
monthly visitors) and the Huffington Post (773,000 visitors) have begun
to rival major daily newspapers in reach and influence.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="490">
	<ocn>490</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another seminal social innovation has been Wikipedia, a strange and
wondrous cultural eruption. Founded by Jimmy Wales and Larry Sanger in
January 2001, the English-language Wikipedia began to gain serious
momentum in the months after the CC licenses were released, and by
early 2003 hosted 100,000 articles. (A &#8220; wiki&#8221; is a special
type of Web site that allows anyone who accesses it to add or modify
its contents.) After two years, Wikipedia had amassed a collection of
400,000 articles and inspired the launch of affiliated Wikipedias in
more than 100 languages. In May 2008,
	</text>
</object>
<object id="491">
	<ocn>491</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wikipedia featured 10.2 million articles in 255 languages; 2.3 million
of the articles were in English. By harnessing the energies of tens of
thousands of volunteers to write an infinitely expandable &#8220;
encyclopedia,&#8221; Wikipedia has become the leading symbol for a
radically new way of compiling and editing knowledge.<en>189</en>
Remarkably, the Wikimedia Foundation, the umbrella organization that
funds Wikipedia and many sister projects, had fewer than twenty paid
employees in 2008 and a budget of less than $2 million.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="189">
		<number>189</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia statistics from &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:About">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wikipedia:About</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="492">
	<ocn>492</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wikipedia has also spun off affiliated multilingual, free-content wikis
on various subjects. Wikispecies is compiling an inventory of the
world's species, Wikiquote is collecting thousands of memorable
quotations, the Wikimedia Commons is providing freely usable media
files, and Wikibooks is assembling open-content textbooks. Wiki
software has been adopted by dozens of different online communities,
giving rise to scores of collaborative Web sites such as Conservapedia
(for American political conservatives), Intellipedia (for U.S.
intelligence agencies), Wookieepedia (for Star Wars fans), Wikitravel
(for travelers), and OpenWetWare (for biological researchers).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="493">
	<ocn>493</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the months following the launch of the CC licenses, peer-topeer
(P2P) file sharing was also expanding rapidly. Long associated with
illicit sharing of copyrighted music, P2P software in fact has many
entirely legitimate uses in science, education, and diverse creative
sectors. One of the key attractions of P2P software is its efficiency.
It does not need to route information through centralized servers;
information can be rapidly shared by routing digital files directly to
participants, computer to computer, or by passing it through key nodes
in an on-the-fly manner. Even after the courts shut down Napster in
2002, a variety of other P2P software applications &#8212; Grokster,
Lime Wire, KaZaA, Gnutella, BitTorrent &#8212; continued to facilitate
online sharing and collaboration. Some thirty-five companies, including
Hollywood studios, are sufficiently impressed with the efficiencies of
P2P that they have licensed BitTorrent technology to distribute their
video content.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="494">
	<ocn>494</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Peer-to-peer file sharing has also unleashed radically new types of
knowledge creation: volunteers who join the NASA Clickworkers project
to count and classify craters on Mars, &#8220; citizen
scientists&#8221; who help compile an interactive database of butterfly
and bird sightings, or geneticists from around the world who submit
data to the Human Genome Project and share access to the database.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="495">
	<ocn>495</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although the tech world and some Internet users had known about various
networking tools for years, the general public was largely in the dark
until the presidential campaign of Vermont governor Howard Dean in 2002
and 2003. At the time, Dean was considered a long-shot antiwar
candidate with little base and little money. Within a few short months,
however, thanks to Dean's outspoken style and his campaign's skillful
use of the Internet, he became the front-runner in a field of twelve
candidates. Dean did not use the Internet as a simple publishing tool,
but as a way to stimulate decentralized collaboration and thereby
organize a diverse community of supporters. The campaign was not just
about Dean, but about the participation of 640,000 volunteers who
virtually organized themselves through various online tools. The
campaign became a dynamic conversation between the candidate and voters
&#8212; and generated a gusher of more than $50 million, most of it
donations of a hundred dollars or less. So much was raised that Dean
famously asked his supporters whether he should forgo federal matching
funds, and instead raise more money from them. They agreed. The
campaign ultimately imploded, of course, after his famous &#8220;
Dean's Scream&#8221; speech &#8212; itself a complex story &#8212; but
what is notable is how the Dean campaign vividly demonstrated the speed
and power of viral networks.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="496">
	<ocn>496</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By 2003 many ordinary people knew about the Napster controversy, the
record industry's scorched-earth litigation tactics against consumers,
and the Supreme Court's ruling in the <i>Eldred</i> case. So people
welcomed blogs, wikis, and other Web 2.0 applications as tools to
emancipate themselves culturally. In the mass media era, people had few
tools or sufficient money to speak to the general public or organize
their own communities of interest. But now, using a lightweight
infrastructure of software code and telecommunications, people could
build stable online communities that reflected their own values and
social practices. No permission or payment necessary. No expensive
capital investments.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="497">
	<ocn>497</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In many instances, amazingly, virtual communities are performing tasks
that existing markets are not performing as efficiently or with as much
social trust and goodwill. Craigslist, the free want-ad service that
has significantly undercut classified advertising in newspapers, is one
of the more stellar examples. In South Korea, OhmyNews.org uses
thirty-six thousand citizen-journalists to write up to two hundred
online stories a day. The publication is considered the sixth-most
influential media outlet in Korea, based on a national magazine poll.
Countless specialty blogs are considered more expert and timely sources
of information and analysis than mainstream newspapers and magazines.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="498">
	<ocn>498</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Taken together, the new participatory media platforms constitute
something new under the sun &#8212; a globally accessible space that is
both personal and public, individual and social. The riot of unfiltered
expression that has materialized on the Internet is often dismissed as
stupid, unreliable, and silly; or praised as brilliant, stylish, and
specialized; or simply accepted as idiosyncratic, irregular, and local.
It is all of these things, of course, and that is precisely the point.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="499">
	<ocn>499</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If print culture honors the ethic of &#8220; edit, then publish,&#8221;
the Internet inverts it: <i>anything</i> can be made public . . . and
then it is up to users to become their own editors. On the Internet,
people do not &#8220; consume&#8221; content, they become active
writers, editors, and critics in their own right. They use search
engines, news aggregators, and favorite bloggers to identify what they
want &#8212; or they create their own content, as desired. They are
<i>participants</i>, not merely informed consumers who choose what some
professional editor offers to them.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="500">
	<ocn>500</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Web 2.0 environment was quite hospitable for the spread of the CC
licenses. It enabled people to signal their willingness to share and
their enthusiasm for cool niche fare as opposed to massaudience
kitsch.Members of online communities could confidently share their work
on wikis and collaborative Web sites, knowing that no one could
appropriate their content and take it private. Socially, the licenses
let people announce their social identity to others and build a
countercultural ethos of sharing. The ethos became hipper and more
attractive with every new antipiracy measure that Centralized Media
instigated.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="501">
	<ocn>501</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Open Networks and the Long Tail
	</text>
</object>
<object id="502">
	<ocn>502</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While technology and economics have been driving forces in shaping the
new participatory platforms, much of their appeal has been frankly
cultural. Amateur content on the Net may be raw and irregular, but it
also tends to be more interesting and authentic than the highly
produced, homogenized fare of commercial media. Some of it vastly
outshines the lowest common denominator of mass media. Again, the cheap
connectivity of the Internet has been key. It has made it possible for
people with incredibly specialized interests to find one another and
organize themselves into niche communities. For closeted homosexuals in
repressive countries or isolated fans of the actor Wallace Beery, the
Internet has enabled them to find one another and mutually feed their
narrow interests. You name it, there are sites for it: the fans of
obscure musicians, the collectors of beer cans, Iranian exiles, kite
flyers. Freed of the economic imperative of attracting huge audiences
with broad fare, niche-driven Internet content is able to connect with
people's personal passions and interests: a powerful foundation not
just for social communities, but for durable markets.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="503">
	<ocn>503</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This, truly, is one of the more profound effects of networking
technologies: the subversion of the &#8220; blockbuster&#8221;
economics of the mass media. It is becoming harder and more expensive
for film studios and broadcast networks to amass the huge,
cross-demographic audiences that they once could. In the networked
environment, it turns out that a diversified set of niche markets can
be eminently profitable with lower-volume sales. While Centralized
Media require a supply-side &#8220; push&#8221; of content, the
Internet enables a demand-side &#8220; pull&#8221; of content by users.
This radically reduces transaction costs and enhances the economic
appeal of niche production. It is easier and cheaper for a company (or
single creator) to &#8220; pull&#8221; niche audiences through word of
mouth than it is to pay for expensive &#8220; push&#8221; advertising
campaigns. Specialty interests and products that once were dismissed as
too marginal or idiosyncratic to be profitable can now flourish in
small but robust &#8220; pull markets.&#8221;<en>190</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="190">
		<number>190</number>
		<note>
			David Bollier, &#8220; When Push Comes to Pull: The New Economy and
Culture of Networking Technology&#8221; (Washington, DC: Aspen
Institute, 2006), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.aspeninstitute.org/atf/cf/%7BDEB6F227-659B-4EC8-8F84-8DF23CA704F5%7D/2005InfoTechText.pdf">http://www.aspeninstitute.org/atf/cf/%7BDEB6F227-659B-4EC8-8F84-8DF23CA704F5%7D/2005InfoTechText.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="504">
	<ocn>504</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The term associated with this phenomenon is the &#8220; Long
Tail&#8221; &#8212; the title of a much-cited article by Chris Anderson
in the October 2004 issue of <i>Wired</i> magazine, later expanded into
a book. Anderson explained the &#8220; grand transition&#8221; now
under way:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="505">
	<ocn>505</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		For too long we've been suffering the tyranny of
lowestcommon-denominator fare, subjected to brain-dead summer
blockbusters and manufactured pop. Why? Economics. Many of our
assumptions about popular taste are actually artifacts of poor
supply-and-demand matching &#8212; a market response to inefficient
distribution. . . . Hit-driven economics is a creation of an age
without enough room to carry everything for everybody. Not enough shelf
space for all the CDs, DVDs, and games produced. Not enough screens to
show all the available movies. . . .<en>191</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="191">
		<number>191</number>
		<note>
			Chris Anderson, &#8220; The Long Tail,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>, October
2004, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/tail.html">http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.10/tail.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="506">
	<ocn>506</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The &#8220; Long Tail&#8221; refers to the huge potential markets that
can be created for low-volume niche books, CD, DVDs, and other
products. More than half of Amazon's book sales, for example, come from
books that rank below its top 130,000 titles. The implication is that
&#8220; the market for books that are not even sold in the average
bookstore is larger than the market for those that are,&#8221; writes
Anderson. &#8220; In other words, the potential book market may be
twice as big as it appears to be, if only we can get over the economics
of scarcity.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="507">
	<ocn>507</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unconstrained by the size and tastes of a local customer base or by
limited shelf space, online retailers such as Amazon, Netflix (DVDs),
Rhapsody (music), and iTunes (music) are showing that the Long Tail can
be a very attractive business model. These companies have developed new
tools, such as collaborative filtering software and user
recommendations, to drive demand for lesser-known titles at the far end
of the Long Tail. This is just another instance of using new
technologies that leverage people's natural social dynamics, and in so
doing inventing new types of markets.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="508">
	<ocn>508</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Another Vehicle for Niche Communities: The Commons
	</text>
</object>
<object id="509">
	<ocn>509</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If the Long Tail is a market vehicle for amassing niche communities,
the commons is the social analogue. A commons does not revolve around
money and market exchange, but around collective participation and
shared values. It does not use property rights and contracts in order
to generate value; it uses gift exchange and moral commitments to build
a community of trust and common purpose. Such communities, it turns
out, can generate significant &#8220; wealth&#8221; &#8212; as Richard
Stallman demonstrated with free software.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="510">
	<ocn>510</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Generically speaking, a commons is a governance regime for managing
collective resources sustainably and equitably. The commons is
generally associated with open fields, forests, and other natural
resources that were collectively used by villagers for their
subsistence needs. During the &#8220; enclosure movement&#8221; in
medieval times and extending through the eighteenth century, British
gentry and entrepreneurs began to privatize the commons and convert its
resources into marketable commodities. Enclosures essentially
dispossessed the commoners and installed a new market regime to manage
resources that were previously shared. The commoners, unable to feed
themselves or participate in markets, migrated to the industrial cities
of England to become the wage slaves and beggars who populate Charles
Dickens's novels.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="511">
	<ocn>511</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although markets tend to be more efficient than commons, they also tend
to focus on that which can be sold and converted into cash. Markets
presume that deserts and the public domain have no value because they
have no marketable output. Markets also presume that a commons cannot
be sustained because inevitably someone will overuse a shared resource
&#8212; a practice known as &#8220; free riding&#8221; &#8212; and ruin
it. This is the famous &#8220; tragedy of the commons&#8221; notion
popularized by biologist Garret Hardin in a 1968 essay, which described
how a few farmers will let their sheep overgraze a common pasture and
so destroy it.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="512">
	<ocn>512</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The &#8220; tragedy of the commons&#8221; metaphor has ossified into a
truism of neoclassical economics. It takes for granted that shared
resources cannot be managed sustainably, and that private property
regimes are much better stewards of resources. This prejudice was
powerfully rebutted by political scientist Elinor Ostrom in her noted
1990 book <i>Governing the Commons</i>, which marshaled many empirical
examples of natural resource commons that have been managed responsibly
for decades or even hundreds of years. Ostrom's scholarship has since
given rise to a great deal of academic study of commons, particularly
through the International Association for the Study of the Commons and
the Workshop in Political Theory and Policy Analysis at Indiana
University. It also inspired thinking about the commons by law scholars
like Yochai Benkler, Lawrence Lessig, and James Boyle, who saw close
parallels with the commons as they watched corporations use copyright
law to enclose culture and information.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="513">
	<ocn>513</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Cultural commons differ significantly from natural resource commons in
this key respect: they are not finite, depletable resources like
pastures or forests. Online commons tend to grow in value as more
people participate, provided there is sufficient governance and common
technical standards to enable sharing. Online commons, in short, are
less susceptible to the dreaded &#8220; tragedy of the commons&#8221;
and, indeed, tend to be highly generative of value. Their output does
not get &#8220; used up&#8221; the way natural resources do.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="514">
	<ocn>514</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The burden of Lessig's 2001 book <i>The Future of Ideas</i> was to
argue that the Internet constitutes a great, underappreciated commons.
It can serve as the infrastructure for tremendous wealth and innovation
if its &#8220; layers&#8221; &#8212; the hardware, software, and
content&#8212; remain sufficiently open and usable by all. The problem,
he warned with great prescience, is that policymakers are generally
blind to the value of the commons and markets are too eager to reap
short-term individual gains. They fail to appreciate that too much
private control at any &#8220; layer&#8221; of the Internet &#8212;
through proprietary hardware or software, or excessive copyright or
patent protection &#8212; can stifle personal freedom, market
competition, and innovation. Lessig wanted to name the book
<i>Dot.commons</i>, but his publisher rejected it as too obscure.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="515">
	<ocn>515</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the key advantages of treating key infrastructure (such as
Internet transmission protocols and computer operating systems) as a
commons is that people have the freedom to modify and improve them,
with resulting benefits for all. Innovation and competition can
flourish more readily. At the content layer, much of the appeal of the
commons is the creative freedom, above and beyond what the market may
enable. Precisely because it is a commons, and not a market, people's
freedoms are not constrained by marketability. A commons is a
noncommercial, nongovernmental space that is free from corporate
manipulations and government meddling. It offers a qualitatively
different type of experience than the marketplace or government power.
A commons tends to be more informal, a place where people know you by
name, and where your contributions are known and welcomed. A commons
based on relationships of trust and reciprocity can undertake actions
that a business organization requiring extreme control and predictable
performance cannot.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="516">
	<ocn>516</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Precisely because a commons is open and not organized to maximize
profit, its members are often willing to experiment and innovate; new
ideas can emerge from the periphery. Value is created through a process
that honors individual self-selection for tasks, passionate engagement,
serendipitous discovery, experimental creativity, and peer-based
recognition of achievement. The Open Prosthetics Project, for example,
invites anyone to contribute to the design of a prosthetic limb and/or
the specification of limbs that ought to be designed, even if they
don't know how to do it.<en>192</en> This has generated such unexpected
innovations as limbs specifically adapted for rock climbers and an arm
designed for fishing. Athletes who engage in &#8220; extreme
sports&#8221; &#8212; skiing, biking, surfing &#8212; have been a rich
source of ideas for new products, just as software hackers are among
the first to come up with innovative programming ideas.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="192">
		<number>192</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.openprosthetics.org">http://www.openprosthetics.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="517">
	<ocn>517</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Part of the value proposition of the commons at the content layer is
that it can host a more diverse range of expression &#8212; personal,
social, and creative &#8212; than the market, in part because it does
not have the burden of having to sustain costly overhead and sell a
product. It has other goals &#8212; the personal interests and whims of
the commoners &#8212; and it can often meet those needs inexpensively.
Yet the commons does in fact generate many marketable innovations,
thanks to its open accessibility, the social relationships it enables
and the free sharing and circulation of work.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="518">
	<ocn>518</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Seeing the success of online commons, Centralized Media have tried to
fight back by embracing elements of user participation. They invite
audiences to vote in polls (<i>American Idol</i>), publish lists of
&#8220; most e-mailed&#8221; articles (major newspapers), and direct
radio listeners to their Web sites for more information (National
Public Radio). <i>Time</i> magazine's choice for the &#8220; Person of
the Year&#8221; in 2006 &#8212; &#8220; You,&#8221; the primary driver
of Web sites like MySpace and YouTube &#8212; was a landmark moment in
media history: with a pinched smile and backhanded assertion of its
cultural authority, Centralized Media formally acknowledged its most
powerful competitor, Decentralized Media!
	</text>
</object>
<object id="519">
	<ocn>519</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet for all the celebration of &#8220; you&#8221; as the master of your
own fate in cyberspace, the question that is skirted is whether &#8220;
you&#8221; can indeed retain control of your stuff in a Centralized
Media environment. The point of conventional business models, after
all, is to engineer a proprietary lock-in of customers through
technological dependence, binding contract terms, frequent-buyer
credits, brand loyalty, etc. That's how companies have traditionally
secured a more durable customer base and preempted competition.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="520">
	<ocn>520</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But the commons is about securing user freedoms, and not necessarily
about prevailing in a market. Web 2.0 may or may not protect both
concerns. Like the commons, Web 2.0 relies upon user-generated content,
network effects, and bottom-up innovation. But Web 2.0 entrepreneurs,
at the end of the day, need to make money. Their sites need to adopt
business practices that protect revenue streams. Facebook is catering
to advertisers, not users, when they sift through masses of users'
personal data in order to sell targeted advertising. MySpace at one
point refused to let its users connect to rival Web sites and outside
software &#8220; widgets.&#8221;<en>193</en> In this sense, Web 2.0
media may be &#8220; open,&#8221; but they are not necessarily &#8220;
free,&#8221; as in freedom. Web 2.0 entrepreneurs are more likely to
focus on protecting their market advantages than advancing user
freedoms. The two issues may overlap substantially, but they are not
identical.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="193">
		<number>193</number>
		<note>
			Rachel Rosmarin, &#8220; Why MySpace Blinked,&#8221; <i>Forbes</i>,
April 24, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="521">
	<ocn>521</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Science-fiction writer William Gibson once wrote, &#8220; The future is
already here; it's just not well-distributed yet.&#8221; That sums up
the Great Value Shift circa 2003. The efficiencies and affordances made
possible by the Internet were there. They were enabling all sorts of
pioneers to build new business models, new creative genres, and new
online communities &#8212; but these innovations were unevenly
distributed. More to the point, their potential was unevenly perceived,
especially in many precincts of Washington officialdom and the
corporate world. The challenge for amateurs venturing onto open
platforms was to validate the new sorts of socially created value
enabled by the Internet.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="522">
	<ocn>522</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		6 CREATORS TAKE CHARGE
	</text>
</object>
<object id="523">
	<ocn>523</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Rip, remix, burn, mashup &#8212; legally. The CC licenses facilitate
new Internet genres and business models.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="524">
	<ocn>524</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The first users of CC licenses understood that something different was
going on; a different order was taking shape. More than just a legal
tool, the CC licenses gave the tech vanguard a way to express their
inchoate sense that a new and better world was possible, at least on
the Internet. They yearned for a noncommercial sharing economy with a
different moral calculus than mass media markets, and for markets that
are more open, accountable, and respectful of customers.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="525">
	<ocn>525</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The early adopters were unusually informed about the politics of
technology, skeptical of Big Media, and passionate about the artistic
freedoms and social responsibility. They were a locally engaged but
globally aware network of tech sophisticates, avant-garde artists,
clued-in bloggers, small-/{d}/ democratic activists, and the rebellious
of spirit: the perfect core group for branding the Creative Commons and
instigating a movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="526">
	<ocn>526</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It only made sense that Cory Doctorow &#8212; copyfighter,
sciencefiction writer, tech analyst, co-editor of the popular Boing
Boing blog &#8212; became the first book author to use a CC license.
Doctorow &#8212; then a thirty-two-year-old native of Canada, the son
of Trotskyite schoolteachers, the European representative for the
Electronic Frontier Foundation from 2002 to 2006 &#8212; is a singular
character on the tech/intellectual property/free culture circuit. He
can hold forth with intelligence, wry wit, and bravado on digital
rights management, Internet economics, or the goofy gadgets and pop
culture artifacts that he regularly showcases on Boing Boing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="527">
	<ocn>527</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In January 2003, a month after the CC licenses were released, Doctorow
published his first novel, <i>Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom</i>,
under an Attribution, NonCommercial, No Derivative Works license
(BY-NC-ND). Simultaneously, his progressive-minded publisher, Tor Books
of New York City, sold hard copies of the book. &#8220; Why am I doing
this thing?&#8221; Doctorow asked rhetorically:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="528">
	<ocn>528</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Well, it's a long story, but to shorten it up: first-time novelists
have a tough row to hoe. Our publishers don't have a lot of promotional
budget to throw at unknown factors like us. Mostly, we rise and fall
based on word-of-mouth. I'm not bad at word-of-mouth. I have a blog,
Boing Boing (http://boingboingnet), where I do a <i>lot</i> of
word-ofmouthing. I compulsively tell friends and strangers about things
I like. And telling people about stuff is <i>way, way</i> easier if I
can just send it to 'em. Way easier.<en>194</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="194">
		<number>194</number>
		<note>
			Cory Doctorow, &#8220; A Note About This Book,&#8221; February 12,
2004, and &#8220; A Note About This Book,&#8221; January 9, 2003, in
<i>Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom</i>, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.craphound.com/down">http://www.craphound.com/down</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="529">
	<ocn>529</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A year later, Doctorow announced that his &#8220; grand
experiment&#8221; was a success; in fact, he said, &#8220; my career is
turning over like a goddamned locomotive engine.&#8221; More than
thirty thousand people had downloaded the book within a day of its
posting. He proceeded to release a collection of short stories and a
second novel under a CC license. He also rereleased <i>Down and Out in
the Magic Kingdom</i> under a less restrictive CC license &#8212; an
Attribution, NonCommercial, ShareAlike license (BY-NC-SA), which allows
readers to make their own translations, radio and film adaptations,
sequels, and other remixes of the novel, so long as they are made
available on the same terms.<en>195</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="195">
		<number>195</number>
		<note>
			Anna Weinberg,&#8220;Buying the Cow, Though the Milk Is Free: Why
Some Publishers are Digitizing Themselves,&#8221; June 24, 2005,
<i>Book Standard</i>, June 24, 2005, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.thebookstandard.com/bookstandard/news/publisher/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000968186">http://www.thebookstandard.com/bookstandard/news/publisher/article_display.jsp?vnu_content_id=1000968186</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="530">
	<ocn>530</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		With some sheepish candor, Doctorow conceded: &#8220; I wanted to see
if the sky would fall: you see writers are routinely schooled by their
peers that maximal copyright is the only thing that stands between us
and penury, and so ingrained was this lesson in me that even though I
had the intellectual intuition that a &#8216; some rights reserved'
regime would serve me well, I still couldn't shake the atavistic fear
that I was about to do something very foolish indeed.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="531">
	<ocn>531</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By June 2006, <i>Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom</i> had been
downloaded more than seven hundred thousand times. It had gone through
six printings, many foreign translations, and two competing online
audio adaptations made by fans. &#8220; Most people who download the
book don't end up buying it,&#8221; Doctorow conceded, &#8220; but they
wouldn't have bought it in any event, so I haven't lost any sales. I've
just won an audience. A tiny minority of downloaders treats the free
e-book as a substitute for the printed book &#8212; those are the lost
sales. But a much larger minority treats the e-book as an enticement to
buy the printed book. They're gained sales. As long as gained sales
outnumber lost sales, I'm ahead of the game. After all, distributing
nearly a million copies of my book has cost me
nothing.&#8221;<en>196</en> In 2008, Doctorow's marketing strategy of
giving away online books to stimulate sales of physical books paid off
in an even bigger way. His novel for teenagers, <i>Little Brother</i>,
about a youthful hacker who takes on the U.S. government after it
becomes a police state, spent weeks on the <i>New York Times</i>
bestseller list for children's books.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="196">
		<number>196</number>
		<note>
			Cory Doctorow, &#8220; Giving it Away,&#8221; Forbes.com, December
1, 2006, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.forbes.com/2006/11/30/cory-doctorow-copyright-tech-media_cz_cd_books06_1201doctorow.html">http://www.forbes.com/2006/11/30/cory-doctorow-copyright-tech-media_cz_cd_books06_1201doctorow.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="532">
	<ocn>532</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is perhaps easier for a sci-fi futurist like Doctorow than a
publishing business to take such a wild leap into the unknown. But
that, too, is an important insight: artists are more likely to lead the
way into the sharing economy than entrenched industries. &#8220; I'd
rather stake my future on a literature that people care about enough to
steal,&#8221; said Doctorow, &#8220; than devote my life to a form that
has no home in the dominant medium of the century.&#8221; Book lovers
and authors will pioneer the future; corporate publishing will
grudgingly follow, or be left behind.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="533">
	<ocn>533</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Over the past few years, a small but growing number of pioneering
authors have followed Doctorow's lead and published books under
Creative Commons licenses. While the hard evidence is scarce, many
authors who use CC licenses believe that releasing free electronic
versions of their books does not hurt, and probably helps, the sales of
physical copies of their books. Lessig released his 2004 book, <i>Free
Culture</i>, under an Attribution, NonCommercial license (BY-NC), and
scores of authors and established publishers have since released books
under CC licenses. Among the more notable titles: Yochai Benkler's
<i>The Wealth of Networks</i> (Yale University Press, 2006), Kembrew
McLeod's <i>Freedom of Expression</i> (Doubleday, 2005), Peter Barnes's
<i>Capitalism 3.0</i> (Berrett-Koehler, 2006), and Dan Gillmor's <i>We
the Media</i> (O'Reilly Media, 2004).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="534">
	<ocn>534</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2006, Paulo Coelho, author of a bestselling book, <i>The
Alchemist</i>, created a &#8220; pirate&#8221; blog site that invited
readers to use BitTorrent and other file-sharing networks to download
free copies of his books. After he put the Russian translation of
<i>The Alchemist</i> online, sales of hardcover copies in Russia went
from around 1,000 a year to 100,000, and then to more than 1 million.
Coelho attributes the success of foreign translations of his book to
their free availability online.<en>197</en> Experiments such as these
were likely influential in the launch of LegalTorrents, a site for the
legal peer-to-peer distribution of CC-licensed text, audio, video
games, and other content.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="197">
		<number>197</number>
		<note>
			Smaran, &#8220; Alchemist Author Pirates His Own Book,&#8221;
TorrentFreak blog, January 24, 2008, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://torrentfreak.com/alchemist-author-pirates-own-books080124">http://torrentfreak.com/alchemist-author-pirates-own-books080124</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="535">
	<ocn>535</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC licenses have been useful, not just for helping individual
authors promote their books, but in fueling open-access scholarly
publishing. As we will see in chapter 11, the CC licenses help
scientists put their &#8220; royalty-free literature&#8221; on the
Internet &#8212; a move that enlarges their readership, enhances their
reputations, and still enables them to retain copyrights in their
works.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="536">
	<ocn>536</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Free culture publishing models are popping up in many unusual quarters
these days. LibriVox, to take one instance, is a nonprofit digital
library of public-domain audio books that are read and recorded by
volunteers.<en>198</en> Since it started in 2005, the group has
recorded more than 150 books by classic authors from Dostoyevsky and
Descartes to Jane Austen and Abraham Lincoln. All of them are free.
Most are in English but many are in German, Spanish, Chinese, and other
languages.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="198">
		<number>198</number>
		<note>
			Mia Garlick, &#8220; LibriVox,&#8221; Creative Commons blog,
December 5, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/text/librivox">http://creativecommons.org/text/librivox</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="537">
	<ocn>537</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Founder Hugh McGuire said the inspiration for LibriVox was a
distributed recording of Lessig's book <i>Free Culture</i> read by
bloggers and podcasters, chapter by chapter. &#8220; After listening to
that, it took me a while to figure out how to record things on my
computer (which I finally did, thanks to free software Audacity).
Brewster Kahle's call for &#8216; Universal Access to all human
knowledge' was another inspiration, and the free hosting provided by
archive.org and ibiblio.org meant that LibriVox was possible: there was
no worry about bandwidth and storage. So the project was started with
an investment of $0, which continues to be our global budget.&#8221;
LibriVox's mission, said McGuire, is the &#8220; acoustical liberation
of books in the public domain.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="538">
	<ocn>538</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Several publishing businesses now revolve around CC licenses.
Wikitravel is a collaborative Web site that amasses content about
cities and regions around the world; content is licensed under the CC
Attribution, ShareAlike license (BY-SA).<en>199</en> In 2007, its
founder joined with a travel writer to start Wikitravel Press, which
now publishes travel books in a number of languages. Like the
Wikitravel Web pages, the text in the books can be freely copied and
reused.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="199">
		<number>199</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Wikitravel Press launches,&#8221; Creative Commons blog,
August 3, 2007, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7596">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7596</link>&gt;.
See also Mia Garlick, &#8220; Wikitravel,&#8221; Creative Commons blog,
June 20, 2006, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/text/wikitravel">http://creativecommons.org/text/wikitravel</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="539">
	<ocn>539</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another new business using CC licenses is Lulu, a technology company
started by Robert Young, the founder of the Linux vendor Red Hat and
benefactor for the Center for the Public Domain.Lulu lets individuals
publish and distribute their own books, which can be printed on demand
or downloaded. Lulu handles all the details of the publishing process
but lets people control their content and rights. Hundreds of people
have licensed their works under the CC ShareAlike license and Public
Domain Dedication, and under the GNU Project's Free Documentation
License.<en>200</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="200">
		<number>200</number>
		<note>
			Mia Garlick, &#8220; Lulu,&#8221; Creative Commons blog, May 17,
2006, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/text/lulu">http://creativecommons.org/text/lulu</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="540">
	<ocn>540</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As more of culture and commerce move to the Internet, the question
facing the book industry now is whether the text of a book is more
valuable as a physical object (a codex) or as a digital file
(intangible bits that can circulate freely), or some combination of the
two. Kevin Kelly, the former editor of <i>Wired</i> magazine, once
explained: &#8220; In a regime of superabundant free copies, copies
lose value. They are no longer the basis of wealth. Now relationships,
links, connection and sharing are. Value has shifted away from a copy
toward the many ways to recall, annotate, personalize, edit,
authenticate, display, mark, transfer and engage a
work.&#8221;<en>201</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="201">
		<number>201</number>
		<note>
			Kevin Kelly, &#8220; Scan This Book!&#8221; <i>New York Times
Magazine</i>, May 14, 2006, p. 43.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="541">
	<ocn>541</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What this means in practice, Kelly has pointed out, is that books
become more valuable as they become more broadly known and socially
circulated &#8212; the very functionalities that the Internet
facilitates. If people can discover a book online and read portions of
it, share it with friends, and add annotations and links to related
materials, it makes a book more desirable than a hard-copy version that
is an inert text on a shelf. As Kelly writes: &#8220; When books are
digitized, reading becomes a community activity. Bookmarks can be
shared with fellow readers. Marginalia can be broadcast. Bibliographies
swapped. You might get an alert that your friend Carl has annotated a
favorite book of yours. A moment later, his links are
yours.&#8221;<en>202</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="202">
		<number>202</number>
		<note>
			Ibid., p. 45.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="542">
	<ocn>542</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Needless to say, most book publishers and authors' organizations are
not yet prepared to embrace this newfangled value proposition. It seems
way too iffy. A &#8220; sharing&#8221; business model would seemingly
cannibalize their current revenues and copyright control with little
guarantee of doing better in an open, online milieu. The bigger problem
may be the cultural prejudice that an absolute right of control over
any possible uses of a book is the best way to make money.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="543">
	<ocn>543</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In general, the publishing trade remains skeptical of the Internet,
clueless about how to harness its marketing power, and strangers to CC
licenses. And it could be years before mainstream publishing accepts
some of the counterintuitive notions that special-interest Internet
communities will drive publishing in the future. In a presentation that
caused a stir in the book industry, futurist Mike Shatzkin said in May
2007 that this is already happening in general trade publishing:
&#8220; We're close to a tipping point, or maybe we're past it . . .
where Web-based branding will have more credibility than print, because
print, needing more horizontal reach to be viable, won't deliver the
attention of the real experts and megaphones in each
field.&#8221;<en>203</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="203">
		<number>203</number>
		<note>
			Mike Shatzkin, &#8220; The End of General Trade Publishing Houses:
Death or Rebirth in a Niche-by-Niche World,&#8221; presented to the
Book Expo America, New York, May 31, 2007, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.idealog.com/speeches/endoftrade.htm">http://www.idealog.com/speeches/endoftrade.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="544">
	<ocn>544</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		DIY Videos and Film
	</text>
</object>
<object id="545">
	<ocn>545</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the biggest cultural explosions of the past decade has been
amateur video on the Web. The volume of online video has been so great
that there are actually many distinct genres of amateur video: short
videos on YouTube, video mashups, &#8220; machinima&#8221; (a
combination of video and online gaming images), amateur pornography,
and hybrid forms that combine user videos with conventional broadcast
and cable television shows. Just as the Great Value Shift has empowered
musicians, so it is giving video- and filmmakers new powers to express
themselves as they wish, and reach huge audiences via the Internet.
This power represents a potentially major threat to the cultural
dominance of the television and film industries, as reflected in
various schemes by the networks and studios to establish their own
online presences. The threat of do-it-yourself (DIY) video and film is
big enough that Viacom alleged that YouTube's copyright infringements
of Viacom-owned video should entitle Viacom to $1 billion in damages.
The entertainment industry and the Writers Guild of America endured a
long, bitter strike in 2007&#8211;2008 precisely because the projected
revenues from Internet video are so large.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="546">
	<ocn>546</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is too early to know which new video styles will be flash-inthe-pan
novelties and which will ripen into popular, and perhaps lucrative,
genres. But rarely has a culture seen so many diverse experiments in
amateur and indie video expression. One site, Justin.tv, is a free
platform for broadcasting and viewing live video. Some people make
round-the-clock &#8220; life casts&#8221; of their daily activities;
others have used it to broadcast live from Baghdad, showing war-related
events. Yahoo and Reuters have entered into a partnership to host
amateur photojournalism by people using their digital cameras and
camera phones. Machinima video, the product of the underground gaming
community, blends filmmaking with online games to produce
computer-generated imagery. As John Seely Brown describes it, &#8220;
Basically, you can take Second Life or Worlds of Warcraft and have a
set of avatars run all over the world, that come together and create
their own movie, and then you can &#8216; YouTube' the
movie.&#8221;<en>204</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="204">
		<number>204</number>
		<note>
			Cited in David Bollier, <i>The Rise of Collective Intelligence:
Decentralized Cocreation of Value as a New Paradigm in Commerce and
Culture</i> (Washington, DC: Aspen Institute Communications and Society
Program, 2007), p. 27.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="547">
	<ocn>547</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As amateur video and film proliferate, thanks to inexpensive
technologies and Internet access, the CC licenses have obvious value in
letting the creator retain a copyright in the video while inviting its
duplication and reuse by millions of people online. To industry
traditionalists locked into binary options, the free circulation of a
work precludes any moneymaking opportunities. But of course, that is
precisely what is now being negotiated: how to devise ingenious new
schemes to make money from freely circulating video. One option is to
own the platform, as YouTube does. But there are also competitors such
as Revver and blip.tv, which have established their own approaches
based on advertising and commercial licensing of works. There are also
schemes that use Internet exposure to drive paying customers into
theaters and advertisers to buy commercial licenses. For some amateurs,
DIY video is simply a way to get noticed and hired by a conventional
media company.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="548">
	<ocn>548</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That's what the Los Angeles&#8211;based comedy collective The Lonely
Island did to promote themselves to national attention. They posted
their comedy shorts and songs to their Web site using Creative Commons
licenses. Soon other artists began making remixes of their songs. The
remixes in effect served as free marketing, which caught the attention
of the Fox Broadcasting Company, which in turn hired them to create a
comedy pilot TV episode. In the end, Fox did not pick up the show, but
as <i>Wired News</i> recounted, &#8220; Instead of letting the show
wither on a shelf somewhere, the group posted the full video both cut
and uncut. The edgy, quirky short&#8212; Awesometown &#8212; spread
like wildfire online and eventually landed all three performers an
audition spot for <i>Saturday Night Live</i>.&#8221;<en>205</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="205">
		<number>205</number>
		<note>
			Matt Haughey, &#8220; From LA's Awesometown to New York City's
SNL,&#8221; <i>Wired News</i>, October 1, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="549">
	<ocn>549</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps the most successful example of leveraging free Internet
exposure to reap commercial benefits is the sci-fi parody <i>Star
Wreck</i>. Finnish producer Samuli Torssonen took seven years to shoot
a fulllength movie using a Sony DVCAM, computer-generated graphics, and
a makeshift studio. Some three hundred people were involved in the
project, including some professional actors and many amateurs. When
<i>Star Wreck</i> was deliberately posted to the Internet in 2005,
tagged with a CC-BY-NC-ND license (Attribution, NonCommercial, No
Derivatives), it was eventually downloaded 5 million times and became
the most-watched Finnish film in history. Fans in Russia, China, and
Japan soon copied the film, which stimulated broader viewer demand and
led to commercial deals to distribute the film. <i>Star Wreck</i>
became so popular that Universal Pictures, the American studio, signed
a deal in 2006 to distribute DVD versions of the film. Torssonen says
that the film has earned a 20to-1 return on investment. &#8220; I
wouldn't call free distribution stupid, as some people say, but a
success,&#8221; he told an audience in 2007.<en>206</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="206">
		<number>206</number>
		<note>
			Samuli Torssonen presentation at iCommons Summit 2007, Dubrovnik,
Croatia, June 15, 2007. See also www.starwreck.com.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="550">
	<ocn>550</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The lesson for Stephen Lee, CEO of Star Wreck Studios, is that &#8220;
you don't need millions to make a quality movie. You need an active,
passionate community.&#8221; Lee says the plan for a peer-produced
model of &#8220; wrecking a movie&#8221; is to develop an Internet
collaboration, make the film popular through viral marketing, and then
license it commercially. Star Wreck Studios is now developing a new
movie, <i>Iron Sky</i>, about a Nazi base on the far side of the moon.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="551">
	<ocn>551</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the more daring experiments in film production is being
pioneered by the Blender Institute, a studio for open-content animation
and game projects located in the Amsterdam docklands. Started in August
2007, the Institute employs fourteen full-time people who are obsessed
with improving its three-dimensional open-source software, the
so-called Blender 3D suite. The software is widely used by a large
international user community for modeling, animation, rendering,
editing, and other tasks associated with 3D computer-generated
animation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="552">
	<ocn>552</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Ton Roosendaal, who directs the Blender Institute, is trying to
demonstrate that a small studio can develop a virtuous cycle of
economically sustainable creativity using open-source software,
Creative Commons licenses, and talented programmers and artists from
around the world. &#8220; We give programmers the freedom to do their
best, and what they want to do is improve the technology,&#8221; he
said. &#8220; The market is too hyper-rational and nailed down and
filled with limits,&#8221; he argues, referring to his peers at major
animation studios. &#8220; Open source is free of most of these
constraints.&#8221;<en>207</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="207">
		<number>207</number>
		<note>
			Ton Roosendaal remarks at conference, &#8220; Economies of the
Commons,&#8221; De Balie Centre for Culture and Politics, Amsterdam,
April 10&#8211;12, 2008.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="553">
	<ocn>553</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In April 2008, the Blender Institute released a ten-minute animated
short, <i>Big Buck Bunny</i>, which features a kind-hearted, fat white
bunny who endures the abuse of three stone-throwing rodents until they
smash a beautiful butterfly with a rock &#8212; at which point the
bunny rallies to teach the bullies a lesson.<en>208</en> The film uses
cutting-edge computer-generated animation techniques that rival
anything produced by Pixar, the Hollywood studio responsible for <i>Toy
Story</i>, <i>Cars</i>, and <i>Ratatouille</i>. <i>Big Buck Bunny</i>
is licensed under a CC Attribution license, which means the digital
content can be used by anyone for any purpose so long as credit is
given to the Blender Institute.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="208">
		<number>208</number>
		<note>
			The film can be downloaded at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.bigbuckbunny.org/index.php/download">http://www.bigbuckbunny.org/index.php/download</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="554">
	<ocn>554</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Big Buck Bunny</i> was initially distributed to upfront investors as
a DVD set that includes extras such as interviews, outtakes, deleted
scenes, and the entire database used in making the film. Then, to pique
wider interest in sales of the DVD set, priced at thirty-four euros, a
trailer was released on the Internet. This resulted in extensive
international press coverage and blog exposure. Early signs are
promising that Blender will be able to continue to make highquality
animation on a fairly modest budget without worries about illegal
downloads or a digital rights management system. The Blender production
model also has the virtue of enabling access to top creative talent and
cutting-edge animation technologies as well as efficient distribution
to paying audiences on a global scale.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="555">
	<ocn>555</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While CC-licensed films are not common, neither are they rare. Davis
Guggenheim, the filmmaker who directed <i>An Inconvenient Truth</i>,
made a short film, <i>Teach</i>, to encourage talented people to become
teachers. The film was released in 2006 under a CC BY-NCND license
because Guggenheim wanted the film widely available to the public yet
also wanted to preserve the integrity of the stories told, hence the
NoDerivatives provision. A Spanish short film, <i>Lo que t&#251;
Quieras O&#237;r</i>, became YouTube's fifth most-viewed video&#8212;
more than 38 million views. The film's viral diffusion may have been
helped by the CC BY-NC-SA (Attribution, NonCommercial, ShareAlike)
license, which allows viewers not only to share the film, but to remix
for noncommercial purposes so long as they use the same license.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="556">
	<ocn>556</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In Brazil, director Bruno Vianna released his first full-length film,
<i>Cafun&#233;</i>, under a CC BY-NC-SA license (Attribution,
NonCommercial, ShareAlike) and put it on file-sharing networks at the
same time that it was exhibited in a handful of theaters.<en>209</en>
Each release had different endings; downloaders were invited to remix
the ending as they wished. The film was financed by the government's
culture ministry as part of a competition for low-budget films, but
only about fifty Brazilian films are released to commercial theaters
each year. Vianna saw the Internet release as a great way to build an
audience for his debut film . . . which is exactly what happened. For
some weeks, it made it into the list of twenty most-watched films in
the country.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="209">
		<number>209</number>
		<note>
			Mia Garlick, CC blog, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/6048">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/6048</link>&gt;;
see also &#8220; Cafun&#233; breaking the limits for open business
models,&#8221; iCommons blog, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.icommons.org/static/2006/11/22/cafune-breakingthe-limits-for-open-business-models">http://www.icommons.org/static/2006/11/22/cafune-breakingthe-limits-for-open-business-models</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="557">
	<ocn>557</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Letting the Music Flow
	</text>
</object>
<object id="558">
	<ocn>558</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Media reform activist Harold Feld offers a succinct overview of why
creativity in music &#8212; and therefore the business of selling
recorded music &#8212; has suffered over the past two decades:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="559">
	<ocn>559</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The 1990s saw a number of factors that allowed the major labels to push
out independents and dominate the market with their own outrageously
priced and poorly produced products: consolidation in the music
industry, the whole &#8220; studio system&#8221; of pumping a few big
stars to the exclusion of others, the consolidation in music outlets
from mom-andpop record stores to chains like Tower Records and retail
giants like Wal-Mart that exclude indies and push the recordings
promoted by major labels, and the consolidation of radio &#8212; which
further killed indie exposure and allowed the labels to artificially
pump their selected &#8220; hits&#8221; through payola. All this
created a cozy cartel that enjoyed monopoly profits.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="560">
	<ocn>560</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		As a result, the major labels, the mainstream retailers, and the radio
broadcasters grew increasingly out of touch with what listeners
actually wanted. But as long as the music cartel controlled what the
vast majority of people got to hear, it didn't matter . . . The music
cartel remained the de facto only game in town.<en>210</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="210">
		<number>210</number>
		<note>
			Harold Feld, &#8220; CD Sales Dead? Not for Indies!&#8221; blog
post on Public Knowledge Web site, March 27, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/890">http://www.publicknowledge.org/node/890</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="561">
	<ocn>561</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Changing the music industry is obviously a major challenge that is not
going to be solved overnight. Still, there is a growing effort led by
indie musicians, small record labels, Internet music entrepreneurs, and
advocacy groups such as the Future of Music Coalition to address these
problems. Creative Commons is clearly sympathetic, but has largely
focused on a more modest agenda &#8212; enabling a new universe of
shareable music to arise. Its chief tools for this mission, beyond the
CC licenses, are new software platforms for legal music remixes, online
commons that legally share music, and new business models that respect
the interests of both fans and artists. Ultimately, it is hoped that a
global oeuvre of shareable music will emerge. Once this body of music
matures, attracting more artists and fans in a self-sustaining viral
spiral, the record industry may be forced to give up its dreams of
perfect control of how music may circulate and adopt fan-friendly
business practices.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="562">
	<ocn>562</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This, at least, is the theory, as Lessig explains it. He calls it the
&#8220; BMI strategy,&#8221; a reference to the strategy that
broadcasters and musicians used to fight ASCAP's monopoly control over
radio music in the early 1940s. ASCAP, the American Society of
Composers, Authors and Publishers, is a nonprofit organization that
collects royalties for musical performances. At the time, ASCAP
required artists to have five hits before it would serve as a
collection agency for them, a rule that privileged the playing of pop
music on the radio at the expense of rhythm and blues, jazz, hillbilly,
and ethnic music. Then, over the course of eight years, ASCAP raised
its rates by 450 percent between 1931 and 1939 &#8212; at which point,
ASCAP then proposed <i>doubling</i> its rates for 1940. In protest,
many radio stations refused to play ASCAP-licensed music. They formed a
new performance-rights body, BMI, or Broadcast Music, Inc., which
sought to break the ASCAP monopoly by offering free arrangements of
public-domain music to radio stations. They also charged lower rates
than ASCAP for licensing music and offered better contracts for
artists.<en>211</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="211">
		<number>211</number>
		<note>
			Donald Clarke, <i>The Rise and Fall of Popular Music</i>, chapter
11.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="563">
	<ocn>563</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The Internet is today's broadcasters,&#8221; said Lessig in a
2006 speech. &#8220; They are facing the same
struggle.&#8221;<en>212</en> Just as ASCAP used its monopoly power to
control what music could be heard and at what prices, he said, so
today's media corporations want to leverage their control over content
to gain control of the business models and technologies of digital
environments. When Google bought YouTube, one-third of the purchase
price of $1.65 billion was allegedly a financial reserve to deal with
any copyright litigation, said Lessig. This is how the incumbent media
world is trying to stifle the emergence of free culture.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="212">
		<number>212</number>
		<note>
			Lessig explained his BMI strategy at a speech, &#8220; On Free, and
the Differences Between Culture and Code,&#8221; at the 23d Chaos
Communications Conference (23C3) in Berlin, Germany, December 30, 2006;
video can be watched at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7661663613180520595&amp;q=23c3">http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7661663613180520595&amp;q=23c3</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="564">
	<ocn>564</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The same questions that once confronted broadcasters are now facing
Internet innovators, Lessig argues: &#8220; How do we free the future
from the dead hand of the past? What do we do to make it so they can't
control how technology evolves?&#8221; With copyright terms lasting so
long, it is not really feasible to try to use public-domain materials
to compete with a commercial cartel. Lessig's answer is a BMI-inspired
solution that uses the CC licenses to create a new body of &#8220;
free&#8221; works that, over time, can begin to compete with popular
works. The legendary record producer Jerry Wexler recalled how ASCAP
marginalized R &amp; B, country, folk, and ethnic music, but &#8220;
once the lid was lifted &#8212; which happened when BMI entered the
picture &#8212; the vacuum was filled by all these archetypal musics.
BMI turned out to be the mechanism that released all those primal
American forms of music that fused and became
rock-androll.&#8221;<en>213</en> Lessig clearly has similar ambitions
for Creative Commons.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="213">
		<number>213</number>
		<note>
			From BMI, Inc., Web site, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.bmi.com/genres/entry/533380">http://www.bmi.com/genres/entry/533380</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="565">
	<ocn>565</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For now, the subculture of CC-licensed music remains something of a
fringe movement. It is easy to patronize it as small, amateurish, and
quirky. Yet its very existence stands as a challenge to the music
industry by showing the feasibility of a more artist- and fanfriendly
way of distributing music. Is it visionary to believe that free culture
artists will force the major labels to change &#8212; just as BMI
forced ASCAP to lower prices &#8212; and make them more competitive and
inclusive?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="566">
	<ocn>566</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Creative Commons's primary task is practical &#8212; to help musicians
reach audiences directly and reap more of the financial rewards of
their music. So far, a wide range of indie bands, hip-hop artists, and
bohemian experimentalists of all stripes have used the licenses. One of
the most popular is the Attribution, NonCommercial license, which lets
artists share their works while getting credit and retaining commercial
rights. A number of marquee songwriters and performers &#8212; David
Byrne, Gilberto Gil, the Beastie Boys, Chuck D &#8212; have also used
CC licenses as a gesture of solidarity with free culture artists and as
an enlightened marketing strategy. Inviting people to remix your songs
is a great way to engage your fan base and sell more records. And
tagging your music with a CC license, at least for now, wraps an artist
in a mantle of tech sophistication and artistic integrity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="567">
	<ocn>567</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Guitarist Jake Shapiro was one of the first musicians to show the
marketing potential of unleashing free music on the Internet. In 1995,
Shapiro put MP3 files of music by his band, Two Ton Shoe, on the
group's Web site. Within a few years, Two Ton Shoe was one of the
most-downloaded bands on the Internet, developing fan bases in Italy,
Brazil, Russia, and South Korea. One day Shapiro received a phone call
out of the blue from a South Korean concert promoter. He wanted to know
if the band would fly over to Seoul to perform four concerts. It turned
out that fans in South Korea, where fast broadband connections are the
norm, had discovered Two Ton Shoe through file sharing. A local CD
retailer kept getting requests for the band's music, which led him to
contact a concert promoter. In August 2005, Shapiro and his buddies
arrived in Seoul as conquering rock stars, selling out all four of
their concerts. &#8220; The kids who showed up knew all the words to
the songs,&#8221; Shapiro recalled. A year later, the band signed a
deal to distribute a double CD to East Asia.<en>214</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="214">
		<number>214</number>
		<note>
			Shapiro described his experiences at the &#8220; Identity Mashup
Conference,&#8221; June 19&#8211;21, 2006, hosted by the Berkman Center
for Internet and Society at Harvard Law School, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mediaberkman/2006/06/28/id-mashup-2006-day-two-the-commons-open-apis-meshups-and-mashups">http://blogs.law.harvard.edu/mediaberkman/2006/06/28/id-mashup-2006-day-two-the-commons-open-apis-meshups-and-mashups</link>&gt;.
His band's Web site is at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.twotonshoe.com">http://www.twotonshoe.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="568">
	<ocn>568</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While such stories of viral marketing success are not common, neither
are they rare. Lots of bands now promote themselves, and find admiring
(paying) fans, by posting their music, for free, on Web sites and
file-sharing sites. Perhaps the most scrutinized example was
Radiohead's decision to release its album <i>In Rainbows</i> for free
online, while inviting fans to pay whatever they wanted. (The band did
not release any numbers, but considered the move a success. They later
released the album through conventional distribution channels as
well.)<en>215</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="215">
		<number>215</number>
		<note>
			Jon Pareles, &#8220; Pay What You Want for This Article,&#8221;
<i>New York Times</i>, December 9, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="569">
	<ocn>569</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Just as previous generations of fans came together around FM radio or
live performance venues, the Internet is the new gathering place for
discovering interesting, fresh, and authentic talent. The lesson that
the record industry hasn't quite learned is that music is not just a
commodity but a <i>social experience</i> &#8212; and social experiences
lose their appeal if overly controlled and commercialized. If the music
marketplace does not provide a place for fans to congregate and share
in a somewhat open, unregimented way &#8212; if the commodity ethic
overwhelms everything else &#8212; the music dies. Or more accurately,
it migrates underground, outside the marketplace, to sustain itself.
This is why so much of the best new music is happening on the fringes
of the stagnant commercial mainstream.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="570">
	<ocn>570</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is also why the Creative Commons licenses have acquired such cachet.
They have come to be associated with musicians who honor the integrity
of music making. They symbolize the collective nature of creativity and
the importance of communing freely with one's fans. Nimrod Lev, a
prominent Israeli musician and supporter of the CC licenses, received
considerable press coverage in his country for a speech that lamented
the &#8220; cunning arrangement&#8221; (in Israeli slang,
<i>combina</i>) by which the music industry has betrayed people's love
of music, making it &#8220; only a matter of business and
commerce.&#8221; Said Lev:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="571">
	<ocn>571</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The music industry treats its consumer as a consumer of sex, not of
love, the love of music. Just like everything else: a vacuum without
values or meaning. But it is still love that everyone wants and seeks.
. . . The music vendors knew then [a generation ago] what they have
forgotten today, namely that we must have cultural heroes: artists that
are not cloned in a manner out to get our money. There was an added
value with a meaning: someone who spoke to our hearts in difficult
moments, and with that someone, we would walk hand in hand for a while.
We had loyalty and love, and it all meant something.<en>216</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="216">
		<number>216</number>
		<note>
			Nimrod Lev, &#8220; The Combina Industry,&#8221; November 16, 2004,
at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://law.haifa.ac.il/techlaw/new/try/eng/nimrod.htm">http://law.haifa.ac.il/techlaw/new/try/eng/nimrod.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="572">
	<ocn>572</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At the risk of sounding na&#239;ve, Lev said he wanted to stand up for
the importance of &#8220; authenticity and empathy and my own
truth&#8221; in making music. It is a complaint that echoes throughout
the artistic community globally. A few years ago, Patti Smith, the punk
rocker renowned for her artistic integrity, decried the &#8220; loss of
our cultural voice&#8221; as the radio industry consolidated and as
music television became a dominant force. She grieved for the scarcity
of places for her to &#8220; feel connected&#8221; to a larger musical
community of artists and fans.<en>217</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="217">
		<number>217</number>
		<note>
			Patti Smith at a panel at the National Conference for Media Reform,
St. Louis, sponsored by Free Press, May 14, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="573">
	<ocn>573</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The classic example of music as social experience &#8212; music as a
vehicle for a community of shared values &#8212; is the Grateful Dead.
The band famously invited its fans to record all of its concerts and
even provided them with an authorized &#8220; tapers' section&#8221; in
which to place their microphones and equipment. Fans were also allowed
to circulate their homemade tapes so long as the music was shared, and
not sold. This had the effect of building a large and committed fan
base, which avidly archived, edited, and traded Grateful Dead
cassettes. One reason that the Dead's &#8220; customer base&#8221; has
been so lucrative and durable over several decades is that the fans
were not treated as mere customers or potential pirates, but as a
community of shared values. The music belonged to the fans as much as
to the band, even though Deadheads were only too happy to pay to attend
concerts and buy the officially released CDs and t-shirts.<en>218</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="218">
		<number>218</number>
		<note>
			A fascinating collision of the Grateful Dead's sharing ethic and
the copyright business model occurred in 2005, when the Internet
Archive placed a huge cache of fan recordings online, available for
free download. When Grateful Dead Merchandising objected, Deadheads
accused the band's representatives of betraying the band's
long-established sharing ethic. Paradoxically, the band's merchandisers
may also have jeopardized the band's commercial appeal by prohibiting
the downloads. As music critic Jon Pareles put it, &#8220; The Dead had
created an anarchy of trust, going not by statute but by instinct and
turning fans into co-conspirators, spreading their music and buying
tickets, T-shirts and official CDs to show their loyalty. The new
approach . . . removes what could crassly be called brand value from
the Dead's legacy by reducing them to one more band with products to
sell. Will the logic of copyright law be more profitable, in the end,
than the logic of sharing? That's the Dead's latest improvisational
experiment.&#8221; Jon Pareles, &#8220; The Dead's Gamble: Free Music
for Sale,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, December 3, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="574">
	<ocn>574</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While the Grateful Dead may be an outlier case, it exemplifies the
sharing ethic that the Internet is facilitating: the formation of
communities of amateurs that flourish by sharing and celebrating music.
Artists can make some money through CD sales, but much more through
performances, merchandising, endorsements, and sales to films,
television, and advertisers. If established singers and bands are
reluctant to make a transition to this new business model, hungry
newcomers are not.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="575">
	<ocn>575</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Mountain Goats, an indie rock group, authorized the Internet
Archive to host their live shows on the Web because they realized the
videos seed market demand for their music. The group's front man, John
Darnielle, said, &#8220; I am totally in favor of tape trading, and
file sharing never did anything wrong by me. People got into The
Mountain Goats after downloading my stuff.&#8221;<en>219</en> In 2001,
two newcomers working out of a basement produced a cover version of
Tears for Fears' &#8220; Mad World,&#8221; which two years later went
to the top of the British pop charts.<en>220</en> In a world where
amateur creativity can easily migrate to the commercial mainstream,
tagging works with a NonCommercial CC license is a valuable option. By
requiring uses that fall outside the scope of the license to pay as
usual, it can help artists get visibility while retaining their
potential to earn money. A larger restructuring of the music industry,
alas, will take longer to achieve.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="219">
		<number>219</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons blog, &#8220; Musicians Large and Small on
Internet Downloading,&#8221; by Matt Haughey, July 26, 2004.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="220">
		<number>220</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/l/hi/entertainment/3352667.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/l/hi/entertainment/3352667.stm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="576">
	<ocn>576</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Music as Remix
	</text>
</object>
<object id="577">
	<ocn>577</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If any segment of the music world really understands the social
dynamics of musical creativity, it is hip-hop artists. As Joanna Demers
documents in her book about &#8220; transformative appropriation&#8221;
in music, <i>Steal This Music</i>, hip-hop was born as a remix genre in
the 1970s and 1980s.<en>221</en> In defiance of copyright law, which
considers unauthorized borrowing as presumptively illegal, hip-hop
artists used turntable scratching and digital sampling to transform
existing songs into something new, which in time grew into a lucrative
market segment. Hip-hop illustrates how the commons and the market need
to freely interact, without undue restrictions, in order for both to
flourish. It works because sampling is not a simple matter of &#8220;
theft&#8221; but a mode of creativity, a way of carrying on a cultural
conversation. Sampling is a way of paying tribute to musical heroes,
mocking rivals, alluding to an historical moment, or simply
experimenting with an arresting sound. When the rap group Run-DMC used
Aerosmith's &#8220; Walk This Way&#8221; as the basis for a remix, it
was not only a salute to the group's musical influence and a new turn
of the creative wheel, it revived Aerosmith's sagging career (or, in
economist's terms, it &#8220; created new value&#8221;).
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="221">
		<number>221</number>
		<note>
			Joanna Demers, <i>Steal This Music: How Intellectual Property Law
Affects Musical Creativity</i> (Athens: University of Georgia Press,
2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="578">
	<ocn>578</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The problem, of course, is that most remix culture (and the value it
creates) is illegal. By the late 1980s, in fact, the freedom of the
commons that gave birth to hip-hop was coming under siege. Musicians
and record labels were routinely invoking copyright law to demand
permission and payments for the tiniest samples of music. Only wealthy
artists could afford to clear the rights of familiar songs, and
basement amateurs (who had given rise to the genre in the first place)
were being marginalized. When George Clinton's group Funkadelic
succeeded in its lawsuit against the rap group N.W.A. for using a
nearly inaudible sample of a three-note, two-second clip from &#8220;
Get Off Your Ass and Jam&#8221; &#8212; the infamous <i>Bridgeport v.
Dimension Films</i> decision, in 2004 &#8212; it became clear that the
commons of hip-hop music was being enclosed.<en>222</en> Critics like
Siva Vaidhyanathan and Kembrew McLeod believe that the legal crusade
against sampling has significantly harmed the creative vitality of
hip-hop. Something is clearly amiss when the one of the most critically
acclaimed albums of 2005 &#8212; <i>The Grey Album</i>, a remix
collection by DJ Danger Mouse &#8212; cannot be legally released.
<i>The Grey Album</i> artfully combined music from the Beatles's
<i>White Album</i> with lyrics from Jay-Z's <i>Black Album</i>,
resulting in &#8220; the most popular album in rock history that
virtually no one paid for,&#8221; according to <i>Entertainment
Weekly</i>.<en>223</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="222">
		<number>222</number>
		<note>
			This story is told by Demers in Steal This Music. The court ruling
is <i>Bridgeport v. Dimension Films</i>, 383 F. 3d 390 (6th Circ.
2004).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="223">
		<number>223</number>
		<note>
			DJ Danger Mouse's remix received considerable press attention. A
good overview is by Chuck Klosterman, &#8220; The DJ Auteur,&#8221;
<i>New York Times Magazine</i>, June 18, 2006, pp. 40&#8211;45.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="579">
	<ocn>579</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The impetus for a solution to the sampling problem started with
Negativland, an irreverent &#8220; sound collage&#8221; band known as
much for its zany culture jamming as for its anticopyright manifestos.
(One of its CDs includes a polemical booklet about fair use along with
a whoopee cushion with a &#169; symbol printed on it.) Negativland
gained notoriety in the 1990s for its protracted legal battle with the
band U2 and Island Records over Negativland's release of a parody song
called &#8220; U2.&#8221; Island Records claimed it was an infringement
of copyright and trademark law, among other things. Negativland claimed
that no one should be able to own the letter U and the numeral 2, and
cited the fair use doctrine as protecting its song and title. The case
was eventually settled.<en>224</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="224">
		<number>224</number>
		<note>
			See Negativland's book, <i>Fair Use: The Story of the Letter U and
the Numeral 2</i> (Concord, CA: Seeland, 1995).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="580">
	<ocn>580</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As an experienced sampler of music, Negativland and collagist People
Like Us (aka Vicki Bennett) asked Creative Commons if it would develop
and offer a music sampling license. Don Joyce of Negativland explained:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="581">
	<ocn>581</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		This would be legally acknowledging the now obvious state of modern
audio/visual creativity in which quoting, sampling, direct referencing,
copying and collaging have become a major part of modern inspiration.
[A sampling option would] stop legally suppressing it and start
culturally encouraging it &#8212; because it's here to stay. That's our
idea for encouraging a more democratic media for all of us, from
corporations to the individual.<en>225</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="225">
		<number>225</number>
		<note>
			Glenn Otis Brown, &#8220; Mmm . . . Free Samples (Innovation
la),&#8221; Creative Commons blog, March 11, 2003, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3631">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3631</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="582">
	<ocn>582</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		With legal help from Cooley Godward Kronish and Wilson, Sonsini,
Goodrich &amp; Rosati, Creative Commons did just that. During its
consultations with the remix community, Creative Commons learned that
Gilberto Gil, the renowned <i>tropicalismo</i> musician and at the time
the Brazilian minister of culture, had been thinking along similar
lines, and so it received valuable suggestions and support from him.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="583">
	<ocn>583</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2005, Creative Commons issued the Sampling license as a way to let
people take pieces of a work for any purpose except
advertising.<en>226</en> It also prohibited copying and distribution of
the entire work.<en>*7</en> For example, an artist could take a snippet
of music, a clip of film, or a piece of a photograph, and use the
sample in a new creation. Since its release, the Sampling license has
been criticized on philosophical grounds by some commoners who say it
does not truly enhance people's freedom because it prohibits copying
and distribution of the entire work. This concern reached serious
enough proportions that in 2007 Creative Commons &#8220; retired&#8221;
the license; I'll revisit this controversy in chapter 9.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="226">
		<number>226</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons Web site, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/about/sampling">http://creativecommons.org/about/sampling</link>&gt;.
See also Ethan Smith, &#8220; Can Copyright Be Saved?&#8221; <i>Wall
Street Journal</i>, October 20, 2003.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote symbol="*7">
		<symbol>*7</symbol>
		<note>
			A &#8220; Sampling Plus&#8221; license was also issued to allow
noncommercial copying and distribution of an entire work, which means
it could be distributed via file-sharing networks. Finally, a &#8220;
NonCommercial Sampling Plus&#8221; license was devised to let people
sample and transform pieces of a work, and copy and distribute the
entire work, so long as it was for noncommercial purposes.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="584">
	<ocn>584</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC Sampling license only whetted the imagination of people who
wanted to find new ways to sample, share, and transform music. Neeru
Paharia, then the assistant director of the Creative Commons, came up
with the idea of developing ccMixter, a software platform for remixing
music on the Web.<en>227</en> Paharia realized one day that &#8220;
this whole remixing and sharing ecology is about getting feedback on
who's using your work and how it's evolving. That's almost half the
pleasure.&#8221;<en>228</en> So the organization developed a Web site
that would allow people to upload music that could be sampled and
remixed. The site has about five thousand registered users, which is
not terribly large, but it is an enthusiastic and active community of
remix artists that acts as a great proof of concept while promoting the
CC licenses. There are other, much larger remix sites on the Internet,
such as Sony's ACIDplanet, but such sites are faux commons. They retain
ownership in the sounds and remixes that users make, and no derivative
or commercial versions are allowed.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="227">
		<number>227</number>
		<note>
			See &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/ccMixter">http://wiki.creativecommons.org/ccMixter</link>&gt;.
Interview with Mike Linksvayer, February 7, 2007, and Neeru Paharia,
April 13, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="228">
		<number>228</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Neeru Paharia, April 13, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="585">
	<ocn>585</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One feature of viral spirals is their propensity to call forth a jumble
of new projects and unexpected partners. The CC licenses have done just
that for music. ccMixter has joined with Opsound to offer a joint
&#8220; sound pool&#8221; of clips licensed under an Attribution
ShareAlike license. It also supports Freesound, a repository of more
than twenty thousand CC-licensed samples ranging from waterfalls to
crickets to music.<en>229</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="229">
		<number>229</number>
		<note>
			Neeru Paharia, &#8220; Opsound's Sal Randolph,&#8221; Creative
Commons blog, October 1, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/audio/opsound">http://creativecommons.org/audio/opsound</link>&gt;;
Mike Linksvayer, &#8220; Freesound,&#8221; Creative Commons blog,
October 1, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/audio/freesound">http://creativecommons.org/audio/freesound</link>&gt;;
Matt Haughey, &#8220; Free Online Music Booms as SoundClick Offers
Creative Commons Licenses,&#8221; Creative Commons blog, August 11,
2004.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="586">
	<ocn>586</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Runoff Records, Inc., a record label, discovered a remix artist who
teaches physics and calculus and goes by the name of Minus Kelvin.
Runoff heard a podcast of Kelvin's CC-licensed music, and signed him
up, along with another ccMixter contributor, to do music for three
seasons of the television show <i>America's Next Top
Model</i>.<en>230</en> A few months later, two ccMixter fans based in
Poland and Holland started an online record label, DiSfish, that gives
5 percent of all sale proceeds to CC, another 5 percent to charity,
with the remainder split between the label and the artist. All music on
the label is licensed under CC.<en>231</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="230">
		<number>230</number>
		<note>
			Neeru Paharia, &#8220; Minus Kelvin Discovered on ccMixter,&#8221;
Creative Commons blog, May 17, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/archive/2005/5">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/archive/2005/5</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="231">
		<number>231</number>
		<note>
			Cezary Ostrowski from Poland and Marco Raaphorst from Holland met
online at ccMixter and decided to go into business together. They
started an online label called DiSfish.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="587">
	<ocn>587</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC licenses are not just the province of daring remix artists and
other experimentalists. Disappointed by its CD sales through
traditional channels, the Philharmonia Baroque Orchestra released its
performance of Handel's 1736 opera, <i>Atalanta</i>, exclusively
through the online record label Magnatune, using a CC license.
Conductor Nicholas McGegan said the Internet &#8220; has potentially
given the industry a tremendous shot in the arm,&#8221; letting
orchestras reach &#8220; new audiences, including ones that are
unlikely to hear you in person.&#8221;<en>232</en> A company that
specializes in Catalan music collaborated with the Catalonian
government to release two CDs full of CC-licensed music.<en>233</en> A
group of Gamelan musicians from central Java who perform in North
Carolina decided to release their recordings under a CC
license.<en>234</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="232">
		<number>232</number>
		<note>
			Mia Garlick, &#8220; Classical Music Goes Digital (&amp;
CC),&#8221; May 3, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5883">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5883</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="233">
		<number>233</number>
		<note>
			The Enderrock Group, a company that specializes in Catalan music
and publishes three popular music magazines, released the two CDs,
<i>M&#251;sica Lliure and M&#251;sica Lliure II</i>, free within the
page of its magazines. See Margot Kaminski, &#8220; Enderrock,&#8221;
Creative Commons Web site, January 17, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/audio/enderrock">http://creativecommons.org/audio/enderrock</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="234">
		<number>234</number>
		<note>
			The group, Gamelan Nyai Saraswait, was blogged about by Matt
Haughey on February 1, 2003, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3599">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/3599</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="588">
	<ocn>588</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Big-name artists have gotten into the licenses as well. DJ Vadim
created a splash when he released all the original solo, individual
instrumental, and a cappella studio tracks of his album <i>The Sound
Catcher</i> under an Attribution, NonCommercial license, so that
remixers could have at it.<en>235</en> In 2004, <i>Wired</i> magazine
released a CD with sixteen tracks by the likes of David Byrne, Gilberto
Gil, and the Beastie Boys. &#8220; By contributing a track to <i>The
Wired CD</i>., these musicians acknowledge that for an art form to
thrive, it needs to be open, fluid and alive,&#8221; wrote
<i>Wired</i>. &#8220; These artists &#8212; and soon, perhaps, many
more like them &#8212; would rather have people share their work than
steal it.&#8221;<en>236</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="235">
		<number>235</number>
		<note>
			Victor Stone, &#8220; DJ Vadim Releases Album Tracks Under
CC,&#8221; August 20, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7619">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7619</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="236">
		<number>236</number>
		<note>
			Thomas Goetz, &#8220; Sample the Future,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>,
November 2004, pp. 181&#8211;83.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="589">
	<ocn>589</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Soon thereafter, Byrne and Gil went so far as to host a gala benefit
concert for Creative Commons in New York City. In a fitting fusion of
styles, Gil sang a Brazilian arrangement of Cole Porter's cowboy song,
&#8220; Don't Fence Me In.&#8221; The crowd of 1,500 was high on the
transcultural symbolism, said Glenn Brown: &#8220; Musical superstars
from North and South, jamming together, building earlier works into new
creations, in real time. Lawyers on the sidelines and in the audience,
where they belong. The big Creative Commons logo smiling
overhead.&#8221;<en>237</en> The description captures the CC enterprise
to a fault: the fusion of some clap-your-hands populism and hardheaded
legal tools, inflected with an idealistic call to action to build a
better world.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="237">
		<number>237</number>
		<note>
			Glenn Otis Brown, &#8220; WIRED Concert and CD: A Study in
Collaboration,&#8221; September 24, 2004, available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/4415">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/4415</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="590">
	<ocn>590</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By 2008 the power of open networks had persuaded the major record
labels to abandon digital rights management of music CDs, and more
major artists were beginning to venture forth with their own direct
distribution plans, bypassing the standard record label deals. Prince,
Madonna, and others found it more lucrative to run their own business
affairs and deal with concert venues and merchandisers. In a major
experiment that suggests a new business model for major music acts,
Nine Inch Nails released its album <i>Ghosts I-IV</i> under a Creative
Commons NonCommercial ShareAlike license, and posted audio files of the
album on its official Web site, inviting free downloads. It did not do
advertising or promotion. Despite the free distribution &#8212; or
because of it &#8212; the group made money by selling 2,500 copies of
an &#8220; Ultra-Deluxe Limited Edition&#8221; of the album for $300;
the edition sold out in less than three days. There were also
nonlimited sales of a &#8220; deluxe edition&#8221; for $75 and a $10
CD. The scheme showed how free access to the music can be used to drive
sales for something that remains scarce, such as a &#8220; special
edition&#8221; CD or a live performance. One week after the album's
release, the Nine Inch Nails' Web site reported that the group had made
over $1.6 million from over 750,000 purchase and download transactions.
Considering that an artist generally makes only $1.60 on the sale of a
$15.99 CD, Nine Inch Nails made a great deal more money from a &#8220;
free&#8221; album distribution than it otherwise would have made
through a standard record deal.<en>238</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="238">
		<number>238</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Wikipedia entry, &#8220; Ghosts I-IV,&#8221; at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_I-IV">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ghosts_I-IV</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="591">
	<ocn>591</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is too early to know if Lessig's &#8220; BMI strategy&#8221; will in
fact catalyze a structural transformation in the entertainment
industries. But Lessig apparently feels that it is the only feasible
strategy. As he said in a 2006 speech, intensified hacking to break
systems of proprietary control will not work; new campaigns to win
progressive legislation won't succeed within the next twenty years; and
litigation is &#8220; a long-term losing strategy,&#8221; as the
<i>Eldred</i> case demonstrated. For Lessig and much of the free
culture community, the long-term project of building one's own open,
commons-friendly infrastructure is the only enduring solution.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="592">
	<ocn>592</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the music industry, the early signs seem to support this approach.
When digital guru Don Tapscott surveyed the events of 2006, he
concluded that &#8220; the losers built digital music stores and the
winners built vibrant communities based on music. The losers built
walled gardens while the winners built public squares. The losers were
busy guarding their intellectual property while the winners were busy
getting everyone's attention.&#8221; In a penetrating analysis in 2007,
music industry blogger Gerd Leonhard wrote: &#8220; In music, it's
always been about interaction, about sharing, about engaging &#8212;
not Sell-Sell-Sell right from the start. Stop the sharing and you kill
the music business &#8212; it's that simple. When the fan/user/listener
stops engaging with the music, it's all over.&#8221;<en>239</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="239">
		<number>239</number>
		<note>
			Gerd Leonhard, &#8220; Open Letter to the Independent Music
Industry: Music 2.0 and the Future of Music,&#8221; July 1, 2007, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.gerdleonhard.net/2007/07/gerd-leonhards.html">http://www.gerdleonhard.net/2007/07/gerd-leonhards.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="593">
	<ocn>593</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Serious change is in the air when the producer/consumer dichotomy is no
longer the only paradigm, and a vast network of ordinary people and
talented creators are becoming active participants in making their own
culture. They are sharing and co-creating. Markets are no longer so
separate from social communities; indeed, the two are blurring into
each other. Although we may live in a complicated interregnum between
Centralized Media and distributed media, the future is likely to favor
those creators and businesses who build on open platforms. As Dan
Hunter and F. Gregory Lastowka write: &#8220; It is clear that two
parallel spheres of information production exist today. One is a
traditional, copyright-based and profit-driven model that is struggling
with technological change. The second is a newly enabled, decentralized
amateur production sphere, in which individual authors or small groups
freely release their work.&#8221;<en>240</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="240">
		<number>240</number>
		<note>
			Dan Hunter and F. Gregory Lastowka, &#8220;
Amateur-to-Amateur,&#8221; <i>William and Mary Law Review</i> 46, no.
951 (December 2004), pp. 1029&#8211;30.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="594">
	<ocn>594</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Hunter and Lastowka liken copyright law today to the Roman Empire in
decline: &#8220; It is meaningless to ask whether the unitary might of
imperial Rome was preferable to the distributed, messy agglomeration of
tribes and states that eventually emerged after Rome fell. It was not
better, just different.&#8221; That is certainly a debatable
conclusion, depending upon one's cultural tastes and sense of history.
But the Rome metaphor does capture the fragmentation and
democratization of creativity that is now under way. And that, in fact,
is something of the point of the CC licenses: to make access and use of
culture more open and egalitarian. For all his commitment to law and
the CC licenses, Lessig ultimately throws his lot in with social
practice: &#8220; Remember, it's the <i>activity</i> that the licenses
make possible that matters, not the licenses themselves. The point is
to change the existing discourse by growing a new
discourse.&#8221;<en>241</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="241">
		<number>241</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, September 14, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="595">
	<ocn>595</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		7 THE MACHINE AND THE MOVEMENT
	</text>
</object>
<object id="596">
	<ocn>596</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>An infrastructure of code gives rise to a movement for free
culture.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="597">
	<ocn>597</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When the CC licenses were first launched, many regarded them as a
boring legal license that may or may not really matter. The real
surprise was how the CC licenses became a focal object for organizing a
movement. As more users began to adopt the licenses in 2003 and 2004,
they ceased being just a set of legal permissions and became a cool
social brand. The CC licenses and logo became symbols of resistance
against the highly controlled, heavily marketed, Big Brother worldview
that Hollywood and the record industry seem to embody. The CC licenses
offered a way to talk about one's legal and creative rights in the
Internet age, and to cite to a positive alternative &#8212; the sharing
economy. With no paid advertising to speak of, the CC logo came to
symbolize an ethic and identity, one that stood for artistic integrity,
democratic transparency, and innovation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="598">
	<ocn>598</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Glenn Otis Brown recalls how people spontaneously took up the license
to express their anger at the media establishment and their yearning
for a more wholesome alternative: &#8220; If you're frustrated with the
way the world works now, frustrated with the way the media is becoming
more democratized but all these laws aren't really facilitating
that,&#8221; said Brown, &#8220; you can just cast a little virtual
vote for a different sort of copyright system by putting the &#8216;
Some Rights Reserved' tag on your Web page. But also, practically, you
can help create pools of content that people can work with and make it
so much easier to participate.&#8221; Without really planning it, the
Creative Commons became much more than a system of free licenses for
sharing. It became a symbol for a movement. Communities of social
practice began to organize themselves around the CC project.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="599">
	<ocn>599</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Inside of the organization, we always talked about how we
really had <i>two</i> organizations,&#8221; said Brown. &#8220; One was
Creative Commons, the <i>movement</i>; and one was Creative Commons,
the <i>machine</i>.&#8221;<en>242</en> The machine was about meeting
utilitarian needs through licenses and software; the movement was about
motivating people and transforming culture. Just as the GPL had given
rise to the free software community and a hacker political philosophy
(which in turn inspired the Creative Commons's organizers), so the CC
licenses were spontaneously igniting different pockets of the culture:
Web designers, bloggers, musicians, book authors, videographers,
filmmakers, and amateurs of all stripes. The viral spiral was
proceeding apace.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="242">
		<number>242</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, June 9, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="600">
	<ocn>600</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The tension between the machine and the movement has been an animating
force in the evolution of the Creative Commons. &#8220; You want to
have something that's actually useful to people,&#8221; said Brown,
&#8220; but you also have to get people excited about it, and build up
your constituency.&#8221;<en>243</en> Some CC initiatives have had
strong symbolic resonances but little practical value, while other
initiatives were quite useful but not very sexy. For example, embedding
CC metadata into software applications and Web services is complicated
and technical &#8212; but highly effective in extending the practices
of free culture. On the other hand, the Creative Commons's release of
specialty licenses for music sampling, developing nations, and a CC
version of the General Public License for software (as discussed below)
were discretionary moves of some utility that were probably more
important as gestures of solidarity to allies.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="243">
		<number>243</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="601">
	<ocn>601</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This has been a recurrent motif for the organization &#8212; pragmatic,
improvisational outreach to distinct constituencies as part of a larger
attempt to build a movement. There has always been a corresponding
pull, however, &#8220; not to put &#8216; the machine' at risk by
incorporating the new licenses into every last one of our software
tools,&#8221; said Brown. The integrity of &#8220; the machine&#8221;
ultimately needs to be respected.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="602">
	<ocn>602</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even as the machine was getting built, Lessig was taking steps to stoke
up a movement. In 2004, Lessig published his third book in five years,
<i>Free Culture</i>. The book described, as the subtitle put it,
&#8220; how big media uses technology and the law to lock down culture
and control creativity.&#8221; Lessig's earlier books, <i>Code</i> and
<i>The Future of Ideas</i>, had critiqued the alarming trends in
copyright law, explained the importance of the commons, and set forth a
philosophical rationale for what became the CC licenses. Now <i>Free
Culture</i> provided a wide-ranging survey of how incumbent industries
with old business models &#8212; for recorded music, film,
broadcasting, cable television &#8212; were (and are) curbing
traditional creative freedoms and technological innovations. Drawing
explicitly on the ideas of freedom developed by Richard Stallman in the
1980s, and upon legal history, politics, and colorful stories, Lessig
argued that industry protectionism poses a profound harm to creators,
business, and democratic culture &#8212; and that action needed to be
taken.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="603">
	<ocn>603</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although <i>Free Culture</i> repeats many of the fundamental arguments
made in his earlier books, Lessig's arguments this time did not sound
like a law professor's or academic's, but more like an activist trying
to rally a social movement. &#8220; This movement must begin in the
streets,&#8221; he writes. &#8220; It must recruit a significant number
of parents, teachers, librarians, creators, authors, musicians,
filmmakers, scientists &#8212; all to tell their story in their own
words, and to tell their neighbors why this battle is so important. . .
. We will not reclaim a free culture by individual action alone. It
will take important reforms of laws. We have a long way to go before
the politicians will listen to these ideas and implement these reforms.
But that also means that we have time to build awareness around the
changes that we need.&#8221;<en>244</en> The preeminent challenge for
this would-be movement, Lessig wrote, is &#8220; rebuilding freedoms
previously presumed&#8221; and &#8220; rebuilding free culture.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="244">
		<number>244</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, <i>Free Culture</i> (New York: Penguin, 2004), pp.
275, 287.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="604">
	<ocn>604</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig had reason to think that his analysis and exhortations would
find receptive ears. He was now a leading voice on copyright and
Internet issues, and well known through his earlier books, public
speaking, and <i>Eldred</i> advocacy. The launch of the Creative
Commons was thrusting him into the spotlight again. Adoption of the CC
licenses was steadily growing in 2003 and 2004 based on the most
comprehensive sources at the time, search engines. Yahoo was reporting
in September 2004 that there were 4.7 million links to CC licenses on
the Web. This number shot up to 14 million only six months later, and
by August 2005 it had grown to 53 million.<en>245</en> These numbers
offer only a crude estimate of actual license usage, but they
nonetheless indicated a consistent trend. Usage was also being
propelled by new types of Web 2.0 sites featuring usergenerated
content. For example, Flickr, the photo-sharing site, had 4.1 million
photos tagged with CC licenses at the end of 2004, a number that has
soared to an estimated 75 million by 2008.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="245">
		<number>245</number>
		<note>
			CC license statistics, on CC wiki page, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/License_statistics">http://wiki.creativecommons.org/License_statistics</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="605">
	<ocn>605</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The decisive choice, four years earlier, to build a suite of licenses
that could propagate themselves via open networks was bearing fruit.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="606">
	<ocn>606</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Building the CC Machine
	</text>
</object>
<object id="607">
	<ocn>607</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was a pleasant surprise for the organization to learn that a great
deal of individual usage of the CC licenses was fairly spontaneous.
Persuading large companies and respected institutions to use the CC
licenses was a more difficult proposition. Lessig therefore spent a
fair amount of time trying to get prominent institutions to adopt the
licenses and give them some validation. Among the early converts were
MIT, Rice University, Stanford Law School, and Sun Microsystems,
supplemented by some relatively new organizations such as Brewster
Kahle's Internet Archive and the Public Library of Science, a publisher
of open-access journals.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="608">
	<ocn>608</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Personal diplomacy can accomplish only so much, however, and in any
case the Internet itself needed to be leveraged to disseminate the
licenses and educate the public. One challenge, for example, was to
introduce the CC licenses &#8212; which are not, after all, a
self-evident need for most people &#8212; in a clear, compelling way.
Most authors and artists have little idea what licenses they may want
to choose, and their implications for how they might be able to sell or
share works in the future. People needed a quick and easy way to make
intelligent choices. It fell to Lisa Rein, the first technical director
at CC, in late 2001, to develop a license-generating interface for the
Web site. The quandary she faced was how to maximize user choice in
selecting licenses while minimizing complexity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="609">
	<ocn>609</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Web interface for the licenses has steadily improved over the
years, but in a sense, those improvements have been offset by a growing
complexity and number of CC licenses. Some critics have complained that
the whole CC scheme can be a bit daunting. Yes, the licenses can ensure
certain freedoms without your having to hire an attorney, which is
clearly an improvement over relying on the fair use doctrine. But that
does not mean that anyone can immediately understand the implications
of using a NonCommercial or ShareAlike license for a given work. Any
lurker on a CC listserv soon encounters head-scratching questions like
&#8220; Can I use a BY-NC photo from Flickr on my blog if the blog is
hosted by a company whose terms of service require me to grant them a
worldwide, nonexclusive license to use any work hosted by their
service, including for commercial use?&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="610">
	<ocn>610</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By far the more important vehicle for promoting usage of the CC
licenses has been software code. Lessig and the CC team realized that
if the licenses could become an embedded element of leading search
engines, Web publishing tools, and Web 2.0 platforms, it could
powerfully promote license use. Integrating the code into existing Web
sites and software can pose some serious technical challenges, however.
Figuring out how to integrate the CC licenses with popular software
applications, Web services, and digital file formats has fallen chiefly
to Nathan Yergler, the chief technology officer of Creative Commons.
Over the years, he and other CC developers have come up with a variety
of applications to help make software infrastructures more friendly.
One program that was developed, ccHost, is a content management system
that has licensing and remix tracking built into its core. JsWidget is
a simple javascript widget that developers can easily integrate into
their sites to enable users to choose a license without leaving the
site. Creative Commons has made it a standard practice to coordinate
its work with technology volunteers, startup companies, and nonprofits
with a stake in digitally enabling open licensing. It does this work
through a CC development wiki, the cc-devel mailing list, Internet
Relay Chat, World Wide Web Consortium working groups, and participation
in Google's annual &#8220; Summer of Code&#8221; program for student
programmers.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="611">
	<ocn>611</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig and top CC staff have worked hard at convincing executives at
major software enterprises to incorporate the CC licenses into a
software application or Web site. One early triumph came when the
makers of Movable Type, a blogging platform, agreed to make it easy for
users to tack a CC license onto their blogs. Two months later, the
O'Reilly empire of software blogs adopted the CC licenses. Then
programmer Dave Winer embedded the licenses in his new Web log software
in 2003. Blogs may not be core infrastructure for the Internet, but
they are plentiful and popular, and have given Creative Commons
enormous visibility and a high adoption curve.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="612">
	<ocn>612</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It had always been Lessig's ambition that the major search engines
would be reengineered to help people find CC-tagged content. To help
prove that it could be done, Creative Commons built its own
jerry-rigged search engine that retrieved content tagged with CC
metadata. Lessig and Brown, meanwhile, made numerous diplomatic
overtures to Google and Yahoo executives and software engineers. After
two years of off-and-on conversations, both search engine companies
agreed in 2005 to incorporate changes into their advanced searches so
that users could locate CC-licensed content. (The Google advanced
search does not use the Creative Commons name, but simply asks users if
they want content that is &#8220; free to use or share,&#8221; among
other options.) The search engine exposure was a serious breakthrough
for Creative Commons's visibility and legitimacy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="613">
	<ocn>613</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After a few years, the CC licenses were integrated into a number of
other software platforms. It became possible to search for CClicensed
images (Flickr), video programs (blip.tv), music (Owl), and old Web
content (Internet Archive, SpinXpress). With these search tools,
Internet users had a practical way to locate blues tunes that could be
remixed, photos of the Eiffel Tower that could be modified and sold,
and articles about flower arrangements that could be legally
republished. Advertisers, publishers, and other companies could search
for images, songs, and text that could be licensed for commercial use.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="614">
	<ocn>614</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig and Brown worked hard to get other major Web and software
companies to make it easy for users to tag content with CC licenses.
The ultimate goal was to make it easy for users to automate their
preferences. Joi Ito, a Japanese venture capitalist and democratic
reformer who became the chair of the Creative Commons's board of
directors in 2006, put it this way: &#8220; Every input device that you
have, whether it's a camera phone, a digital camera or PowerPoint
software, should allow you to automatically set it to the CC license
that you want. And the minute you take that picture, you've already
expressed how you would want that picture to be used.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="615">
	<ocn>615</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Creative Commons also urged open-source software communities to
incorporate CC-made software into their applications so that users can
more easily tag content with the licenses or find licensed works.
Firefox, for example, has integrated a Creative Commons search function
into the drop-down menu of its browser search interface. It also has a
plug-in module called MozCC that scans for any CC metadata as you
browse Web pages, and then reports on the browser status bar how
content is licensed. CC licenses have been integrated into other
software as well, such as Songbird, a free software media player, and
Inkscape, a free vector-graphics program similar to Adobe Illustrator.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="616">
	<ocn>616</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Application by application, Web site by Web site, the Creative Commons
board and staff have tried to insinuate the licenses into as many
software applications and Web services as they could, in a kind of
behind-the-scenes enactment of Lessig's book <i>Code</i>. If code is
law, then let's write it ourselves! The diffusion of the licenses has
tended to occur through personal connections of Lessig, CC board
members, and friendly tech entrepreneurs and programmers. Joi Ito used
his contacts at Sony to persuade it to develop a video remix Web site
in Japan that uses CC licenses as the default choice. For Sony, the
licenses help the company avoid any whiff of legal impropriety because
users must stipulate whether their video remixes may be shared or not.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="617">
	<ocn>617</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2006, Microsoft went so far as to come out with a plug-in module for
its Word program, enabling writers to tag their text documents with CC
licenses. At the time, many CC fans grumbled at the hypocrisy of
Microsoft, the five-hundred-pound gorilla of proprietary software,
embracing the Creative Commons, even in such a modest way. But for
Lessig and CC board members, any business that chooses to advance the
reach of free culture &#8212; in this case, by accessing the 400
million users of Microsoft Office &#8212; is welcomed. While this
ecumenical tolerance has made the Creative Commons a big-tent movement
with an eclectic assortment of players, it has also provoked bitter
complaints in free software and Wikipedia circles that the Creative
Commons promotes a fuzzy, incoherent vision of &#8220; freedom&#8221;
in the digital world (an issue to which I return in chapter 9).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="618">
	<ocn>618</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One vexing problem that CC developers confronted was how to digitally
tag stand-alone files as CC-licensed work if they are not on the Web.
How could one tag an MP3 file, for example, to show that the music is
under a CC license? One problem with just inserting a CC tag onto the
MP3 file is that anyone could fraudulently mark the file as
CC-licensed. To prevent scams, Neeru Paharia, then CC assistant
director, and other developers came up with a solution that requires
any stand-alone digital files that are embedded with CC licenses to
include a URL (Uniform Resource Locator) that links to a Web page
verifying the assertions made on the file.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="619">
	<ocn>619</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The practice of embedding CC license information on digital files has
been called <i>digital rights expression</i> &#8212; a kind of benign
analogue to digital rights management. The purpose is to embed
information about the copyright status of a work <i>in</i> the digital
file. Unlike DRM, the goal is not to try to build an infrastructure for
enforcing those rights or controlling how people may use a work.
&#8220; Instead of using technology to ensure that the consumer can't
do anything with it,&#8221; said Mike Linksvayer, CC vice president and
former chief technology officer, &#8220; we're trying to use technology
to ensure that people can find a CC-licensed work. If they're looking,
for instance, for music that can remixed, then this information will
help a search engine locate that information.&#8221;<en>246</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="246">
		<number>246</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Mike Linksvayer, February 7, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="620">
	<ocn>620</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps the neatest self-promotional trick that the Creative Commons
has devised is to rely upon companies whose very business plans revolve
around CC licenses. We will examine &#8220; open business&#8221;
enterprises in chapter 10, but for now it is worth noting that a number
of innovative companies use the licenses as a core element of their
business strategy. These enterprises include Flickr (photo sharing),
Magnatune (an online record label), Jamendo (a Luxembourg-based music
site), and Revver (a video-sharing site that shares advertising
revenues with creators).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="621">
	<ocn>621</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Infrastructure grows old and occasionally needs to be updated and
improved. The CC licenses have been no exception. As users have
incorporated them into one medium after another, the unwitting
omissions and infelicitous legal language of some parts of the licenses
needed revisiting. After many months of discussions with many parts of
the CC world, the Creative Commons issued a new set of 2.0 licenses in
May 2004.<en>247</en> They did not differ substantially from the
original ones, and in fact the changes would probably bore most
nonlawyers. For example, version 2.0 included a provision that allows a
licensor to require licensees to provide a link back to the licensor's
work. The 2.0 licenses also clarify many complicated license options
affecting music rights, and make clear that licensors make no
warranties of title, merchantability, or fitness for use. Perhaps the
biggest change in version 2.0 was the elimination of the choice of
Attribution licenses. Since nearly 98 percent of all licensors chose
Attribution, the Creative Commons decided to drop licenses without the
Attribution requirement, thereby reducing the number of CC licenses
from eleven to six.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="247">
		<number>247</number>
		<note>
			Glenn Otis Brown, &#8220; Announcing (and explaining) our new 2.0
licenses,&#8221; CC blog, May 25, 2004, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/4216">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/4216</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="622">
	<ocn>622</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another set of major revisions to the licenses was taken up for
discussion in 2006, and agreed upon in February 2007.<en>248</en> Once
again, the layperson would care little for the debates leading to the
changes, but considerable, sometimes heated discussion went into the
revisions. In general, the 3.0 tweaks sought to make the licenses
clearer, more useful, and more enforceable. The issue of &#8220; moral
rights&#8221; under copyright law &#8212; an issue in many European
countries &#8212; is explicitly addressed, as are the complications of
the CC licenses and collecting societies. New legal language was
introduced to ensure that people who remix works under other licenses,
such as the GNU Free Documentation License (FDL), would be able to also
use CC-licensed materials in the same work &#8212; an important
provision for preventing free culture from devolving into &#8220;
autistic islands&#8221; of legally incomptabile material. Besides
helping align the CC world with Wikipedia (which uses the GNU FDL
license), the 3.0 revisions also made harmonizing legal changes to take
account of MIT and the Debian software development community.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="248">
		<number>248</number>
		<note>
			7. Mia Garlick, &#8220; Version 3.0 Launched,&#8221; CC blog,
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7249">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7249</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="623">
	<ocn>623</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By getting the CC licenses integrated into so many types of software
and Web services, and even leveraging market players to embrace the
sharing ethic, Creative Commons has managed to kill at least three
birds with one stone. It has enlarged the universe of shareable
Internet content. It has educated people to consider how copyright law
affects them personally. And it has given visibility to its larger
vision of free culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="624">
	<ocn>624</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In one sense, the CC &#8220; machine&#8221; composed of the licenses,
the CC-developed software, and the CC-friendly protocol was the engine
for change. In another sense, the influence that Creative Commons has
acquired derives from the social communities that gradually began to
use its infrastructure. The social practice infused power into the
&#8220; machine&#8221; even as the machine expanded the social
practice. A virtuous cycle took hold, as the CC community used its
self-devised legal and technological infrastructure to advance their
shared cultural agenda.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="625">
	<ocn>625</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Driving this cycle was an ever-growing staff and new managers working
out of offices in downtown San Francisco. Although Lessig has been the
chief executive officer and chairman of the board of Creative Commons
for most of its existence, most day-to-day operating responsibilities
fell to executive director Glenn Otis Brown until his departure in
2005, and then to general counsel Mia Garlick, who left in 2007. (Both
took jobs at Google.) Key executives at Creative Commons in 2008
included Mike Linksvayer, vice president; Eric Steuer, creative
director; Diane Peters, general counsel; Nathan Yergler, chief
technology officer; and Jennifer Yip, operations manager. The annual
budget, which was $750,000 in 2003, had grown to $3.6 million in 2008
(a sum that included the Science Commons project). Much of this funding
came from foundations such as the John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur
Foundation, the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, the Rockefeller
Foundation, and Omidyar Network.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="626">
	<ocn>626</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Once the CC machine had secured its footing, Lessig and the CC staff
paid close attention to the movement &#8212; the social communities
that find utility and meaning through Creative Commons&#8212; and to
developing new software and projects that these early adopters would
welcome. In 2006, the organization hit upon the idea of hosting a
series of &#8220; salons&#8221; in major cities. The gatherings have
become a big success, and are now replicated in cities throughout the
world. Artists talk about how they use CC licenses; entrepreneurs
explain how their business models work; remix artists perform their
work. The events, free and open to the public, combine testimonials
about free culture, personal networking, entrepreneurial
idea-mongering, live performances, and partying. The CC crowd seems to
enjoy partying; they do it well. Every December, there are gala
anniversary parties in groovy San Francisco hot spots. There have been
virtual parties in the immersive online world, Second Life. Because CC
users tend to include some of the most adventurous artistic talent and
eclectic innovators around &#8212; people who know where the truly cool
night spots are &#8212; CC parties tend to be lively, good times. The
parties in Rio and Dubrovnik, at the iCommons Summits, were memorable
international happenings, for example &#8212; occasions, as one
self-styled Lothario boasted to me, &#8220; where a guy could dance
with a woman from every continent of the world in a single
evening.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="627">
	<ocn>627</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Add to the mix tech-oriented college students, another key sector of
free culture activism, and there is even more youthful energy. Hundreds
of college students participate in a nationwide student organization,
FreeCulture.org, later renamed Students for Free Culture. The group got
its start in 2004 when some students at Swarthmore College began
investigating the reliability of Diebold electronic voting machines;
the company invoked copyright law in an attempt to keep the problems
secret, leading to a public confrontation that Diebold lost. Nelson
Pavlosky and Luke Smith, who were also inspired by Lessig's advocacy,
co-founded the group, which has since spawned over thirty
quasi-autonomous chapters on campuses across the United States and a
few foreign nations. The organization tries to be a grassroots force on
Internet, digital technology, and copyright issues. It has mounted
protests against CDs with digital rights management, for example, and
hosted film remixing contests and exhibits of CC-licensed art at NYU
and Harvard. Students for Free Culture also organized a &#8220;
no-profit record company/recording collective,&#8221; the Antenna
Alliance, which gave bands free recording space and distributed their
CC-licensed music to college radio stations.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="628">
	<ocn>628</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		We have looked at the machine and many parts of the movement, but not
at one of the most significant forces fueling Creative Commons &#8212;
the dozens of national projects to adapt the licenses to legal systems
around the world. The long-term reverberations of this movement &#8212;
which includes activists in Brazil, Croatia, South Africa, Egypt, Peru,
Scotland, and dozens of other countries &#8212; are only beginning to
be felt.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="629">
	<ocn>629</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		8 FREE CULTURE GOES GLOBAL
	</text>
</object>
<object id="630">
	<ocn>630</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>The commoners mount a transnational mobilization to build their own
digital commons.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="631">
	<ocn>631</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is a measure of Lessig's ambition for Creative Commons that only
five months after the release of the licenses, in April 2003, he
instigated a move to take the idea global. Glenn Brown remembers
objecting, &#8220; I don't know how we're going to get this done! Larry
was like, &#8216; We have no other choice. We <i>have</i> to do this.
This needs to be an international organization.'&#8221;<en>249</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="249">
		<number>249</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, June 9, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="632">
	<ocn>632</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Professor James Boyle, a board member, was aghast. &#8220; That's the
stupidest thing I've ever heard,&#8221; he said upon hearing the idea.
&#8220; I was practically foaming at the mouth,&#8221; he recalled,
noting that it was &#8220; just insane&#8221; to try to adapt the
licenses to the mind-boggling complexities of copyright laws in scores
of nations.<en>250</en> But Lessig, determined to make the Creative
Commons an international project, proceeded to hire Christiane
Asschenfeldt (now Christiane Henckel von Donnersmarck), a Berlin-based
copyright lawyer whom he had met the previous summer at an iLaw
(Internet Law) conference in Cambridge, Massachusetts. He charged her
with helping project leaders in different countries adapt the licenses
(or, in computerese, &#8220; port&#8221; them) to their respective
national legal codes.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="250">
		<number>250</number>
		<note>
			Interview with James Boyle, August 15, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="633">
	<ocn>633</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Asschenfeldt set about inventing a system for gathering teams of
volunteers, usually associated with a law school or technology
institute, to become CC affiliates. Once an affiliate institution and
project lead are chosen, the project lead produces a first draft of the
licenses, which then undergoes public discussion, rewriting, and a
final review by the new international arm of Creative Commons, CC
International.<en>251</en> (Confusingly, this project was originally
called &#8220; iCommons,&#8221; a name that in 2006 was reassigned to a
new CC spinoff group that convenes the international free culture
movement.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="251">
		<number>251</number>
		<note>
			The procedures for porting a CC license to another jurisdiction are
outlined in a document, &#8220; Welcome to Creative Commons
International,&#8221; undated, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Worldwide_Overview">http://wiki.creativecommons.org/Worldwide_Overview</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="634">
	<ocn>634</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In a pre-Internet context, the whole idea of a creating a new
international license architecture and network of legal experts might
seem ridiculously unrealistic. But by 2003 there were enough examples
of &#8220; distributed intelligence&#8221; popping up that it no longer
seemed so crazy to think that a passionate corps of dispersed
volunteers could collaborate as catalysts for change. In any case,
following the <i>Eldred</i> defeat, Lessig and Brown came to believe,
as discussed earlier, that the Creative Commons needed to be both a
machine and a movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="635">
	<ocn>635</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Going international with the licenses offered an appealing way to grow
both simultaneously without forcing unpleasant trade-offs between the
two, at least initially. Drafting the licenses for a country, for
example, helps convene top lawyers committed to the idea of legal
sharing and collaboration while also mobilizing diverse constituencies
who are the potential leaders of a movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="636">
	<ocn>636</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		According to Jonathan Zittrain, an early collaborator on the project
and a board member, Creative Commons at the international level is more
of a &#8220; persuasive, communicative enterprise than a legal
licensing one.&#8221;<en>252</en> It is a vehicle for starting a
process for engaging public-spirited lawyers, law scholars, and all
manner of creators. The licenses do have specific legal meanings in
their respective legal jurisdictions, of course, or are believed to
have legal application. (Only three courts, in the Netherlands and
Spain, have ever ruled on the legal status of the CC licenses. In two
instances the courts enforced the licenses; in the other case, in which
the defendant lost, the validity of the licenses was not at
issue.)<en>253</en> Apart from their legal meaning, the licenses' most
important function may be as a social signaling device. They let people
announce, &#8220; I participate in and celebrate the sharing
economy.&#8221; The internationalization of the CC licenses has also
been a way of &#8220; localizing&#8221; the free culture movement.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="252">
		<number>252</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Jonathan Zittrain, September 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="253">
		<number>253</number>
		<note>
			The most famous court case involving the CC licenses is <i>A. Curry
v. Audax/Weekend</i>, in which Adam Curry sued the publishers of a
Dutch tabloid magazine and two senior editors for using four photos of
his family on his Flickr account that had been licensed under a
BY-NC-SA license. See &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5944">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5944</link>&gt;
and &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5823">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5823</link>&gt;.
A District Court of Amsterdam upheld Curry's usage of the CC licenses
in a March 9, 2006, decision; see &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://mirrors.creativecommons.org/judgements/Curry-Audax-English.pdf">http://mirrors.creativecommons.org/judgements/Curry-Audax-English.pdf</link>&gt;.
There have been two Spanish cases involving CC licenses. In both cases,
a collecting society, the Sociedad General de Autores y Editores
(SGAE), sued caf&#233;s for playing &#8220; free music&#8221; licensed
under CC licenses; SGAE claimed that it was owed royalties for the
public performance of music because artists cannot legally apply a CC
license to their work (or even release it online) without the consent
of their collecting society. In both instances, the cases turned on
evidentiary issues, not on the enforceability of CC licenses. See
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5830">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/5830</link>&gt;
and &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7228">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/entry/7228</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="637">
	<ocn>637</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The first nation to port the CC licenses was Japan. This was partly an
outgrowth of a five-month sabbatical that Lessig had spent in Tokyo,
from late 2002 through early 2003. There were already stirrings of
dissatisfaction with copyright law in Japan. Koichiro Hayashi, a
professor who had once worked for the telecom giant NTT, had once
proposed a so-called d-mark system to allow copyright owners to forfeit
the statutory term of copyright protection and voluntarily declare a
shorter term for their works. In the spring of 2003, a team of Japanese
lawyers associated with a technology research institute, the Global
Communications Center (GLOCOM), working with CC International in
Berlin, set about porting the licenses to Japanese law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="638">
	<ocn>638</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yuko Noguchi, a former Lessig student and lawyer who later became the
legal project lead, explained that the CC licenses are a culturally
attractive way for Japanese to address the structural problems of
copyright law. Japan is a country that prizes harmony and dislikes
confrontation. The licenses offer a way to promote legal sharing
without forcing bitter public policy conflicts with major content
industries.<en>254</en> (Partly for such reasons, CC Japan shifted its
affiliation to the University of Tokyo in 2006.) In a culture that
enjoys the sharing of comics, animation, haiku, and other works, the CC
Japan licenses, launched in January 2004, have been used by a diverse
range of artists and companies.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="254">
		<number>254</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Yuko Noguchi, September 12, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="639">
	<ocn>639</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		During his sojourn in Japan, Lessig had a fateful meeting with Joichi
Ito, who in many ways embodies the tech sophistication, democratic
zeal, and cosmopolitan style of the international Creative Commons
movement. Widely known as Joi (pronounced &#8220; Joey&#8221;), Ito,
forty-two, was born in Japan and educated in the United States.
Disaffected with formal education in the U.S., where he studied
computer science and physics, he dropped out and began his highly
unusual career in Japan as an activist, entrepreneur, and venture
capitalist. He has worked as a nightclub disc jockey, and brought
industrial music and the rave scene to Japan, but he has also become a
talented venture capitalist and early stage investor in such companies
as Six Apart, Technorati, Flickr, SocialText, Dopplr, and Rupture.
Lessig and Ito became close friends; Ito later joined the Creative
Commons board. He was appointed chairman of the board in 2007 and then,
in 2008, he became chief executive officer when Lessig left to start a
congressional reform project. Duke law professor James Boyle, a board
member, replaced Ito as chairman.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="640">
	<ocn>640</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Once it went public, the very idea of Creative Commons attracted many
other people like Ito to its ranks: educated, tech-savvy, culturally
fluent, activist-minded. In fact, following the American launch of
Creative Commons, volunteers from many countries began to approach the
organization, asking if they could port the licenses to their own legal
systems. Finland became the second nation to adopt the licenses, in May
2004, followed a month later by Germany. In Europe, the early adopters
included Denmark, Hungary, Scotland, Slovenia, Sweden, and Malta. In
South America, CC licenses were introduced in Argentina, Chile, and
Peru. In Asia, Malaysia and China ported the licenses, as did
Australia. Israel was the first Middle Eastern country to port the
licenses.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="641">
	<ocn>641</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As each jurisdiction introduces its licenses, it typically hosts a gala
public event to celebrate and publicize free culture. News media and
government officials are invited. There are panel discussions about
copyright law and digital culture; performances by musicians who use
the licenses; and endorsements by prominent universities, cultural
institutions, and authors. Lessig has made it a practice to fly in and
deliver an inspirational speech. Few international launches of CC
licenses have been more spectacular or consequential than the one
staged by Brazil in March 2004.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="642">
	<ocn>642</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Brazil, the First Free Culture Nation
	</text>
</object>
<object id="643">
	<ocn>643</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Luiz In&#225;cio Lula da Silva had just been elected president of
Brazil, and he was eager to stake out a new set of development policies
to allow his nation to plot its own economic and cultural future. His
government, reflecting his electoral mandate, resented the coercive
effects of international copyright law and patent law. To tackle some
of these issues on the copyright front, President Lula appointed
Gilberto Gil, the renowned singer-songwriter, as his minister of
culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="644">
	<ocn>644</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Gil became a revered cultural figure when he helped launch a new
musical style, <i>tropicalismo</i>, in the late 1960s, giving Brazil a
fresh, international cachet. The music blended national styles of music
with pop culture and was inflected with political and moral themes. As
one commentator put it, <i>tropicalismo</i> was &#8220; a very '60s
attempt to capture the chaotic, swirling feel of Brazil's perennially
uneven modernization, its jumble of wealth and poverty, of rural and
urban, of local and global. . . . They cut and pasted styles with an
abandon that, amid today's sample-happy music scene, sounds
up-to-theminute.&#8221;<en>255</en> The military dictatorship then
running the government considered <i>tropicalismo</i> sufficiently
threatening that it imprisoned Gil for several months before forcing
him into exile, in London. Gil continued writing and recording music,
however, and eventually returned to Brazil.<en>256</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="255">
		<number>255</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry, &#8220; Tropicalismo,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropicalismo">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tropicalismo</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="256">
		<number>256</number>
		<note>
			For a history of Gil, see his personal Web site at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.gilbertogil.com.br/index.php?language=en">http://www.gilbertogil.com.br/index.php?language=en</link>&gt;;
the Wikipedia entry on him at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilberto_Gil">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gilberto_Gil</link>&gt;;
and Larry Rohter, &#8220; Gilberto Gil Hears the Future, Some Rights
Reserved,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, March 11, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="645">
	<ocn>645</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This history matters, because when Gil was appointed culture minister,
he brought with him a rare political sophistication and public
veneration. His moral stature and joyous humanity allowed him to
transcend politics as conventionally practiced. &#8220; Gil wears
shoulder-length dreadlocks and is apt to show up at his ministerial
offices dressed in the simple white linens that identify him as a
follower of the Afro-Brazilian religion <i>candombl&#233;</i>,&#8221;
wrote American journalist Julian Dibbell in 2004. &#8220; Slouching in
and out of the elegant Barcelona chairs that furnish his office, taking
the occasional sip from a cup of pinkish herbal tea, he looks &#8212;
and talks &#8212; less like an elder statesman than the posthippie,
multiculturalist, Taoist intellectual he is.&#8221;<en>257</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="257">
		<number>257</number>
		<note>
			Julian Dibbell, &#8220; We Pledge Allegiance to the Penguin,&#8221;
<i>Wired</i>, November 2004, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.11/linux_pr.html">http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/12.11/linux_pr.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="646">
	<ocn>646</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As luck had it, Dibbell &#8212; author of the article on cyber-rape
that had enticed Lessig to investigate digital culture in the first
place (see chapter 3) &#8212; was living in Rio at the time. He was
friendly with Hermano Vianna, a prominent intellectual who knew Gil and
was deeply into the music scene and digital technology. Between Dibbell
and Vianna, a flurry of introductions was made, and within months Larry
Lessig, John Perry Barlow, and Harvard law professor William Fisher
were sitting with Gil, Vianna, and Dibbell in Gil's Rio de Janeiro
penthouse across from the beach.<en>258</en> Lessig's mission was to
pitch the Creative Commons licenses to Gil, and in particular, get
Gil's thoughts about a new CC Sampling license that would let musicians
authorize sampling of their songs.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="258">
		<number>258</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="647">
	<ocn>647</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Gil knew that sampling was a central driving power for
contemporary creativity well before digital instruments came
along,&#8221; recalled Vianna. "<i>Tropicalismo</i> was all about
sampling different ideas and different cultures. <i>Tropicalismo</i>
was about juxtapositions, not fusions, and in this sense was heir to a
long tradition of Brazilian modern thought and art that began with the
cultural anthropology of the early modernists, in the 1920s and 1930s,
and can be traced back to all debates about Brazilian identity in the
20th century."<en>259</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="259">
		<number>259</number>
		<note>
			E-mail from Hermano Vianna, January 8, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="648">
	<ocn>648</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig did not need to argue his case. Gil immediately understood what
Creative Commons was trying to accomplish culturally and politically.
He was enthusiastic about CC licenses, the proposed Sampling license,
and the prospect of using his ministry to advance a vision of free
culture.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="649">
	<ocn>649</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By further coincidence, Ronaldo Lemos da Silva, then a Brazilian law
student who has been described as a &#8220; Lessig of the Southern
Hemisphere,&#8221; had just completed his studies at Harvard Law
School. He was well acquainted with Creative Commons and was
considering his future when friends at the Funda&#231;&#227;o Getulio
Vargas (FGV), a Rio de Janeiro university, urged him to join them in
founding a new law school. The school would host a new Center for
Technology and Society to study law and technology from the perspective
of developing nations like Brazil. Lemos accepted, and the center soon
became the host for CC Brazil and myriad free culture projects.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="650">
	<ocn>650</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This alignment of intellectual firepower, artistic authority, and
political clout was extraordinary &#8212; and a major coup for Creative
Commons. The culture minister of the world's fifth-largest country and
tenth-largest economy &#8212; whose own forty-year career was based on
a remix sensibility &#8212; became a spirited champion of the CC
licenses and free culture. Unlike most culture ministers, who treat
culture chiefly as an aesthetic amenity, Gil took the economic and
technological bases of creativity seriously. He wanted to show how
creativity can be a tool for political and cultural emancipation, and
how government can foster that goal. It turned out that Brazil, with
its mix of African, Portuguese, and indigenous cultures and its
colorful mix of vernacular traditions, was a perfect laboratory for
such experimentation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="651">
	<ocn>651</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the first collaborations between Creative Commons and the
Brazilian government involved the release of a special CC-GPL license
in December 2003.<en>260</en> This license adapted the General Public
License for software by translating it into Portuguese and putting it
into the CC's customary &#8220; three layers&#8221; &#8212; a
plain-language version, a lawyers' version compatible with the national
copyright law, and a machine-readable metadata expression of the
license. The CC-GPL license, released in conjunction with the Free
Software Foundation, was an important international event because it
gave the imprimatur of a major world government to free software and
the social ethic of sharing and reuse. Brazil has since become a
champion of GNU/Linux and free software in government agencies and the
judiciary. It regards free software and open standards as part of a
larger fight for a &#8220; development agenda&#8221; at the World
Intellectual Property Organization and the World Trade Organization. In
a related vein, Brazil has famously challenged patent and trade
policies that made HIV/AIDS drugs prohibitively expensive for thousands
of sick Brazilians.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="260">
		<number>260</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons press release, &#8220; Brazilian Government First
to Adopt New &#8216; CC-GPL,' &#8221; December 2, 2003.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="652">
	<ocn>652</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When the full set of CC Brazil licenses was finally launched&#8212; at
the Fifth International Free Software Forum, in Port Alegre on June 4,
2004 &#8212; it was a major national event. Brazilian celebrities,
government officials, and an enthusiastic crowd of nearly two thousand
people showed up. Gil, flying in from a cabinet meeting in
Bras&#237;lia, arrived late. When he walked into the auditorium, the
panel discussion under way immediately stopped, and there was a
spontaneous standing ovation.<en>261</en> &#8220; It was like a boxer
entering the arena for a heavyweight match,&#8221; recalled Glenn Otis
Brown. &#8220; He had security guards on both sides of him as he walked
up the middle aisle. There were flashbulbs, and admirers trailing him,
and this wave of people in the audience cresting as he walked
by.&#8221;<en>262</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="261">
		<number>261</number>
		<note>
			A ten-minute video of the CC Brazil opening can be seen at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://support.creativecommons.org/videos#brasil">http://support.creativecommons.org/videos#brasil</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="262">
		<number>262</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Glenn Otis Brown, August 10, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="653">
	<ocn>653</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Gil originally planned to release three of his songs under the new CC
Sampling license &#8212; dubbed the &#8220; Recombo&#8221; license
&#8212; but his record label, Warner Bros., balked. He eventually
released one song, &#8220; Oslodum,&#8221; that he had recorded for an
indie label. &#8220; One way to think about it,&#8221; said Brown,
&#8220; is that now, anybody in the world can jam with Gilberto
Gil.&#8221;<en>263</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="263">
		<number>263</number>
		<note>
			Film about CC Brazil launch, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://support.creativecommons.org/videos#brasil">http://support.creativecommons.org/videos#brasil</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="654">
	<ocn>654</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As culture minister, Gil released all materials from his agency under a
CC license, and persuaded the Ministry of Education as well as
Radiobr&#225;s, the government media agency, to do the same. He also
initiated the Cultural Points (Pontos de Cultura) program, which has
given small grants to scores of community centers in poor neighborhoods
so that residents can learn how to produce their own music and video
works. Since industry concentration and payola make it virtually
impossible for newcomers to get radio play and commercially distribute
their CDs, according to many observers, the project has been valuable
in allowing a fresh wave of grassroots music to &#8220; go
public&#8221; and reach new audiences.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="655">
	<ocn>655</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For developing countries, the real challenge is finding ways to tap the
latent creativity of the &#8220; informal&#8221; economy operating on
the periphery of formal market systems. Brazil is rich with such
creative communities, as exemplified by the flourishing
<i>tecnobrega</i> music scene in the northeast and north regions of
Brazil. Ronaldo Lemos says that <i>tecnobrega</i> &#8212; &#8220; a
romantic sound with a techno-beat and electronica
sound&#8221;<en>264</en> &#8212; arose on the fringes of the mainstream
music marketplace through &#8220; sound system parties&#8221; attended
by thousands of people every weekend. Local artists produce and sell
about four hundred new CDs every year, but both the production and
distribution take place outside the traditional music industry. The CDs
can't be found in retail stores but are sold entirely by street vendors
for only $1.50. The CDs serve as advertising for the weekend parties.
The music is &#8220; born free&#8221; in the sense that the
<i>tecnobrega</i> scene doesn't consider copyrights as part of its
business model and does not enforce copyrights on their CDs; it invites
and authorizes people to share and reuse the content.<en>265</en> (The
<i>tecnobrega</i> business model is discussed at greater length in
chapter 10.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="264">
		<number>264</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Ronaldo Lemos da Silva, September 15, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="265">
		<number>265</number>
		<note>
			The <i>tecnobrega</i> scene is described by Ronaldo Lemos in
&#8220; From Legal Commons to Social Commons: Developing Countries and
the Cultural Industry in the 21st Century,&#8221; &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://icommons.org/banco/from-legal-commons-tosocial-commons-brazil-and-the-cultural-industry-1">http://icommons.org/banco/from-legal-commons-tosocial-commons-brazil-and-the-cultural-industry-1</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="656">
	<ocn>656</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lemos believes the CC licenses are an important tool for helping
grassroots creativity in Brazil to &#8220; go legitimate.&#8221; He
explains, &#8220; Creative Commons provides a simple, non-bureaucratic
structure for intellectual property that might help to integrate the
massive marginal culture that is arising in the peripheries, with the
&#8216; official,' &#8216; formal' structures of the Brazilian
economy.&#8221;<en>266</en> Freed of the blockbuster imperatives of the
current music market, the CC licenses allow creativity in the informal
&#8220; social commons&#8221; to flow &#8212; yet not be appropriated
by commercial vendors. People can experiment, generate new works, and
learn what resonates with music fans. All of this is a predicate for
building new types of open markets, says Lemos. <i>Tecnobrega</i> is
just one of many open-business models that use the free circulation of
music to make money.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="266">
		<number>266</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="657">
	<ocn>657</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since its launch in June 2004, Lemos and the CC Brazil office have
instigated a number of projects to demonstrate how sharing and
collaboration can spur economic and cultural development. They have
promoted free software and open business models for music and film and
started collaborations with allies in other developing nations.
Nigerian filmmakers inspired the People's Cinema in Brazil, a project
to help people use audio-video technology to produce their own films
and develop audiences for them. The <i>culture-livre</i> (free culture)
project, a joint effort of Creative Commons in Brazil and South Africa,
is using the ccMixter software to encourage young musicians to mix
traditional African instruments with contemporary sensibilities, and
launch their careers.<en>267</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="267">
		<number>267</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.ccmixter.co.za">http://www.ccmixter.co.za</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="658">
	<ocn>658</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In Brazil, there are open-publishing projects for scientific
journals;<en>268</en> a Web site that brings together a repository of
short films;<en>269</en> and Overmundo,a popular site for cultural
commentary by Internet users.<en>270</en> TramaVirtual, an
open-platform record label that lets musicians upload their music and
fans download it for free, now features more than thirty-five thousand
artists.<en>271</en> (By contrast, the largest commercial label in
Brazil, Sony-BMG, released only twelve CDs of Brazilian music in 2006,
according to Lemos.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="268">
		<number>268</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.scielo.br">http://www.scielo.br</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="269">
		<number>269</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.portacurtas.comb.br">http://www.portacurtas.comb.br</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="270">
		<number>270</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.overmundo.com.br">http://www.overmundo.com.br</link>&gt;
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="271">
		<number>271</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://tramavirtual.uol.com.br">http://tramavirtual.uol.com.br</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="659">
	<ocn>659</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Cultural production is becoming increasingly disconnected from
traditional media forms,&#8221; said Lemos, because mass media
institutions &#8220; are failing to provide the adequate incentives for
culture to be produced and circulated. . . . Cultural production is
migrating to civil society and/or the peripheries, which more or less
already operate in a &#8216; social commons' environment, and do not
depend on intellectual property within their business
models.&#8221;<en>272</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="272">
		<number>272</number>
		<note>
			Ronaldo Lemos, &#8220; From Legal Commons to Social Commons:
Developing Countries and the Cultural Industry in the 21st
Century,&#8221; &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://icommons.org/banco/from-legal-commons-to-social-commons-brazil-and-the-culturalindustry-1">http://icommons.org/banco/from-legal-commons-to-social-commons-brazil-and-the-culturalindustry-1</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="660">
	<ocn>660</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As more people have adopted legal modes of copying and sharing under CC
licenses, it is changing the social and political climate for copyright
reform. Now that CC Brazil can cite all sorts of successful free
culture ventures, it can more persuasively advocate for a Brazilian
version of the fair use doctrine and press for greater photocopying
privileges in educational settings (which are legally quite
restrictive).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="661">
	<ocn>661</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although the CC licenses are now familiar to many Brazilians, they have
encountered some resistance, mostly from lawyers. &#8220; Among all
other audiences &#8212; musicians, artists, writers &#8212; they were
extremely well received,&#8221; said Lemos. When he presented the CC
licenses to an audience of three hundred lawyers, however, he recalls
that a famous law professor publicly scoffed: &#8220; You're saying
this because you're young, foolish, and communist.&#8221; Three years
later, Lemos discovered that the professor was using his intellectual
property textbook in her class.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="662">
	<ocn>662</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As a unique global ambassador of creative sharing, Gilberto Gil did a
lot to take the CC licenses to other nations and international forums
such as the World Intellectual Property Organization. The day before
his 2004 benefit concert for the Creative Commons in New York City with
David Byrne, Gil delivered a powerful speech explaining the political
implications of free culture:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="663">
	<ocn>663</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		A global movement has risen up in affirmation of digital culture. This
movement bears the banners of free software and digital inclusion, as
well as the banner of the endless expansion of the circulation of
information and creation, and it is the perfect model for a
Latin-American developmental cultural policy (other developments are
possible) of the most anti-xenophobic, anti-authoritarian,
anti-bureaucratizing, anti-centralizing, and for the very reason,
profoundly democratic and transformative sort.<en>273</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="273">
		<number>273</number>
		<note>
			Gil remarks at New York University, September 19, 2004, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.nyu.edu/fas/NewsEvents/Events/Minister_Gil_speech.pdf">http://www.nyu.edu/fas/NewsEvents/Events/Minister_Gil_speech.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="664">
	<ocn>664</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Brazilian government was making digital culture &#8220; one of its
strategic public policies,&#8221; Gil said, because &#8220; the most
important political battle that is being fought today in the
technological, economic, social and cultural fields has to do with free
software and with the method digital freedom has put in place for the
production of shared knowledge. This battle may even signify a change
in subjectivity, with critical consequences for the very concept of
civilization we shall be using in the near future.&#8221;<en>274</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="274">
		<number>274</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="665">
	<ocn>665</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To advance this new paradigm, Gil, who left his post as culture
minister in 2008, called for the rise of &#8220; new creative
<i>mestizo</i> [hybrid] industries&#8221; that break with the
entrenched habits of the past. Such businesses &#8220; have to be
flexible and dynamic; they have to be negotiated and re-negotiated, so
that they may contemplate the richness, the complexity, the dynamism
and the speed of reality itself and of society itself, without becoming
impositions.&#8221;<en>275</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="275">
		<number>275</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="666">
	<ocn>666</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		National Variations of a Global Idea
	</text>
</object>
<object id="667">
	<ocn>667</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When it comes to free culture, Brazil is clearly a special case. But
citizens in more than seventy nations have stepped forward to build a
CC presence in their societies. Each has shown its own distinctive
interests.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="668">
	<ocn>668</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Tomislav Medak, a philosopher by training and a copyfighter by
circumstance, runs the Multimedia Institute in Zagreb, Croatia, a
cultural center that consists mostly of a performance space, a lounge,
and a caf&#233;. The organization survives on donations from the likes
of George Soros's Open Society Institute, but it thrives because it is
the gathering place for an avant-garde corps of electronic musicmakers,
publishers, performers, and hackers. Mainstream Croats would probably
describe the community as a bunch of &#8220;
cyberSerbian-gay-Communists,&#8221; said Medak, which he concedes is
not inaccurate.<en>276</en> But the institute is not just a coalition
of minority interests; it is also broad-spectrum champion of cultural
freedom. It sees free software, civil liberties, and artists' rights as
core elements of a democratic society that it would like to build.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="276">
		<number>276</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Tomislav Medak, CC Croatia, June 25, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="669">
	<ocn>669</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Multimedia Institute was understandably excited when it learned
about Creative Commons and Lessig's vision of free culture. With help
from some lawyer friends, the institute in January 2004 ported the CC
licenses to Croatian law, primarily as a way to empower artists and
counteract the dominance of corporate media and expansive copyright
laws. &#8220; We are a country where the IP framework is very young,
and most of the policies are protection-driven. Most policies are
dictated by official institutions that just translate international
documents into local legislation,&#8221; Medak said.<en>277</en> This
commercial/copyright regime tends to stifle the interests of emerging
artists, amateurs, consumers and local culture.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="277">
		<number>277</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="670">
	<ocn>670</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; In the post-socialist period,&#8221; said Medak, &#8220; our
society has been hugely depleted of the public domain, or commons. The
privatization process and the colonizing of cultural spaces have been
blatant over the last couple of years, especially in Zagreb. So the
Creative Commons has fit into a larger effort to try to recapture some
of those public needs that were available, at least ideologically, in
socialist societies. Now they are for real.&#8221;<en>278</en> Medak
has since gone on to become a leader of iCommons and the host of the
international iCommons Summit in 2007, which brought several hundred
commoners from fifty nations to Dubrovnik.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="278">
		<number>278</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="671">
	<ocn>671</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In Scotland, government and other public-sector institutions have been
huge fans of the CC licenses. In fact, museums, archives, and
educational repositories have been the primary advocates of the CC
Scotland licenses, says Andr&#233;s Guadamuz, a law professor at the
Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual Property and Technology Law
at the University of Edinburgh. &#8220; People who want to try to share
information in the public sector are turning to Creative Commons
because they realize that here is a license that is already
made.&#8221;<en>279</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="279">
		<number>279</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Andr&#233;s Guadamuz of CC Scotland, December 19,
2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="672">
	<ocn>672</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The BBC was a pioneer in making its archived television and radio
programs available to the public for free. In 2003, inspired by the CC
licenses, the BBC drafted its own &#8220; Creative Archive&#8221;
license as a way to open up its vast collection of taxpayer-financed
television and radio programs.<en>280</en> The license was later
adopted by Channel 4, the Open University, the British Film Institute,
and the Museum, Libraries and Archives Council. Although the Creative
Archive license has similar goals as the CC licenses, it contains
several significant differences: it restricts use of video programs to
United Kingdom citizens only, and it prohibits use of materials for
political or charitable campaigns and for any derogatory purposes.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="280">
		<number>280</number>
		<note>
			See &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/help/4527506.stm">http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/help/4527506.stm</link>&gt;,
and interview with Paula Le Dieu, joint director of the BBC Creative
Archive project, May 28, 2004, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://digital-lifestyles.info/2004/05/28/exclusive-providing-the-fuel-fora-creative-nation-an-interview-with-paula-le-dieu-joint-director-on-the-bbccreative-archive">http://digital-lifestyles.info/2004/05/28/exclusive-providing-the-fuel-fora-creative-nation-an-interview-with-paula-le-dieu-joint-director-on-the-bbccreative-archive</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="673">
	<ocn>673</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC licenses have proven useful, also, to the British Museum and
National Archives. In 2004, these and other British educational
institutions were pondering how they should make their publicly funded
digital resources available for reuse. A special government panel, the
Common Information Environment, recommended usage of the CC licenses
because they were already international in scope. The panel liked that
the licenses allow Web links in licensed materials, which could help
users avoid the complications of formal registration. The panel also
cited the virtues of &#8220; human readable deeds&#8221; and
machine-readable metadata.<en>281</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="281">
		<number>281</number>
		<note>
			Intrallect Ltd and AHRC Research Centre for Studies in Intellectual
Property and Technology Law, University of Edinburgh, &#8220; The
Common Information Environment and Creative Commons,&#8221; October 10,
2005, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.intrallect.com/index.php/intrallect/content/download/632/2631/file/CIE">http://www.intrallect.com/index.php/intrallect/content/download/632/2631/file/CIE</link>&gt;
_CC_Final_Report.pdf.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="674">
	<ocn>674</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As it happened, a team of Scottish legal scholars led by a private
attorney, Jonathan Mitchell, successfully ported the licenses and
released them a few months later, in December 2005. The Scottish effort
had been initiated a year earlier when Mitchell and his colleagues
objected that the U.K. CC licenses then being drafted were too rooted
in English law and not sufficiently attuned to Scottish law. Since the
introduction of the CC Scotland licenses, publicsector institutions
have enthusiastically embraced them. Museums use the licenses on MP3
files that contain audio tours, for example, as well as on Web pages,
exhibition materials, and photographs of artworks. Interestingly, in
England and Wales, individual artists and creative communities seem to
be more active than public-sector institutions in using the licenses.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="675">
	<ocn>675</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The use of CC licenses for government information and publicly funded
materials is inspiring similar efforts in other countries. Governments
are coming to realize that they are one of the primary stewards of
intellectual property, and that the wide dissemination of their work
&#8212; statistics, research, reports, legislation, judicial decisions
&#8212; can stimulate economic innovation, scientific progress,
education, and cultural development. Unfortunately, as Anne Fitzgerald,
Brian Fitzgerald, and Jessica Coates of Australia have pointed out,
&#8220; putting all such material into the public domain runs the risk
that material which is essentially a public and national asset will be
appropriated by the private sector, without any benefit to either the
government or the taxpayers.&#8221;<en>282</en> For example, the
private sector may incorporate the public-domain material into a
value-added proprietary model and find other means to take the
information private. The classic instance of this is West Publishing's
dominance in the republishing of U.S. federal court decisions.
Open-content licenses offer a solution by ensuring that
taxpayerfinanced works will be available to and benefit the general
public.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="282">
		<number>282</number>
		<note>
			iCommons annual report, 2007, &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.icommons.org/annual07">http://www.icommons.org/annual07</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="676">
	<ocn>676</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the United States, the National Institutes of Health has pursued a
version of this policy by requiring that federally funded research be
placed in an open-access archive or journal within twelve months of its
commercial publication. The European Commission announced in 2007 that
it plans to build a major open-access digital repository for publicly
funded research.<en>283</en> In Mexico, the Sistema Internet de la
Presidencia, or Presidency Internet System (SIP), decided in 2006 to
adopt CC licenses for all content generated by the Mexican presidency
on the Internet &#8212; chiefly the president's various Web sites,
Internet radio station, and documents.<en>284</en> In Italy, CC Italy
is exploring legislation to open up national and local government
archives. It also wants new contract terms for those who develop
publicly funded information so that it will automatically be available
in the future.<en>285</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="283">
		<number>283</number>
		<note>
			Michael Geist, &#8220; Push for Open Access to Research, BBC News,
February 28, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/~/2/hi/technology/6404429">http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/~/2/hi/technology/6404429</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="284">
		<number>284</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons blog, Alex Roberts, March 8, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/text/sip">http://creativecommons.org/text/sip</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="285">
		<number>285</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Juan Carlos de Martin, CC Italy, July 17, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="677">
	<ocn>677</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Laboratories of Free Culture
	</text>
</object>
<object id="678">
	<ocn>678</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2005, about two years after the launch of CC International,
twenty-one jurisdictions around the world had adopted the licenses. (A
legal jurisdiction is not necessarily the same as a nation because
places like Scotland, Puerto Rico, and Catalonia &#8212; which have
their own CC licenses &#8212; are not separate nations.) Under a new
director of CC International, copyright attorney Catharina Maracke, who
took over the license-porting project in 2006, the pace of license
adoption has continued. By August 2008, fortyseven jurisdictions had
ported the CC licenses, and a few dozen more had their projects under
way. The CC affiliates have now reached a sufficient critical mass that
they represent a new sort of international constituency for the sharing
economy. The CC network of legal scholars, public institutions,
artistic sectors, and Internet users is not just a motivated global
community of talent, but a new sort of transnational cultural movement:
a digital republic of commoners.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="679">
	<ocn>679</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To be sure, some nations have more institutional backing than others,
and some have more enthusiastic and active projects than others. CC
Poland reported in 2006 that its biggest challenge was &#8220; a
complete lack of financial and organizational support, in particular
from our partner organization.&#8221;<en>286</en> (This was remedied in
2008 when CC Poland entered into a partnership with an
interdisciplinary center at the University of Warsaw and with a law
firm.) CC affiliates in smaller developing countries with fewer
resources &#8212; especially in Africa &#8212; often have to beg and
scrape to pull together resources to supplement the work of volunteers.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="286">
		<number>286</number>
		<note>
			iCommons '06 conference booklet, p. 77.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="680">
	<ocn>680</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Not surprisingly, the American CC licenses &#8212; a version of which
was spun off as a generic license, as opposed to jurisdictionspecific
licenses &#8212; are the most used. In a pioneering study of license
usage in January 2007, Giorgos Cheliotis of Singapore Management
University and his co-authors conservatively estimated that there were
60 million distinct items of CC content on the Internet &#8212; a sum
that rose to 90 million by the end of 2007. Over 80 percent of these
items use a license that is not jurisdiction-specific; the remaining 20
percent are spread among the thirty-three nations included in the
study.<en>287</en> The highest volume of license usage per capita can
be found in European nations &#8212; particularly Spain, Germany,
Belgium, France, Italy, and Croatia &#8212; which were among the
earliest adopters of the licenses. In absolute terms, the heaviest
usage can be seen in Spain, Germany, France, South Korea, Italy, and
Japan.<en>288</en> Overall, however, CC usage outside of the United
States is still fairly new, and usage and growth rates vary immensely
from country to country.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="287">
		<number>287</number>
		<note>
			Giorgos Cheliotis, Warren Chik, Ankit Guglani, and Girl Kumar Tayi,
&#8220; Taking Stock of the Creative Commons Experiment: Monitoring the
Use of Creative Commons Licenses and Evaluating Its Implications for
the Future of Creative Commons and for Copyright Law,&#8221; paper
presented at 35th Research Conference on Communication, Information and
Internet Policy (TPRC), September 28&#8211;30, 2007. Paper dated August
15, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="288">
		<number>288</number>
		<note>
			Cheliotis, &#8220; Taking Stock,&#8221; pp. 20&#8211;22.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="681">
	<ocn>681</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As a fledgling network, the international CC community is a rudimentary
platform for change. Its members are still groping toward a shared
understanding of their work and devising new systems of communication
and collaboration. But a great deal of cross-border collaboration is
occurring. A variety of free culture advocates have constituted
themselves as the Asia Commons and met in Bangkok to collaborate on
issues of free software, citizen access to government information, and
industry antipiracy propaganda. CC Italy has invited leaders of
neighboring countries&#8212; France, Switzerland, Austria, Croatia, and
Slovenia &#8212; to share their experiences and work together. A CC
Latin America project started <i>Scripta</i>, a new Spanish-language
journal based in Ecuador, to discuss free software and free culture
issues affecting the continent.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="682">
	<ocn>682</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		CC leaders in Finland, France, and Australia have published books about
their licensing projects.<en>289</en> CC Brazil and CC South Africa
have collaborated on a project about copyright and developing nations.
CC Canada is working with partners to develop an online, globally
searchable database of Canadian works in the Canadian public domain. CC
Salons have been held in Amsterdam, Toronto, Berlin, Beijing, London,
Warsaw, Seoul, Taipei, and Johannesburg.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="289">
		<number>289</number>
		<note>
			The French book is Dani&#232;le Bourcier and M&#233;lanie Dulong de
Rosnay, eds., <i>International Commons at the Digital Age</i> (Paris:
Romillat, 2004), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://fr.creativecommons.org/icommons_book.htm">http://fr.creativecommons.org/icommons_book.htm</link>&gt;.
The Finnish book is Herkko Hietanen et al., <i>Community Created
Content: Law, Business and Policy</i> (Turre Publishing, 2007), at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.turre.com/images/stories/books/webkirja_koko_optimoitu2.pdf">http://www.turre.com/images/stories/books/webkirja_koko_optimoitu2.pdf</link>&gt;.
The Australian book is Brian Fitzgerald, <i>Open Content Licensing:
Cultivating the Creative Commons</i> (Sydney: Sydney University Press,
2007).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="683">
	<ocn>683</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the Netherlands, CC project lead Paul Keller engineered a
breakthrough that may overcome the persistent objections of European
collecting societies to CC-licensed content. Collecting societies in
Europe generally insist that any musician that they represent transfer
all of their copyrights to the collective. This means that professional
musicians cannot distribute their works under a CC license. Artists who
are already using CC licenses cannot join the collecting societies in
order to receive royalties for commercial uses of their works. In this
manner, collecting societies in many European nations have effectively
prevented many musicians from using the CC licenses.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="684">
	<ocn>684</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2007, however, CC Netherlands negotiated a one-year pilot program
with two Dutch collecting societies, Buma and Stemra, to let artists
use CC NonCommercial licenses for parts of their
repertoire.<en>290</en> As a result, artists will have greater choice
in the release of their works and the ability to easily manage their
rights via a Web site. Other European CC affiliates hope that this
Dutch experiment will break the long stalemate on this issue and
persuade their collecting societies to be more flexible.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="290">
		<number>290</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons Netherlands press release, &#8220; Buma/Stemra and
Creative Commons Netherlands Launch a Pilot,&#8221; August 23, 2007;
e-mail by Paul Keller, CC Netherlands, to CC International listserv,
August 23, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="685">
	<ocn>685</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Developing Nations License
	</text>
</object>
<object id="686">
	<ocn>686</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the boldest experiments in the CC world was the creation of the
Developing Nations license, launched in September 2004. A year earlier,
Lessig had approached James Love, the director of Knowledge Ecology
International (previously the Consumer Project on Technology), to ask
him to craft a CC license that might help developing countries. Love
proposed that the CC offer a &#8220; rider&#8221; at the end of its
existing licenses so that people using the licenses could exempt
developing nations from, say, the NonCommercial or NoDerivatives
license restrictions. So, for example, if a textbook author wanted to
let developing nations copy her book for either commercial or
noncommercial purposes, she could add a rider authorizing this
practice.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="687">
	<ocn>687</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Love was trying to do for books and journal articles what is already
possible for drugs &#8212; the legalization of a commercial market for
generic equivalents. Love had seen how generic drugs could reach people
only because for-profit companies were able to produce and sell the
drugs; nonprofit or philanthropic distribution is just not powerful
enough. But the market for generic drugs is possible only because of
laws that authorize companies to make legal knockoffs of proprietary
drugs once the patent terms expire. Love hoped to do the same via a
Developing Nations license for copyrighted works: &#8220; It would
create an opportunity for the publishing equivalent of generic drug
manufacturers who make &#8216; generic' books. In developing countries,
you have whole libraries full of photocopied books. You would not have
libraries there if people didn't engage in these
practices.&#8221;<en>291</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="291">
		<number>291</number>
		<note>
			Interview with James P. Love, June 13, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="688">
	<ocn>688</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the end, Creative Commons offered the Developing Nations license as
a separate license, not a rider. It had simple terms: &#8220; You must
attribute the work in the manner specified by the author or licensor
(but not in any way that suggests that they endorse you or your use of
the work)&#8221; &#8212; and the license was valid only in
non&#8211;high income nations, as determined by United Nations'
statistics. Although the release of the license got considerable press
coverage, actual usage of the license was extremely small. The most
prominent use was totally unexpected &#8212; for architectural designs.
Architecture for Humanity, a California nonprofit, used the license for
its designs of low-cost housing and health centers. The organization
wanted to give away its architectural plans to poor countries while not
letting its competitors in the U.S. use them for free.<en>292</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="292">
		<number>292</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons blog, Kathryn Frankel, &#8220; Commoners:
Architecture for Humanity,&#8221; June 30, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/education/architecture">http://creativecommons.org/education/architecture</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="689">
	<ocn>689</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The expected uses of the Developing Nations license never materialized.
In 2006, Love said, &#8220; The license is there, but people who might
be willing to use it are not really aware of it.&#8221; He worried that
the license &#8220; hasn't really been explained in a way that would be
obvious to them,&#8221; and ventured that there may be &#8220; a need
for a re-marketing campaign.&#8221; By this time, however, the license
had attracted the ire of Richard Stallman for its limitations on
&#8220; freedom.&#8221;<en>293</en> It prohibited copying of a work in
certain circumstances (in high-income countries) even for noncommercial
purposes, and so authorized only a partial grant of freedom, not a
universal one. &#8220; Well, the whole point was <i>not</i> to be
universal,&#8221; said Love. &#8220; The license is for people that are
unwilling to share with high-income countries, but are willing to share
with developing countries. So it actually expands the commons, but only
in developing countries.&#8221;<en>294</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="293">
		<number>293</number>
		<note>
			See Lessig on Creative Commons blog, December 7, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/weblog/archive/2005/12/page/3">http://creativecommons.org/weblog/archive/2005/12/page/3</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="294">
		<number>294</number>
		<note>
			Interview with James Love, June 13, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="690">
	<ocn>690</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The controversy that grew up around the Developing Nations license
illuminates the different approaches to movement building that Lessig
and Stallman represent. Lessig's advocacy for free culture has been an
exploratory journey in pragmatic idealism; Stallman's advocacy for free
software has been more of a crusade of true believers in a core
philosophy. For Stallman, the principles of &#8220; freedom&#8221; are
unitary and clear, and so the path forward is fairly self-evident and
unassailable. For Lessig, the principles of freedom are more
situational and evolving and subject to the consensus of key creative
communities. The flexibility has enabled a broad-spectrum movement to
emerge, but it does not have the ideological coherence of, say, the
free software movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="691">
	<ocn>691</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Several factors converged to make it attractive for Creative Commons to
revoke the Developing Nations license. Some people in the open-access
publishing movement disliked the license because it did not comply with
its stated standards of openness. In addition, Richard Stallman's
increasingly strident objections to Creative Commons licenses were
starting to alarm some segments of the &#8220; free world.&#8221; What
if Internet content became Balkanized through a series of incompatible
licenses, and the movement were riven with sectarian strife? Stallman
objected not only to the Developing Nations license, but to attempts by
Creative Commons to get Wikipedia to make its content, licensed under
the GNU Free Documentation license, compatible with the CC licenses. By
2007 this dispute had been simmering for four years (see pages
212&#8211;217).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="692">
	<ocn>692</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Finally, many CC staff members regarded the Developing Nations and
Sampling licenses as misbegotten experiments. Fewer than 0.01 percent
of uses of CC licenses at the time involved the Developing Nations
license, and the Sampling license was used by a relatively small
community of remix artists and musicians. If eliminating two
little-used niche licenses could neutralize objections from the open
access and free software movements and achieve a greater philosophical
and political solidarity in the &#8220; free world,&#8221; many CC
partisans regarded a rescission of the licenses as a modest sacrifice,
if not a net gain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="693">
	<ocn>693</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In June 2007, Creative Commons announced that it was officially
retiring the two licenses.<en>295</en> In a formal statement, Lessig
explained, &#8220; These licenses do not meet the minimum standards of
the Open Access movement. Because this movement is so important to the
spread of science and knowledge, we no longer believe it correct to
promote a standalone version of this license.&#8221;<en>296</en> The
Creative Commons also revoked the Sampling license because it &#8220;
only permits the remix of the licensed work, not the freedom to share
it.&#8221; (Two other sampling licenses that permit noncommercial
sharing&#8212; SamplingPlus and NonCommercial SamplingPlus &#8212; were
retained.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="295">
		<number>295</number>
		<note>
			Creative Commons &#8220; retired licenses page,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/retiredlicenses">http://creativecommons.org/retiredlicenses</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="296">
		<number>296</number>
		<note>
			Lawrence Lessig, &#8220; Retiring standalone DevNations and One
Sampling License,&#8221; message to CC International listserv, June 4,
2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="694">
	<ocn>694</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Anyone could still use the Sampling or Developing Nations license if
they wished; they still exist, after all. It's just that the Creative
Commons no longer supports them. While the actual impact of the license
revocations was minor, it did have major symbolic and political
significance in the commons world. It signaled that the Creative
Commons was capitulating to objections by free software advocates and
the concerns of open access publishing activists.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="695">
	<ocn>695</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The iCommons Network
	</text>
</object>
<object id="696">
	<ocn>696</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As an international network of CC affiliates grew, it naturally spawned
new pockets of activism. Lessig explained: &#8220; Once a country gets
launched, it becomes a cell of activism. Sometimes it is very
traditional &#8212; Creative Commons Korea is made up of a bunch of
federal judges &#8212; and sometimes it is very radical &#8212;
Creative Commons Croatia is made of up a bunch of real activists who
want to change copyright. Creative Commons Poland, too, is a bunch of
really smart law graduates. But then there is the artist community, on
the other side, many of whom want to blow up copyright; they just think
it is ridiculous.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="697">
	<ocn>697</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; So the opportunity and problem we faced at that point,&#8221;
said Lessig, &#8220; was, &#8216; Well, what are we going to do with
these activists?' Because Creative Commons wanted to facilitate
activism, of course, but it wasn't as if we could bring activism into
our core because it would make it more suspect.&#8221;<en>297</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="297">
		<number>297</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, March 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="698">
	<ocn>698</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The first steps toward organizing this protocommunity of activists came
in March 2005, when eighty people from the various international
licensing projects convened in Boston to talk about their shared
challenges.<en>298</en> It quickly became clear that everyone wanted a
forum in which to learn from one another, coordinate their work, and
see themselves as something larger . . . perhaps a new sort of
movement.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="298">
		<number>298</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://icommons.org/isummit05">http://icommons.org/isummit05</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="699">
	<ocn>699</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Here again was the tension between &#8220; the movement&#8221; and
&#8220; the machine.&#8221; As neutral stewards of the licenses, the CC
affiliates could not become full-throated advocates of a new
international free culture movement. Their mission was preserving the
integrity and utility of the licenses for all users, not advocacy. To
avoid this problem, the Creative Commons, with an infusion of seed
money and CC leaders, in 2006 started a new nonprofit organization,
iCommons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="700">
	<ocn>700</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		iCommons, a registered charity in the United Kingdom, is led by Heather
Ford, a South African who met Lessig at Stanford and went back to her
country to evangelize the Creative Commons licenses. Working out of
Johannesburg, Ford is the activist counterpart to her Berlin licensing
colleagues. She is a gregarious, spirited organizer who keeps tabs on
activist gambits in dozens of nations and pulls together annual
iCommons &#8220; summits.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="701">
	<ocn>701</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The iCommons conferences are something of a staging area for a new type
of global citizenship in the digital &#8220; free world.&#8221; The
first conference, in Rio de Janeiro in June 2006, attracted more than
three hundred commoners from fifty nations.<en>299</en> The second one,
in Dubrovnik, Croatia, drew a somewhat larger and still more diverse
crowd, and a third was held in Sapporo, Japan, in 2008. The free and
open-source software community and the Creative Commons network are two
of the largest, most influential blocs participating in iCommons,
although Wikipedians represent a growing sector. But there are many
other factions. There are musicians from the indie music, netlabels,
and the remix scene. Filmmakers trying to reform fair use legal norms
and video artists who are into mashups. Bloggers and
citizen-journalists and social-networking fans. Gamers and participants
in immersive environments like Second Life and World of Warcraft. Open
business entrepreneurs who regard free software and CC licenses as key
elements of their competitive, profit-making strategies.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="299">
		<number>299</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://icommons.org/isummit06">http://icommons.org/isummit06</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="702">
	<ocn>702</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		From Japan, there were anime artists who are into remixes. From South
Africa, print-on-demand research publishers. A bare-chested Brazilian
guitarist traded thoughts about copyright law with a Zagreb performer.
An Amsterdam hacker with a punk t-shirt shared a smoke with an American
academic. From India, there was Lawrence Liang, founder of the
Alternative Law Forum, a leading intellectual about copyright law and
economic and social inequality. From Syria, there was Anas Tawileh, who
is working to produce the Arab Commons, a directory of Arabic works
released under any of the CC licenses. He hopes it will counteract
&#8220; the weak representation of the Arabic language on the Internet,
the shallow nature of Arabic content currently available and the
consumption rather than the production of knowledge.&#8221; From the
United States, there was Michael Smolens, an entrepreneur who started
dotSUB, a captioning system to make any film available in any language.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="703">
	<ocn>703</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The convergence of so many players in the nascent sharing economy,
assembled in the flesh, was a bracing glimpse into a new kind of
cosmopolitan, democratic sensibility. The program organizers stated
their aspirations this way: &#8220; How do we help one another to build
a commons that nurtures local communities while respecting the needs of
others? How can we move towards the growth of a &#8216; Global Commons
Community'?&#8221;<en>300</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="300">
		<number>300</number>
		<note>
			iCommons Summit '06 program.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="704">
	<ocn>704</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although most international commoners seem to be culturally progressive
and politically engaged, they cannot be situated along a left-right
ideological spectrum. This is because commoners tend to be more
pragmatic and improvisational than ideological. They are focused on
building specific projects to facilitate sharing and creativity, based
on open-source principles. Their enthusiasm is for cool software,
effective legal interventions, and activist innovations, not sectarian
debate.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="705">
	<ocn>705</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is not as if politics has been banished. For example, some critics
have questioned the &#8220; elite&#8221; origins and governance
structure of iCommons, which was hatched by CC board members and
leaders. David Berry, a free culture advocate who teaches at the
University of Sussex, complained on a listserv that iCommons was
&#8220; creating a corporate machine rather than a democratic
one.&#8221;<en>301</en> He cited ambiguity in the powers of the
organization, the murky process by which the iCommons code of conduct
was adopted, and the board's selection of community council members.
Still other critics have grumbled at the Creative Commons's
collaboration with Microsoft in developing a licensing feature within
the Word application.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="301">
		<number>301</number>
		<note>
			David Berry, &#8220; The iCommons Lab Report,&#8221; sent to UK
FreeCulture listserv, November 9, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="706">
	<ocn>706</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		When pressed at the 2006 iCommons Summit to develop more formal
organizational structure, Lessig begged off for the time being, saying
that &#8220; trust and faith in each other&#8221; was a better approach
than rigid rules and system. &#8220; We need a recognition that we have
a common purpose. Don't tell me that I need to tell you what that is,
because we'll never agree, but we do have a common
purpose.&#8221;<en>302</en> This provoked Tom Chance, a free software
and free culture advocate, to complain that &#8220; Lessig's call to
base the organization on &#8216; trust and faith in each other' is too
idealistic and undemocratic.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="302">
		<number>302</number>
		<note>
			Becky Hogge, &#8220; What Moves a Movement,&#8221;
OpenDemocracy.org, June 27, 2006, at
www.opendemocracy.net/media-commons/movement_3686.jsp.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="707">
	<ocn>707</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The encounter nicely captures the quandaries of leadership and
governance in the networked environment. How can the effectiveness and
clarity of leadership be combined with networked participation and the
legitimacy that it provides? How should an organization draw
philosophical boundaries to define itself while remaining open to new
ideas? How should participation in online collectives be structured to
generate collective wisdom and legitimacy and avoid collective
stupidity and bureaucratic paralysis? In this case, iCommons
diversified its governance in late 2007. It invited the Free Software
Foundation Europe, Computer Professionals for Social Responsibility,
and Instituto Overmundo, a Brazilian nonprofit dedicated to cultural
diversity, to join Creative Commons as full-fledged partners in
managing the organization. Despite its broadened leadership, iCommons
remains more of a convener of annual forums and discussion host than
the democratically sanctioned voice of an international movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="708">
	<ocn>708</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This is not surprising. The international commons community is still a
fledgling enterprise trying to forge an identity and agenda. The
resources for many CC affiliates are quite modest and the bonds of
cooperation remain rudimentary. That said, the international explosion
of free culture projects, above and beyond the CC licenses themselves,
is nothing short of remarkable. It represents a &#8220; vast,
transnational mobilization in favor of digital freedom,&#8221; as
Gilberto Gil put it. In the early stages of the viral spiral, no one
could have imagined that a corps of passionate, self-selected
volunteers cooperating through the Internet could accomplish so much.
And it continues, unabated.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="709">
	<ocn>709</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		9 THE MANY FACES OF THE COMMONS
	</text>
</object>
<object id="710">
	<ocn>710</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>As the &#8220; free world&#8221; grows and diversifies, so does
debate over how to build the commons.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="711">
	<ocn>711</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the Creative Commons insinuated itself into one creative sector
after another, and throughout dozens of nations, the variety of
licenses proliferated. By one count in 2006, there were once eighteen
distinct CC licenses, not counting version changes.<en>*8</en> In the
meantime, other parties were offering their own licenses. While the
Creative Commons licenses had become the most-used licenses on the
Internet, many people were choosing to use Free Software Foundation
licenses for text (the GNU Free Documentation License, or FDL), the
European Art Libre license, and special licenses that various
institutions have devised for the arts, music, and educational works.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*8">
		<symbol>*8</symbol>
		<note>
			The eighteen licenses once offered include the core six licenses; a
nonattribution version of five of those six licenses (now retired);
three sampling licenses (one of which has been retired); the Developing
Nations license (now retired); and a public domain dedication (which is
otherwise not possible under copyright statutes). There was also a
&#8220; Music Sharing license,&#8221; which was just another name for
the Attribution-NonCommercial-No Derivatives license, and a &#8220;
Founders' Copyright,&#8221; which is not a license but a contract
between an author and Creative Commons to place a particular work in
the public domain after fourteen years (or twenty-eight years, if the
author opts for a fourteen-year extension)
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="712">
	<ocn>712</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In theory, a proliferation of licenses is not a bad thing. By the
lights of free-market economics and complexity theory, in fact, the
best way to identify the most useful licenses is to introduce a variety
of them and then let them compete for supremacy. Let natural selection
in an ecosystem of licenses cull the losers and elevate the most useful
ones.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="713">
	<ocn>713</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unfortunately, this libertarian vision of diverse licenses competing
for supremacy in the cultural ecosystem can run up against a harsh
reality of the Internet. Too many disparate licenses may make it
<i>harder</i> for people to share content in an easy, interoperable
way. It is not the proliferation of licenses per se that is
problematic, it is the absence of a mechanism to enable differently
licensed works to &#8220; play together&#8221; so that they can
commingle and be used to produce new things. If bodies of works
released under a CC license cannot be combined with works licensed
under other licenses, it defeats one of the key value propositions of
the Internet, easy interoperability and facile sharing and reuse.
Despite its best intentions, license proliferation has the effect of
&#8220; fencing off the commons,&#8221; because the different license
terms keep different bodies of work in separate ghettos.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="714">
	<ocn>714</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Incompatibility is a problem both within the suite of CC licenses and
between CC licenses and other licenses. Within the CC suite of
licenses, for example, a work licensed under the
AttributionNonCommercial-ShareAlike license (BY-NC-SA) cannot legally
be combined with a work licensed under the Attribution-No Derivatives
license (BY-ND) or an Attribution-NonCommercial (BY-NC). The former
license requires that any derivative works be licensed under the same
license, period.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="715">
	<ocn>715</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Some observers are not disturbed by the internal incompatibilities of
the CC suite of licenses. They regard the different licenses as tools
for various communities to build their own &#8220; subeconomies&#8221;
of content, based on their own distinct needs and priorities. A
scientist may not want his research articles altered or combined with
other material. A musician may want to promote noncommercial usage on
the Internet but retain commercial rights so that he can benefit from
any CD sales. Not all creative sectors want to distribute their work in
the same ways.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="716">
	<ocn>716</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The incompatibility between CC-licensed work and other freecontent
licenses is arguably more problematic. At a conference in Spain in the
summer of 2005, Lessig recalls having a &#8220; Homer Simpson
moment&#8221; &#8212; <i>D'oh!</i> &#8212; when he realized where
license proliferation was heading. The incompatibility of licenses, and
therefore bodies of content, could lead to an irretrievably fragmented
universe of content. Lessig saw license proliferation as analogous to
the Balkanization of technical standards that once plagued mainframe
computing. IBM computers couldn't communicate with DEC, which couldn't
communicate with Data General.<en>303</en> &#8220; The legal framework
of the licensing world is basically a pre-Internet framework,&#8221;
said Lessig in 2007. &#8220; We don't have interoperability at the
layer of legal infrastructure.&#8221;<en>304</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="303">
		<number>303</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="304">
		<number>304</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, October 23, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="717">
	<ocn>717</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		In my view [said Lessig], there's a critical need for the free culture
movement to achieve interoperability. And until it achieves
interoperability, there's a huge problem &#8212; because we're creating
these kinds of autistic islands of freedom. Basically, the stuff
produced in the Wikimedia world is free, but can only be used in the
Wikimedia world; the stuff created in the Creative Commons world is
free, but can only be used in the Creative Commons world &#8212; and
never the two will meet. That's very destructive, because what we want
is a kind of invisible platform of freedom that everybody can then
build on. It's been my objective from the very beginning to find the
way to assure that we would get that platform.<en>305</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="305">
		<number>305</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="718">
	<ocn>718</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A critic might call it &#8220; the revenge of choice&#8221; &#8212; the
inevitable outcome of a neoliberal philosophy that privileges
individualism and choice, rather than a collective concern for the
commons. This is the view of Niva Elkin-Koren, a law professor at the
University of Haifa (which coincidentally is the host of CC Israel).
Elkin-Koren argues that the Creative Commons is replicating and
reinforcing property rights discourse and failing to advance the cause
of copyright reform. Because the Creative Commons is plagued by an
&#8220; ideological fuzziness&#8221; that does not adequately set forth
a philosophical vision of freedom or the commons, Elkin-Koren believes
the CC project threatens to &#8220; spread and strengthen the
proprietary regime in information.&#8221;<en>306</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="306">
		<number>306</number>
		<note>
			Niva Elkin-Koren, &#8220; Exploring Creative Commons: A Skeptical
View of a Worthy Pursuit,&#8221; chapter XIV in Lucie Guibault and P.
Bernt Hugenholtz, editors, <i>The Future of the Public Domain:
Identifying the Commons in Information Law</i> (Alphen aan den Rijn,
Netherlands: Kluwer Law International BV, 2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="719">
	<ocn>719</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This critique was at the heart of one of the most serious internecine
squabbles in the movement, the struggle to make Wikipedia content
&#8212; licensed under the Free Software Foundation's GNU Free
Documentation License &#8212; compatible with CC-licensed content. The
failure to find a solution, after four years of negotiation, threatened
to keep two great bodies of Internet content from legally commingling
and cause further fragmentation of open content.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="720">
	<ocn>720</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There are other controversies. Anticapitalist leftists periodically
take the Creative Commons to task for being too politically
respectable. Friendly voices from underdeveloped nations of the
Southern Hemisphere have raised alarms that the public domain is just
another excuse for corporate exploitation of their resources. Others
from the South argue that the informal, social commons inhabited by
poor people &#8212; the &#8220; nonlegal commons&#8221; &#8212; deserve
respect, too. And then there are copyright traditionalists, who believe
that a redoubled effect to fortify the fair use doctrine should be a
top priority.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="721">
	<ocn>721</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For the most part, the general public is oblivious to these internecine
disputes. Who cares about the relative merits of using a GNU Free
Documentation License for Wikipedia entries instead of a Creative
Commons license? The layperson may not understand the long-term
implications of vesting individual authors with the choice of how to
share a work (in the style of the Creative Commons) as opposed to
vesting communities of practice with those rights (in the style of the
Free Software Foundation's General Public License). Yet tech
sophisticates realize that, in the context of the Internet, uninformed
choices today can have serious practical consequences tomorrow. The
terms of a license or the design of a software application or digital
appliance can prevent people from sharing or reusing works. Bodies of
content may become legally incompatible. Consumer freedoms to innovate
and distribute may be limited. And then there are second-order
questions that have great symbolic importance within the movement, such
as, Whose vision of &#8220; freedom&#8221; in digital spaces shall we
endorse? What is philosophically desirable and consistent?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="722">
	<ocn>722</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For a movement that aspires to simplify copyright law, the free culture
movement has gotten embroiled in knotty debates that might give lawyers
headaches. It is not easy to tell if the disputants are persnickety
zealots who have spent too much time in front of their screens or
latter-day Jeffersons, Madisons, and Hamiltons&#8212; brilliant
thinkers who are astute enough to understand the longterm implications
of some difficult issues and passionate enough to take a stand. One
person's arcana can be another person's foundational principle, and one
person's quest for intellectual clarity is another person's distraction
from the messy challenges of building a movement.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="723">
	<ocn>723</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That is the basic problem of the crazy-quilt network that constitutes
the free world. There are, in fact, so many divergent, sometimes
competing, sometimes congruent agendas that it can be difficult to
orchestrate them into a single, harmonious song. For better or worse,
the passions that animate culture jammers, copyright reformers,
hackers, law scholars, artists, scientists, and countless others in
seventy-plus countries are widely divergent. Although the intramovement
disagreements may sometimes seem gratuitous, sectarian, and overblown,
they are, in fact, understandable. The commoners tend to see their
projects as part of a larger, ennobling enterprise&#8212; the
construction of a new democratic polity and cultural ecology. It makes
sense to fret about the technical, legal, and philosophical details
when so much is potentially at stake.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="724">
	<ocn>724</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Individual Choice Versus the Commons
	</text>
</object>
<object id="725">
	<ocn>725</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It turns out that overcoming license incompatibilities is not such an
easy task. Any attempt to bridge differences immediately runs into
mind-bending legal complexities. Crafting new licensing language can
trigger philosophical disagreements, some of which may be proxies for
turf issues and personal control. One of the major philosophical
disagreements involves the one raised by Elkin-Koren: the merits of
individual choice versus the commons. Should individuals be allowed to
choose how their work may circulate in the wider world, or is such
legal partitioning of culture an affront to the value proposition of
the commons and its sharing ethic? Why should the choices of individual
creators be privileged over the creative needs of the general culture?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="726">
	<ocn>726</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The question is a divisive one. The answer that you give, Yochai
Benkler of Harvard Law School told me, &#8220; depends on whether you
think that what you're doing is building a political movement or
whether you're building a commons that has narrower appeal, but is
potentially, more functionally unitary.&#8221;<en>307</en> A movement
is about building a &#8220; big tent,&#8221; he said &#8212; a vision
that accommodates many different types of people with different
preferences. If you are building a movement, then you will use
terminologies that are attractive to a very broad range of liberal and
illiberal conceptions of choice, he said.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="307">
		<number>307</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Yochai Benkler, February 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="727">
	<ocn>727</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But a commons &#8212; of the sort that Richard Stallman's GPL enables
for software code &#8212; requires that its members honor a community's
social and moral priorities. A commons does not cater to individual
preferences; its first priority is to advance the shared goals and
relationships of the community. A commons is not oblivious to the
self-interest of individuals. It just fulfills that self-interest in a
different way. A commons does not confer benefits through individual
negotiations or transactions, but instead through an individual's
good-faith participation in an ongoing, collective process. There is no
individual quid pro quo, in other words. A person's contributions
accrue to the collective &#8212; and benefits flow from belonging to
that collective. This is not an exotic or communistic model; it more or
less resembles a scientist's relationship with his research discipline.
In the style of a gift economy, a scientist's articles and lectures are
gifts to the discipline; in return, he enjoys privileged access to his
colleagues and their research.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="728">
	<ocn>728</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is worth noting that a commons does not necessarily preclude making
money from the fruit of the commons; it's just that any commercial
activity cannot interfere with the integrity of social relationships
within the commons. In the case of GPL'd software, for example, Red Hat
is able to sell its own versions of GNU/Linux only because it does not
&#8220; take private&#8221; any code or inhibit sharing within the
commons. The source code is always available to everyone. By contrast,
scientists who patent knowledge that they glean from their
participation in a scientific community may be seen as &#8220;
stealing&#8221; community knowledge for private gain. The quest for
individual profit may also induce ethical corner-cutting, which
undermines the integrity of research in the commons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="729">
	<ocn>729</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Ironically, the Creative Commons is not itself a commons, nor do its
licenses necessarily produce a commons in the strict sense of the term.
The licenses are <i>tools</i> for creating commons. But the tools do
not require the creation of a commons (unlike the GPL). In this sense,
a commons of CC-licensed content may be a &#8220; lesser&#8221; type of
commons because it may have restrictions on what content may be shared,
and how. The choices of individual authors, not the preexisting claims
of the community, are considered paramount.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="730">
	<ocn>730</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Is one type of commons superior to the others? Does one offer a
superior vision of &#8220; freedom&#8221;? This philosophical issue has
been a recurrent source of tension between the Free Software
Foundation, the steward of the GPL, and the Creative Commons, whose
licenses cater to individual choice.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="731">
	<ocn>731</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Strictly speaking, a commons essentially offers a binary choice,
explained Benkler: &#8220; You're in the commons or you're out of the
commons.&#8221; By broadening that binary choice, the CC licenses make
the commons a more complicated and ambiguous enterprise. This is
precisely what some critics like Stallman have found objectionable
about certain CC licenses. They don't necessarily help forge a
community of shared values and commitments. Or as two British critics,
David Berry and Giles Moss, have put it, the CC licenses create &#8220;
commons without commonality.&#8221;<en>308</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="308">
		<number>308</number>
		<note>
			David Berry and Giles Moss, &#8220; On the &#8216; Creative
Commons': A Critique of the Commons without Commonality,&#8221; Free
Software Magazine, July 15, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/commons_without_commonality">http://www.freesoftwaremagazine.com/articles/commons_without_commonality</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="732">
	<ocn>732</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Inviting authors to choose how their work may circulate can result in
different types of &#8220; commons economies&#8221; that may or may not
be interoperable. ShareAlike content is isolated from NoDerivatives
content; NonCommercial content cannot be used for commercial purposes
without explicit permission; and so on. CC-licensed works may
themselves be incompatible with content licensed under other licenses,
such as the GNU Free Documentation License.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="733">
	<ocn>733</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Freedom, the Commons, and Movement Building
	</text>
</object>
<object id="734">
	<ocn>734</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The slightly confused layperson may ask, Why does all of this matter?
The answer may depend on your commitment to the commons as a different
(better?) way of creating value. Do you believe in individual freedom
and choice, as conceived by contemporary liberal societies? Or do you
believe in the <i>different type of freedom</i> that comes through
participation in a community of shared values?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="735">
	<ocn>735</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Does this state the choice too starkly, as an either/or proposition?
Some believe that it does. Perhaps a broader taxonomy of commons is
possible. Perhaps a commons can accommodate some measure of individual
choice. Or is that an oxymoron?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="736">
	<ocn>736</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		These are pivotal questions. The answers point toward different visions
of free culture and different strategic ideas about movement building.
Is it enough to put forward a demanding, utopian ideal of the commons,
and hope that it will attract a corps of true believers willing to toil
away in the face of general indifference or hostility? This is
essentially what Stallman has done. Or is it better to build a &#8220;
coalition of the reasonable,&#8221; so that a more accessible,
practical vision can gain widespread social acceptance and political
traction in a relatively short period of time? This is the vision that
drives Larry Lessig and his allies.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="737">
	<ocn>737</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Some critics accuse Creative Commons of betraying the full potential of
the commons because its licenses empower individual authors to decide
how &#8220; shareable&#8221; their works can be. The licenses do not
place the needs of the general culture or the commons first, as a
matter of universal policy, and some licenses restrict how a work may
be used. The lamentable result, say critics like Niva Elkin-Koren, is a
segmented body of culture that encourages people to think of cultural
works as property. People internalize the norms, such as &#8220; This
is <i>my work</i> and <i>I'll</i> decide how it shall be used by
others.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="738">
	<ocn>738</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This can be seen in the actual choices that CC licensors tend to use.
Some 67 percent of CC-licensed works do not allow commercial
usage.<en>309</en> Arguments go back and forth about whether the NC
restriction enhances or shrinks freedom. Many musicians and writers
want to promote their works on the Internet while retaining the
possibility of commercial gain, however remote; this would seem a
strike for freedom. Yet critics note that the NC license is often used
indiscriminately, even when commercial sales are a remote possibility.
This precludes even modest commercial reuses of a work, such as
reposting of content on a blog with advertising.<en>310</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="309">
		<number>309</number>
		<note>
			Based on Yahoo queries, June 13, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://wiki.creativecommons.org/License_Statistics">http://wiki.creativecommons.org/License_Statistics</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="310">
		<number>310</number>
		<note>
			Eric Muller, &#8220; The Case for Free Use: Reasons Not to Use a
Creative Commons&#8211;NC License,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://freedomdefined.org/Licenses/NC">http://freedomdefined.org/Licenses/NC</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="739">
	<ocn>739</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The larger point of criticism is that the Creative Commons licenses do
not &#8220; draw a line in the sand&#8221; about what types of freedoms
are inherent to the commons. In the interest of building a broad
movement, Creative Commons does not insist upon a clear standard of
freedom or prescribe how a commons should be structured.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="740">
	<ocn>740</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; While ideological diversity may be crucial for the successes of
a social movement,&#8221; observed Elkin-Koren, &#8220; it may impair
attempts to make creative works more accessible. The lack of a core
perception of freedom in information, may lead to ideological
fuzziness. This could interfere with the goal of offering a workable
and sustainable alternative to copyright.&#8221;<en>311</en> In an
essay that offers &#8220; a skeptical view of a worthy pursuit,&#8221;
Elkin-Koren says that the CC regime encourages narrow calculations of
self-interest and the same attitudes toward property and individual
transactions as the market economy; it does not promote a coherent
vision of &#8220; freedom&#8221; that fortifies the commons as such.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="311">
		<number>311</number>
		<note>
			Niva Elkin-Koren, &#8220; Exploring Creative Commons: A Skeptical
View of a Worthy Pursuit,&#8221; chapter 14 in Lucie Guibault and P.
Bernt Hugenholtz, editors, <i>The Future of the Public Domain:
Identifying the Commons in Information Law</i> (The Netherlands: Kluwer
Law International BV, 2006), p. 326.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="741">
	<ocn>741</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The normative message that we communicate by using Creative
Commons licenses is the strategy of choice,&#8221; Elkin-Koren told me.
&#8220; You're the owner, you're the author, and therefore, you are
entitled to govern your work. . . . No one tells you that maybe it's
wrong; maybe you should allow people to use your work.&#8221; By using
the CC licenses, she continued, we internalize these norms. &#8220; We
are teaching ourselves and others that our works are simply
commodities, and like every other commodity, everyone has to acquire a
license in order to use it.&#8221;<en>312</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="312">
		<number>312</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Niva Elkin-Koren, January 30, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="742">
	<ocn>742</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But champions of the Creative Commons licenses celebrate their approach
as a pragmatic and effective way to break free from the stifling
&#8220; all rights reserved&#8221; ethic of copyright law.
Historically, of course, not much else has been successful in
challenging copyright norms &#8212; which is precisely why Lessig and
others find the CC strategy attractive. &#8220; If I believed that
there was a different discourse that had political purchase in
someplace other than tiny corners of law faculty commons rooms, I'd be
willing to undertake it,&#8221; said Lessig. He concedes that his
viewpoint may be affected by his living in the United States instead of
Israel (where Elkin-Koren lives) but, in the end, he considers the
Creative Commons as &#8220; just my judgment about what's going to be
effective.&#8221;<en>313</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="313">
		<number>313</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, October 23, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="743">
	<ocn>743</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Splintering of the Free World?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="744">
	<ocn>744</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At one point, the philosophical disagreements between the Creative
Commons and its critics did not matter so much. There was enough shared
purpose and common history that everyone could agree to disagree. And
since the project was still young, the stakes were not so high. But
then it became clear that the CC licenses would be quite popular
indeed. When the Creative Commons issued its Developing Nations and
Sampling licenses in 2003, it brought Richard Stallman's simmering
dissatisfaction with the organization to a boil, threatening a serious
schism. Pointing to the &#8220; four freedoms&#8221; that define the
free software movement, Stallman criticized the new CC licenses as
&#8220; not free&#8221; because they do not allow universal copying of
a work.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="745">
	<ocn>745</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Stallman objected to the Sampling license because, while it allowed a
remix of a licensed work, it did not allow the freedom to share it. The
Developing Nations license was objectionable because its freedoms to
copy are limited to people in the developing world, and do not extend
to everyone. Stallman also disliked the fact that the CC tag that
licensors affix to their works did not specify <i>which</i> license
they were using. With no clear standard of &#8220; freedom&#8221; and
now a mix of licenses that included two &#8220; non-free&#8221;
licenses, Stallman regarded the CC tag as meaningless and the
organization itself problematic.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="746">
	<ocn>746</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; I used to support Creative Commons,&#8221; said Stallman on his
blog in July 2005, &#8220; but then it adopted some additional licenses
which do not give everyone that minimum freedom, and now I no longer
endorse it as an activity. I agree with Mako Hill that they are taking
the wrong approach by not insisting on any specific freedoms for the
public.&#8221;<en>314</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="314">
		<number>314</number>
		<note>
			Richard Stallman, &#8220; Fireworks in Montreal,&#8221; at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.fsf.org/blogs/rms/entry-20050920.html">http://www.fsf.org/blogs/rms/entry-20050920.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="747">
	<ocn>747</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Mako Hill is a brilliant young hacker and Stallman acolyte who wrote a
2005 essay, &#8220; Towards a Standard of Freedom: Creative Commons and
the Free Software Movement,&#8221;<en>315</en> a piece that shares
Elkin-Koren's complaint about the CC's &#8220; ideological
fuzziness.&#8221; Then enrolled in a graduate program at the MIT Media
Lab, Hill has written a number of essays on the philosophy and social
values of free software. (When he was an undergraduate at Hampshire
College, I was an outside advisor for his senior thesis and remain
friends with him.)
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="315">
		<number>315</number>
		<note>
			Benjamin Mako Hill, &#8220; Towards a Standard of Freedom: Creative
Commons and the Free Software Movement,&#8221; <i>Advogato</i>, July
29, 2005, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.advogato.org/article/851.html">http://www.advogato.org/article/851.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="748">
	<ocn>748</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In his &#8220; Freedom's Standard&#8221; essay, Hill wrote: &#8220;
[D]espite CC's stated desire to learn from and build upon the example
of the free software movement, CC sets no defined limits and promises
no freedoms, no rights, and no fixed qualities. Free software's success
is built on an ethical position. CC sets no such standard.&#8221; While
CC prides itself on its more open-minded &#8220; some rights
reserved&#8221; standard, Hill says that a real movement for freedom
must make a bolder commitment to the rights of the audience and other
creators&#8212; namely, that &#8220; essential rights are
unreservable.&#8221;<en>316</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="316">
		<number>316</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Benjamin Mako Hill, June 1, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="749">
	<ocn>749</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By this, Hill means that certain essential freedoms should not be
restricted by copyright law or any license. The problem with the CC
licenses, argued Hill, is that they cannot commit to any
"<i>defined</i> spirit of sharing" (emphasis in original). This is not
the way to build a transformative, sustainable movement, said
Hill.<en>317</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="317">
		<number>317</number>
		<note>
			Ibid. See also Hill, &#8220; Freedom's Standard Advanced?&#8221;
<i>Mute</i>, November 23, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.metamute.org/en/node/5597">http://www.metamute.org/en/node/5597</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="750">
	<ocn>750</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But what, then, about the choice of authors? Doesn't that freedom count
for anything? CC partisans have responded. Joi Ito, the chair of the
Creative Commons, wrote in 2007, &#8220; CC is about providing choice.
FSF is mostly about getting people to make <i>their</i> choice. I
realize it's not THAT clear-cut, but I think the point of CC is to
provide a platform for choice. . . . I realize that we are headed in
the same general free culture direction and many of us debate what
choices should be allowed, but I think we are more &#8216; tolerant'
and support more diverse views than the FSF.&#8221;<en>318</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="318">
		<number>318</number>
		<note>
			Joichi Ito, message on iCommons listserv, June 1, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="751">
	<ocn>751</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig has argued many times that, just as the free software community
decided for itself how its content ought to be distributed, so other
artistic sectors &#8212; musicians, photographers, filmmakers, etc.
&#8212; must make such decisions themselves. If they can't have certain
choices, then they will have little interest in joining a movement for
free culture, said Lessig at the 23rd Chaos Communication Congress in
Berlin. &#8220; We don't have the standing to tell photographers or
musicians what &#8216; freedom' is.&#8221; Why should the Free Software
Foundation, or any other group, be able to dictate to an artistic
community how their works should circulate?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="752">
	<ocn>752</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Elkin-Koren is not so sure we can segment the world according to
creative sectors and let each determine how works shall circulate.
&#8220; I don't think we can separate the different sectors, as if we
work in different sectors,&#8221; she told me. &#8220; We all work in
the production of information. My ideas on copyright are really
affected by the art that I use and the music that I listen to. . . .
Information is essential not only for creating something functional or
for selling a work of art, but for our citizenship and for our ability
to participate in society. So it's not as if we can say, &#8216; Well,
this sector can decide for themselves.'&#8221;<en>319</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="319">
		<number>319</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Niva Elkin-Koren, January 30, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="753">
	<ocn>753</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As Wikipedia began to take off in popularity, what might have been an
unpleasant philosophical rift grew into a more serious fissure with
potentially significant consequences. All Wikipedia content is licensed
under the Free Software Foundation's GNU Free Documentation License, or
FDL,<en>320</en> largely because the CC licenses did not exist when
Wikipedia was launched in 2001. The FDL, originally intended for the
documentation manuals that explicate software applications, is
essentially the same as the CC ShareAlike license (any derivative works
must also be released under the same license granting the freedom to
share). But using the FDL can get cumbersome, especially as more video,
audio, and photos are incorporated into a text; each artifact would
require that the license be posted on it. As more content is shared,
the potential for misuse of the content, and lawsuits over violations
of licensing agreements, would grow.<en>321</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="320">
		<number>320</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry on GNU Free Documentation license, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GNU_Free_Documentation_License</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="321">
		<number>321</number>
		<note>
			Michael Fitzgerald, &#8220; Copyleft Hits a Snag,&#8221;
<i>Technology Review</i>, December 21, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="754">
	<ocn>754</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unfortunately, as a legal matter, the FDL is incompatible with the CC
licenses. This means that all content on Wikipedia and its sister
Wikimedia projects (Wikispecies, Wikiquote, Wikinews, among other
projects) cannot legally be combined with works licensed under CC
licenses. Angered by the two &#8220; non-free&#8221; CC licenses,
Stallman dug in his heels and defended Wikipedia's use of the FDL. He
also made it clear that he would remain a critic of Creative Commons
unless it revoked or changed its licenses to conform with the Free
Software Foundation's standards of &#8220; freedom.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="755">
	<ocn>755</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Thus began a four-year search for a resolution. Lessig recalled,
&#8220; We started to think about a way that Wikimedia could migrate to
a license that we would then deem as compatible to a Creative Commons
license. That took two years of negotiation, basically.&#8221; One
proposed solution was for Wikimedia projects to offer both licenses,
the FDL and CC BY-SA, for the same work. However, it was determined
that derivative works licensed under one license would still be
incompatible with dual-licensed works, resulting in &#8220; project
bleed&#8221; (new works would migrate away the existing corpus of
works). Another approach was for a &#8220; one-way compatibility&#8221;
of licenses, so that people creating works under the FDL could use
CC-licensed content.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="756">
	<ocn>756</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But Lessig realized that these solutions dealt only with the issue at
hand; the real challenge was finding a more systemic solution. As
various players engaged with the FDL/CC controversy, it grew from a
licensing squabble into an intertribal confrontation. It became a
symbol for everything that Stallman found politically unacceptable
about the Creative Commons's vision of freedom.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="757">
	<ocn>757</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		From 2005 to 2007, the issue roiled many factions within the free
culture/free software communities. The debate and invective flew back
and forth in various venues, and there were proposals, negotiations,
and political maneuvers. MIT computer scientist (and CC board member)
Hal Abelson rejoined the FSF board. Lessig and other CC staff entered
into talks with the FSF general counsel, Eben Moglen. Wikipedia
co-founder Jimmy Wales joined the Creative Commons board. Yet Stallman
continued to resist, and the Wikimedia board would not approve any
proposed solutions.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="758">
	<ocn>758</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The stalemate was broken in June 4, 2007, when Lessig made a surprise
announcement that the Creative Commons was &#8220; retiring&#8221; the
Developing Nations and Sampling licenses.<en>322</en> One reason was a
lack of interest in the licenses: only 0.01 percent of CC licensors
were using each license. But, without alluding to the Free Software
Foundation or Stallman, Lessig also noted that the two licenses did not
ensure a minimal freedom to share a work noncommercially&#8212; a
standard met by all other CC licenses. In addition, Lessig pointed out
to me, some publishers were beginning to see the Developing Nations
license as a subterfuge to avoid meeting open-access publishing
standards.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="322">
		<number>322</number>
		<note>
			Lessig post to CC International listserv, June 4, 2007. More about
the CC's retired licenses can be seen at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://creativecommons.org/retiredlicenses">http://creativecommons.org/retiredlicenses</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="759">
	<ocn>759</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Creative Commons, the revocation of the two licenses was at least a
shrewd political move; it also affirmed a stricter standard of &#8220;
freedom&#8221; in the ability to use digital materials. In return for
sacrificing two little-used licenses, the organization gained
Stallman's eventual support for a deal that would let the FDL be
treated as compatible with the CC ShareAlike license. This was a major
triumph because it could avoid the contorted, legalistic solutions that
had been previously proposed and rejected. It was also a breakthrough
because it averted a major rift between two growing bodies of open
content and avoided a slow drift into a wider Balkanization of content
across the Internet. &#8220; I kind of thought that no matter what we
did, Richard would find a reason to object,&#8221; recalled Lessig,
&#8220; but he didn't. He stuck to his principles, so I give credit to
him.&#8221;<en>323</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="323">
		<number>323</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, October 23, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="760">
	<ocn>760</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The debates about &#8220; freedom&#8221; produced several specific
results. In November 2006, when Creative Commons released an updated
legal version of its licenses, version 3.0, it formally recognized
other licenses as legally compatible with the ShareAlike license if
they have the same purpose, meaning, and effect, and if the other
license recognizes the CC license. The move should help avoid future
strife over interoperability.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="761">
	<ocn>761</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A few months later, the Creative Commons also adopted a &#8220; Free
Cultural Works&#8221; definition and seal as a way to recognize works
that are &#8220; free,&#8221; as understood by the Free Software
Foundation. The definition declares that works with either the CC
Attribution or Attribution-ShareAlike licenses should be considered
&#8220; free&#8221; because they give people the freedom to modify
works without any discrimination against specific uses or users. The
definition and seal <i>exclude</i> the CC NonCommercial and
NoDerivatives licenses, however, because those licenses do not allow
this sort of freedom. The purpose of the seal is not to denigrate use
of the NC and ND licenses, but to educate users about the less
restrictive licenses and to assert a philosophical solidarity with the
free software community.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="762">
	<ocn>762</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As part of this larger effort, the Creative Commons also issued a draft
statement in April 2008 declaring the special importance of the
ShareAlike license in the free culture movement and the organization's
intentions in its stewardship of the license. The statement amounted to
a diplomatic peace treaty, to be finalized in the months ahead.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="763">
	<ocn>763</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By May 2008 the details of the agreement to make Wikipedia's entries,
licensed under the FDL, legally compatible with materials licensed
under the CC ShareAlike license had not been consummated. But it was
expected that the legal technicalities would be ironed out, and two
great bodies of open content would no longer be legally off-limits to
each other.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="764">
	<ocn>764</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Criticism from the Left and from the South
	</text>
</object>
<object id="765">
	<ocn>765</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the Creative Commons has grown in popularity, a longer line has
formed to take issue with some of its fundamental strategies. One line
of criticism comes from anticapitalist ideologues, another from
scholars of the underdeveloped nations of the South.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="766">
	<ocn>766</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		British academics Berry and Moss apparently hanker for a more bracing
revolution in culture;they object to the commodification of culture in
any form and to the role that copyright law plays in this drama. To
them, Lessig is distressingly centrist. He is &#8220; always very keen
to disassociate himself and the Creative Commons from the (diabolical)
insinuation that he is (God forbid!) anti-market, anticapitalist, or
communist,&#8221; Berry and Moss complain.<en>324</en> The gist of
their objection: Why is Lessig collaborating with media corporations
and neoclassical economists when there is a larger, more profound
revolution that needs to be fought? A new social ethic and political
struggle are needed, they write, &#8220; not lawyers exercising their
legal vernacular and skills on complicated licenses, court cases and
precedents.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="324">
		<number>324</number>
		<note>
			David Berry and Giles Moss, &#8220; On the &#8216; Creative
Commons': A Critique of the Commons Without Commonality,&#8221; <i>Free
Software Magazine</i>, July 15, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.freesoftwaremagagine.com/articles/commons_without_commonality">http://www.freesoftwaremagagine.com/articles/commons_without_commonality</link>&gt;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="767">
	<ocn>767</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Dense diatribes against the antirevolutionary character of Creative
Commons can be heard in various hacker venues and cultural blogs and
Web sites. The argument tends to go along the lines sketched here by
Anna Nimus of Berlin, Germany:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="768">
	<ocn>768</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Creative Commons preserves Romanticism's ideas of originality,
creativity and property rights, and similarly considers &#8220; free
culture&#8221; to be a separate sphere existing in splendid isolation
from the world of material production. Ever since the 18th century, the
ideas of &#8220; creativity&#8221; and &#8220; originality&#8221; have
been inextricably linked to an anti-commons of knowledge. Creative
Commons is no exception. There's no doubt that Creative Commons can
shed light on some of the issues in the continuing struggle against
intellectual property. But it is insufficient at best, and, at its
worst, it's just another attempt by the apologists of property to
confuse the discourse, poison the well, and crowd out any revolutionary
analysis.<en>325</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="325">
		<number>325</number>
		<note>
			Anna Nimus, &#8220; Copyright, Copyleft and the Creative
Anti-Commons,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors0/nimustext.html">http://subsol.c3.hu/subsol_2/contributors0/nimustext.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="769">
	<ocn>769</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To ensure that her revolutionary analysis gets out, Nimus released her
piece under a self-styled &#8220; Anticopyright&#8221; notation, with
the added phrase, &#8220; All rights dispersed.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="770">
	<ocn>770</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A more penetrating brand of criticism has come from the South, which
fears that the West's newfound enthusiasm for the commons may not
necessarily benefit the people of developing nations; indeed, it could
simply legitimate new thefts of their shared resources. In an important
2004 law review article, &#8220; The Romance of the Public
Domain,&#8221; law professors Anupam Chander and Madhavi Sunder argue
that &#8220; public domain advocates seem to accept that because a
resource is open to all by force of law, that resource will indeed be
exploited by all. In practice, however, differing circumstances &#8212;
including knowledge, wealth, power and ability &#8212; render some
better able than others to exploit a commons. We describe this popular
scholarly conception of the commons as &#8216; romantic.' . . . It is
celebratory, even euphoric, about the emancipatory potential of the
commons. But it is also na&#239;ve, idealistic and removed from
reality.&#8221;<en>326</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="326">
		<number>326</number>
		<note>
			Anupam Chander and Madhavi Sunder, &#8220; The Romance of the
Public Domain,&#8221; California Law Review 92, no. 1131 (2004), p.
1341.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="771">
	<ocn>771</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If genes, seeds, indigenous medicines, agricultural innovations,
artistic designs, music, and the various ecological and cultural
resources of the South are not treated as private property, but instead
as elements of the public domain, then anyone can exploit them freely.
This can lead to serious injustices, as powerful corporations swoop in
to exploit resources that are available to all in the public domain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="772">
	<ocn>772</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Chander and Sunder write: &#8220; By presuming that leaving information
and ideas in the public domain enhances &#8216; semiotic democracy'
&#8212; a world in which all people, not just the powerful, have the
ability to make cultural meanings &#8212; law turns a blind eye to the
fact that for centuries the public domain has been a source for
exploiting the labor and bodies of the disempowered &#8212; namely,
people of color, the poor, women and people from the global
South.&#8221;<en>327</en> Chander and Sunder argue that the binary
logic of copyright law &#8212; something is either private property or
in the public domain &#8212; &#8220; masks the ways in which the
commons often functions more in the interests of traditional property
owners than in the interests of commoners.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="327">
		<number>327</number>
		<note>
			Ibid., p. 1343.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="773">
	<ocn>773</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This critique makes clear why the distinction between the public domain
and the commons matters. The public domain is an open-access regime
available to all; it has no property rights or governance rules. The
commons, however, is a legal regime for ensuring that the fruits of
collective efforts remain under the control of that collective. The
GPL, the CC licenses, databases of traditional knowledge, and sui
generis national statutes for protecting biological diversity all
represent innovative legal strategies for protecting the commons. The
powerful can exploit and overwhelm the public domain, but they are not
likely to overwhelm a commons that has a legal regime to protect a
collective's shared resources.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="774">
	<ocn>774</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A more radical and profound critique of the commons came in an open
letter to &#8220; inhabitants of the &#8216; legal' Commons&#8221; from
&#8220; Denizens of Non Legal Commons, and those who travel to and from
them.&#8221; The three-page letter, drafted by Shuddhabrata Sengupta, a
filmmaker and writer with the Raqs Media Collective in New Delhi, is a
plea for recognizing the informal sharing economy that flourishes
beneath the oblivious gaze of mainstream society, and certainly beyond
the reach of property rights and law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="775">
	<ocn>775</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Greetings!&#8221; the letter opens. &#8220; This missive
arrives at your threshold from the proverbial Asiatic street, located
in the shadow of an improvised bazaar, where all manner of oriental
pirates and other dodgy characters gather to trade in what many amongst
you consider to be stolen goods.&#8221; To this <i>other</i> commons,
stolen goods are really &#8220; borrowed,&#8221; because nothing is
really &#8220; owned&#8221; &#8212; and therefore nothing can be
&#8220; stolen.&#8221; This is the realm of &#8220; the great
circulating public library of the Asiatic street.&#8221; The letter
continues:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="776">
	<ocn>776</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		We appreciate and admire the determination with which you nurture your
garden of licenses. The proliferation and variety of flowering
contracts and clauses in your hothouses is astounding. But we find the
paradox of a space that is called a commons and yet so fenced in, and
in so many ways, somewhat intriguing. The number of times we had to ask
for permission, and the number of security check posts we had to
negotiate to enter even a corner of your commons was impressive. . . .
Sometimes we found that when people spoke of &#8220; Common
Property&#8221; it was hard to know where the commons ended and where
property began . . .
	</text>
</object>
<object id="777">
	<ocn>777</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Strangely, the capacity to name something as &#8220; mine,&#8221; even
if in order to &#8220; share&#8221; it, requires a degree of
attainments that is not in itself evenly distributed. Not everyone
comes into the world with the confidence that anything is &#8220;
theirs&#8221; to share. This means that the &#8220; commons,&#8221; in
your parlance, consists of an arrangement wherein only those who are in
the magic circle of confident owners effectively get a share in that
which is essentially, still a configuration of different bits of fenced
in property. What they do is basically effect a series of swaps, based
on a mutual understanding of their exclusive property rights. So I give
you something of what I own, in exchange for which, I get something of
what you own. The good or item in question never exits the circuit of
property, even, paradoxically, when it is shared. Goods that are not
owned, or those that have been taken outside the circuit of ownership,
effectively cannot be shared, or even circulated.<en>328</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="328">
		<number>328</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; A Letter to the Commons, from the participants of the
&#8216; Shades of the Commons Workshop,' &#8221; in <i>In the Shade of
the Commons:Towards a Culture of Open Networks</i> (Amsterdam,
Netherlands: Waag Society, 2006), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www3.fis.utoronto.ca/research/iprp/cracin/publications/pdfs/final/werbin_InThe">http://www3.fis.utoronto.ca/research/iprp/cracin/publications/pdfs/final/werbin_InThe</link>&gt;
Shade.pdf.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="778">
	<ocn>778</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The letter invites a deeper consideration of how humans form commons.
However ingenious and useful the jerry-rigged legal mechanisms of the
GPL and Creative Commons, the disembodied voice of the Non Legal
Commons speaks, as if through the sewer grate, to remind us that the
commons is about much more than law and civil society. It is part of
the human condition. Yet the chaotic Asiatic street is not likely to
yield conventional economic development without the rule of law, civil
institutions, and some forms of legal property. The question posed by
the informal commons remains a necessary one to ponder: What balance of
commons and property rights, and in what forms, is best for a society?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="779">
	<ocn>779</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Fair Use and the Creative Commons
	</text>
</object>
<object id="780">
	<ocn>780</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Walk through the blossoming schools of commons thought and it quickly
becomes clear that the commons is no monolithic ideal but a
many-splendored mosaic of perspectives. To the befuddlement of
conventional observers, the perspectives are not necessarily
adversarial or mutually exclusive. More often than not, they are
fractal&#8212; interesting variations of familiar commons themes. In
our fascination with newfangled commons, it is easy to overlook a more
traditionally minded defender of the commons: the champion of fair use.
It is all well and good to promote works that are &#8220; born
free&#8221; under CC licenses, say these friendly critics. But the hard
fact of the matter is that for the foreseeable future, creators will
still need access to copyrighted content &#8212; and this requires a
strong fair use doctrine and aggressive public education.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="781">
	<ocn>781</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is a compelling argument, but in fact only an indirect criticism of
Creative Commons. For filmmakers who need to use film clips from
existing films and musicians who want to use a riff from another
performer, the fair use doctrine is indeed more important than any CC
license. Peter Jaszi, the law professor at American University's
Washington School of Law, believes that even with growing bodies of
CC-licensed content, &#8220; teachers, filmmakers, editors, freelance
critics and others need to do things with proprietary content.&#8221;
As a practical matter, they need a strong, clear set of fair use
guidelines.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="782">
	<ocn>782</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Jaszi and his colleague Pat Aufderheide, a communications professor who
runs the Center for Social Media at American University, have dedicated
themselves to clarifying the scope and certainty of fair use. They have
launched a major fair use project to get specific creative communities
to define their &#8220; best practices in fair use.&#8221; If
filmmakers, for example, can articulate their own artistic needs and
professional interests in copying and sharing, then the courts are more
likely to take those standards into consideration when they rule what
is protected under the fair use doctrine.<en>329</en> A set of
respectable standards for a given field can help stabilize and expand
the application of fair use.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="329">
		<number>329</number>
		<note>
			Center for Social Media, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/fairuse">http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/fairuse</link>&gt;.
See also Pat Aufderheide and Peter Jaszi, &#8220; Fair Use and Best
Practices: Surprising Success,&#8221; <i>Intellectual Property
Today</i>, October 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.iptoday.com/articles/2007-10-aufderheide.asp">http://www.iptoday.com/articles/2007-10-aufderheide.asp</link>&gt;;
and Peter Jaszi, &#8220; Copyright, Fair Use and Motion
Pictures,&#8221; <i>Utah Law Review</i> 3, no. 715 (2007), and which
also appeared in R. Kolker, ed., <i>Oxford Handbook of Film and Media
Studies</i> (2007), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/files/pdf/fairuse_motionpictures.pdf">http://www.centerforsocialmedia.org/files/pdf/fairuse_motionpictures.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="783">
	<ocn>783</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Inspired in part by a professional code developed by news broadcasters,
some of the nation's most respected filmmakers prepared the Documentary
Filmmakers' Statement of Best Practices in Fair Use, which was released
in November 2005. The guidelines have since been embraced by the film
industry, television programmers, and insurance companies (who insure
against copyright violations) as a default definition about what
constitutes fair use in documentary filmmaking.<en>330</en> Aufderheide
and Jaszi are currently exploring fair use projects for other fields,
such as teaching, as a way to make fair use a more reliable legal tool
for sharing and reuse of works.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="330">
		<number>330</number>
		<note>
			Aufderheide and Jaszi, <i>Intellectual Property Today</i>, October
2007, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.iptoday.com/articles/2007-10-aufderheide.asp">http://www.iptoday.com/articles/2007-10-aufderheide.asp</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="784">
	<ocn>784</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig has been highly supportive of the fair use project and, indeed,
he oversees his own fair use law clinic at Stanford Law School, which
litigates cases frequently. &#8220; It's not as if I don't think fair
use is important,&#8221; said Lessig, &#8220; but I do think that if
the movement focuses on fair use, we don't attract the people we need.
. . . From my perspective, long-term success in changing the
fundamental perspectives around copyright depends on something like
Creative Commons as opposed to legal action, and even quasi-legal
action, like the Fair Use Project.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="785">
	<ocn>785</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Lessig, fair use is deeply flawed as the basis for building a
political movement to reform copyright law. He argues that its
advocates are dogged by the (unfair) perception that they are &#8220;
just a bunch of people who want to get stuff for free, without paying
for it. . . . It's too easy to dismiss that movement.&#8221; Lessig
recalled the time that the head of a major record label snorted,
&#8220; Fair use is the last refuge of the scoundrel.&#8221; Fair use
defenders obviously take issue with this characterization, but the
accusation nonetheless pushes fair use champions into a rhetorical
corner from which it is difficult to escape.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="786">
	<ocn>786</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A more appealing alternative, Lessig argues, is to use the credibility
of copyright ownership to argue the point in a different way. He cited
the successful campaign by European software engineers in the 1980s to
fight attempts to expand patent protection for software. Their campaign
did not resemble &#8220; a bunch of peer-to-peer downloaders who are
saying, &#8216; Yeah, I want my music for free,'&#8221; said Lessig.
&#8220; It was a bunch of people who are the <i>beneficiaries</i> of
patent rights saying, &#8216; Look, we <i>don't want</i> these rights.'
That creates a kind of credibility.&#8221; From a moral and political
standpoint, Lessig argued, a movement based on copyright owners
declaring that they want to forfeit certain rights in order to
<i>share</i> and promote creativity, has greater credibility than a
campaign seeking to &#8220; balance&#8221; the public's rights against
private copyright privileges.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="787">
	<ocn>787</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; I imagine a world where there are one hundred million Creative
Commons&#8211;licensed artists out there, creating works according to
Creative Commons views,&#8221; he said. Then, when Hollywood pressures
Congress for stronger copyright protections, he said, &#8220; there
would be all these people out there who are creating according to a
radically different model. [Hollywood's] claims about extremism would
just not be true for a large number of creators.&#8221; Instead of a
copyright debate that pits &#8220; creators&#8221; against &#8220;
pirates,&#8221; Lessig said, &#8220; I want to create this world where
there is a third category of people who are creators, but who create
according to different values, values that emphasize the importance of
sharing and building upon the past.&#8221;<en>331</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="331">
		<number>331</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Lawrence Lessig, October 23, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="788">
	<ocn>788</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the larger scheme of things, the tensions between the fair use and
free culture advocates are not mutually exclusive. In the end, the two
approaches complement each other with different contributions. Both
seek to promote sharing and reuse, but the former works within the
traditional framework of copyright law; the latter is trying to build a
whole new body of culture and discourse. There is a kind of gentleman's
agreement between the fair use and free culture communities to work on
different sides of the street, while traveling a parallel path down the
same road.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="789">
	<ocn>789</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Lessig, there is little advantage in shirking the property rights
discourse of copyright law, as Elkin-Koren and the &#8220; Non Legal
Commons&#8221; urge. Indeed, he sees a distinct strategic advantage in
<i>embracing</i> that discourse &#8212; and then trying to turn it to
different ends. This, in a way, is what Stallman succeeded in doing
with the GPL, a license based on copyright law. Yet, while Stallman
attracted a somewhat homogeneous community of programmers to his
movement, Creative Commons has attracted a sprawling community of
eclectic interests, diverse priorities, and no agreed-upon
philosophical core.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="790">
	<ocn>790</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By choosing a middle path that embraces but seeks to transform property
discourse, Creative Commons may avoid the marginalization of ardent
leftists and the modest agenda of fair use activism. It remains an open
question whether the ideological fuzziness at the core of Creative
Commons, or the limitations of its licenses, is offset by its success
in popularizing a new cultural vision. Yochai Benkler, the great
commons theorist, understands the legal criticisms, and agrees with
them to an extent. But ultimately, the significance of Creative
Commons, he believes, has been &#8220; in galvanizing a movement, in
symbolizing it and in providing a place to organize around. From my
perspective, if I care about Creative Commons, it is as a cultural icon
for a movement, more than as a set of licenses. Which is why I am less
bothered than some, about the people who are beginning to criticize
Creative Commons and how good the licenses really are, and how
compatible they are.&#8221;<en>332</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="332">
		<number>332</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Yochai Benkler, February 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="791">
	<ocn>791</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For Cory Doctorow, the copyfighter and sci-fi writer, the eclectic
viewpoints within the free culture movement is a decisive strength:
&#8220; The difference between a movement and an organization,&#8221;
he wrote on the iCommons listserv, &#8220; is that an organization is a
group of people who want the same thing for the same reason. A movement
is a collection of groups of people who want the same thing for
different reasons. Movements are infinitely more powerful than
organizations.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="792">
	<ocn>792</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The reason the environmental movement is so powerful, Doctorow
continued, is the very fact that it encompasses &#8220;
anticapitalists, green investors, spiritualists, scientists, hunters
and fishers, parents worried about environmental toxins, labor
reformers, proglobalists, anti-globalists, etc. . . . Denuding the
ideological landscape of the environmental movement in a purge to
eliminate all those save the ones who support environmentalism
<i>qua</i> environmentalism would be the worst setback environmentalism
could suffer. Likewise copyfighters: there are Marxists, anarchists,
Ayn Rand objectivists, economists, artists, free marketeers,
libertarians, liberal democrats, etc., who see copyright liberalization
as serving their agenda. If we insist that copyright reform is about
copyright reform and nothing else, there will be no copyright reform
movement.&#8221;<en>333</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="333">
		<number>333</number>
		<note>
			Cory Doctorow, iCommons listserv [thread, &#8220; Andrew Orlowski
Attacks Lessig], June 1, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="793">
	<ocn>793</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There is a price to be paid for all this diversity, however. Diversity
means constant debate. Debate can escalate into strife and
sectarianism. And in the free culture movement, where so many people
are feverishly improvising and inventing, nearly everything is open for
debate. It turns out that this business of inventing the commons is
complicated stuff; there are many ways to construct a commons. It is
only natural for people to have their own ideas about how to build the
digital republic.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="794">
	<ocn>794</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The fundamental question may be whether the existing framework of
copyright law and property discourse can be adequately reformed &#8212;
or whether its very categories of thought are the problem. The late
poet and activist Audre Lorde, in the context of feminist struggle,
declared that the prevailing discourse must be overthrown, not
reformed, because, in her words, &#8220; the master's tools will never
dismantle the master's house.&#8221; Within the free software and free
culture movements, however, there are those who believe that copyright
law can be sufficiently adapted to build a sharing economy, a more
competitive marketplace, and a more humane democratic culture. Others
are convinced that the legal discourse of property rights, however
modified, will simply entrench the very principles that they wish to
transcend. As the movement grows and diversifies, debates over what
constitutes the most strategic, morally honorable path forward are
likely to intensify.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="795">
	<ocn>795</ocn>
	<text class="h2">
		PART III
	</text>
</object>
<object id="796">
	<ocn>796</ocn>
	<text class="h3">
		A Viral Spiral of New Commons
	</text>
</object>
<object id="797">
	<ocn>797</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By 2008 the viral spiral had come a long way. Richard Stallman's fringe
movement to build a commons for code became an enormous success, partly
inspiring Lawrence Lessig and his compatriots to develop the Creative
Commons licenses and a larger vision of free culture. Empowered by
these tools, ordinary people began to develop some exciting new models
for creativity and sharing. New types of commons arose. Soon there was
a popular discourse about the sharing economy, a politics of open
networks, and a new international social movement. The movement was so
successful at diversifying itself that it was able to engage in serious
internecine squabbles.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="798">
	<ocn>798</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the commons movement matured, and people came to understand the
sensibilities of open networks, the viral spiral seemed to acquire new
speed and powers. Over the past few years, it has advanced into all
sorts of new arenas. Part III examines three of the most exciting ones
&#8212; business, science, and education. Each has taken the tools and
insights developed by the commons movement &#8212; free software, CC
licenses, collaborative models &#8212; and adapted them to its own
special needs.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="799">
	<ocn>799</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		These spin-off movements of entrepreneurs, scientists, and educators
recognize their debt to the free software and CC licenses, but none
feels confined by that history or beholden to its leaders. Each is too
intent on adapting the tools to its own circumstances. Just as CC
licenses have been used in some ways by musicians, and in other ways by
filmmakers, and in still other ways by bloggers, so the commoners in
the worlds of business, science, and education are forging their own
paths. Development requires differentiation. It is fascinating to watch
how the principles of the commons are being crafted to meet the
distinctive needs of the marketplace, the academy, the research lab,
and the classroom.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="800">
	<ocn>800</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What may be most notable about these developments is the blurring of
these very categories. On open platforms, social communities are
becoming sites for market activity. Scientists are increasingly
collaborating with people outside their disciplines, including
amateurs. Formal education is becoming more focused on learning, and
learning is moving out of the classroom and into more informal and
practice-driven venues.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="801">
	<ocn>801</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If there is a common denominator in each of the domains examined in
Part III, it is the use of distributed networks, social community, and
digital technologies to enhance the goals at hand. The new open
business models seek to bring consumer and seller interests into closer
alignment. The new science commons seek to create more powerful types
of research collaboration. The open educational resources movement
wants knowledge to circulate more freely and students to direct their
own learning.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="802">
	<ocn>802</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For the short term, the fledgling models in these fields are likely to
be seen as interesting novelties on the periphery of the mainstream. In
time, however, given what we know about network dynamics, the new
models are likely to supplant or significantly transform many basic
parameters of business, science, and education. The participatory
practices that open networks enable are showing that knowledge is more
about socially dynamic relationships than about fixed bodies of
information. These relationships are also spawning new challenges to
institutional authority and expertise. If one looks closely enough, the
matrix for a very different order of knowledge, institutional life, and
personal engagement can be seen.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="803">
	<ocn>803</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		10 THE NEW OPEN BUSINESS MODELS
	</text>
</object>
<object id="804">
	<ocn>804</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>The commons and the market can be great partners if each shows
respect for the other and ingenuity in working together.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="805">
	<ocn>805</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Entrepreneur John Buckman concedes that his Internet record label,
Magnatune, amounts to &#8220; building a business model on top of
chaos.&#8221;<en>334</en> That is to say, he makes money by honoring
open networks and people's natural social inclinations. The company
rejects the proprietary muscle games used by its mainstream rivals, and
instead holds itself to an ethical standard that verges on the
sanctimonious: &#8220; We are not evil.&#8221; In the music industry
these days, a straight shooter apparently has to be that blunt.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="334">
		<number>334</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman presentation at iCommons Summit, Dubrovnik, Croatia,
June 15, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="806">
	<ocn>806</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Magnatune is a four-person enterprise based in Berkeley, California,
that since 2003 has been pioneering a new open business model for
identifying and distributing high-quality new music. It does not lock
up the music with anticopying technology or digital rights management.
It does not exploit its artists with coercive, unfair contracts. It
does not harass its customers for making unauthorized copies. Internet
users can in fact listen to all of Magnatune's music for free (not just
music snippets) via online streaming.<en>335</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="335">
		<number>335</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman entry in Wikipedia, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Buckman">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/John_Buckman</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="807">
	<ocn>807</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Buckman, a former software programmer turned entrepreneur in his
thirties, previously founded and ran Lyris Technologies, an e-mail list
management company that he sold in 2005. In deciding to start
Magnatune, he took note of the obvious realities that the music
industry has tried to ignore: radio is boring, CDs cost too much,
record labels exploit their artists, file sharing is not going to go
away, people love to share music, and listening to music on the
Internet is too much work. &#8220; I thought, why not make a record
label that has a clue?&#8221; said Buckman.<en>336</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="336">
		<number>336</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman at Magnatune home page, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.magnatune.com/info/why">http://www.magnatune.com/info/why</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="808">
	<ocn>808</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Well before the band Radiohead released its In <i>Rainbows</i> album
with a &#8220; pay what you want&#8221; experiment, Magnatune was
inviting its customers to choose the amount they would be willing to
pay, from $5 to $18, for any of Magnatune's 547 albums. Buckman
explains that the arrangement signals a respect for customers who,
after all, have lots of free music choices. It also gives them a chance
to express their appreciation for artists, who receive 50 percent of
the sales price. &#8220; It turns out that people are quite generous
and they pay on average about $8.40, and they really don't get anything
more for paying more other than feeling like they're doing the right
thing,&#8221; said Buckman.<en>337</en> About 20 percent pay more than
$12.<en>338</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="337">
		<number>337</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman, interview with Matthew Magee of Out-Law.com, radio
podcast, September 13, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.out-law.com/page-8468">http://www.out-law.com/page-8468</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="338">
		<number>338</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman at iCommons, June 15, 2007. For an extensive profile
of Buckman and Magnatune, see &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.openrightsgroup.org/creativebusiness/index.php/John_Buckman:_Magnatune">http://www.openrightsgroup.org/creativebusiness/index.php/John_Buckman:_Magnatune</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="809">
	<ocn>809</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The reality is today nobody really needs to pay for music at
all,&#8221; he acknowledges. &#8220; If you choose to hit the &#8216;
buy' button at Magnatune then you're one of the people who has decided
to actually pay for music. Shouldn't we reflect that honest behavior
back and say, well, if you're one of the honest people how much do you
want to pay?&#8221;<en>339</en> The set-your-own-price approach is part
of Magnatune's larger strategy of building the business by cultivating
open, interactive relationships with its customers and artists. &#8220;
If you set up a trusting world,&#8221; explains Buckman, &#8220; you
can be rewarded.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="339">
		<number>339</number>
		<note>
			John Buckman, interview with Matthew Magee, September 13, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="810">
	<ocn>810</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Magnatune's business model embraces the openness of the Internet and
makes it a virtue, rather than treating it as a bothersome liability
that must be elaborately suppressed. All of Magnatune's music is
released as MP3 files, with no digital rights management, under a CC
Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike license. This means that customers
can legally make their own remixes and covers of songs, and take
samples, so long as the uses are noncommercial and carry the same CC
license. Magnatune also invites customers to give free downloads of
purchased music to three friends. Podcasters have free access to the
entire Magnatune catalog.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="811">
	<ocn>811</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By using a CC license, Magnatune saves a bundle by not having to
oversee complex terms and conditions for usage of music. Nor does it
have to maintain a DRM system and police the behavior of its customers,
both of which squander a key marketing asset: consumer goodwill.
Instead, the music circulates freely and, in so doing, expands public
awareness of Magnatune's 244 artists.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="812">
	<ocn>812</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Two-thirds of Magnatune's revenues comes from licensing its music to
films, ads, television, and shops. Like so many open business models,
it has carved out a mid-tier niche between &#8220; expensive and
proprietary&#8221; and &#8220; cheap and crummy.&#8221; Most mainstream
music licensing involves either expensive, highly lawyered deals with
record labels or insipid stock music from royalty-free CDs. Magnatune's
innovation is to offer high-quality music in multiple genres at
flatrate licenses for sixteen different usage scenarios. The deals can
be easily consummated via the Web; artists share in half the proceeds.
No accounting flimflam. To date, Magnatune has licensed its music to
more than one thousand indie films and many commercials.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="813">
	<ocn>813</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Magnatune is a small, fledgling enterprise in the $4 billion music
industry. It does not have all the answers, and it may be sideswiped by
bigger players at some point. But Magnatune is lean, nimble,
profitable, and growing. It has shown how innovative business models
can flourish in the open environment of the Internet. Unlike its
bloated, besieged competitors, Magnatune is willing to listen closely
to its customers, artists, and licensing clients. It is fair-minded and
straightforward; it wants to share the wealth and let the music flow.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="814">
	<ocn>814</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Open Networks Spur New Business Models
	</text>
</object>
<object id="815">
	<ocn>815</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Openness does not come intuitively to many businesses. Competitive
advantage has long been associated with exclusive control and secrecy.
But as the Internet's power expands, conventional businesses are
feeling pressures to rethink their &#8220; closed&#8221; business
models. A new breed of &#8220; open businesses&#8221; is demonstrating
that a reliance on open-source software, open content, and an ethic of
transparency in dealings with all corporate stakeholders can be
tremendously competitive.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="816">
	<ocn>816</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Open businesses understand the Great Value Shift discussed in chapter 5
&#8212; that working through open networks and commons is likely to
generate greater consumer attention, engagement, and loyalty &#8212;
and thus sales &#8212; and may outperform a more exclusive regime of
control. Working on an open network is also the best way for a company
to get smarter faster, and to stay alert to changing market conditions.
It bears noting that business models are not an either/or choice
&#8212; that is, all open or all closed. There is a continuum of
choices, as we will see below. Sometimes there are heated strategic and
moral debates about what level of openness to adopt, yet the general
trend in business today is clear: toward openness.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="817">
	<ocn>817</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Even as broadcast networks decry the posting of copyrighted television
programs on YouTube, they clearly welcome the ratings spikes that
ensue. Wireless telephony is fragmented among many proprietary systems,
but pressures are now growing to make them compete on an open
platform.<en>340</en> European regulators are calling for &#8220; open
document format&#8221; standards to prevent Microsoft from abusing its
proprietary standards in its Office suite of software. There are even
calls for open standards for avatars in virtual worlds like Second
Life, The Lounge, and Entropia Universe, so that our digital alter egos
can glide from one virtual community to another.<en>341</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="340">
		<number>340</number>
		<note>
			See,e.g., Walter S.Mossberg, &#8220; Free My Phone,&#8221; <i>Wall
Street Journal</i>, October 22, 2007, p. R1.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="341">
		<number>341</number>
		<note>
			Steve Lohr, &#8220; Free the Avatars,&#8221; New York Times,
October 15, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="818">
	<ocn>818</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Why this inexorable trend toward openness? Because on open networks,
excessive control can be counterproductive. The overall value that can
be created through interoperability is usually greater than the value
that any single player may reap from maintaining its own &#8220; walled
network.&#8221;<en>342</en> For a company to reap value from
interoperability, however, it must be willing to compete on an open
platform and it must be willing to share technical standards,
infrastructure, or content with others. Once this occurs, proprietary
gains come from competing to find more sophisticated ways to add value
in the production chain, rather than fighting to monopolize basic
resources. Advantage also accrues to the company that develops trusting
relationships with a community of customers.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="342">
		<number>342</number>
		<note>
			See Elliot E. Maxwell, &#8220; Open Standards, Open Source, and
Open Innovation: Harnessing the Benefits of Openness,&#8221;
<i>Innovations:Technology, Governance, Globalization</i> 1, no. 3
(Summer 2006), at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.emaxwell.net">http://www.emaxwell.net</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="819">
	<ocn>819</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Free software was one of the earliest demonstrations of the power of
online commons as a way to create value. In his classic 1997 essay
&#8220; The Cathedral and the Bazaar,&#8221; hacker Eric S. Raymond
provided a seminal analysis explaining how open networks make software
development more cost-effective and innovative than software developed
by a single firm.<en>343</en> A wide-open &#8220; bazaar&#8221; such as
the global Linux community can construct a more versatile operating
system than one designed by a closed &#8220; cathedral&#8221; such as
Microsoft. &#8220; With enough eyes, all bugs are shallow,&#8221;
Raymond famously declared. Yochai Benkler gave a more formal economic
reckoning of the value proposition of open networks in his pioneering
2002 essay &#8220; Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and the Nature of the
Firm.&#8221;<en>344</en> The title is a puckish commentary on how
GNU/Linux, whose mascot is a penguin, poses an empirical challenge to
economist Ronald Coase's celebrated &#8220; transaction cost&#8221;
theory of the firm. In 1937, Coase stated that the economic rationale
for forming a business enterprise is its ability to assert clear
property rights and manage employees and production more efficiently
than contracting out to the marketplace.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="343">
		<number>343</number>
		<note>
			Eric Raymond, &#8220; The Cathedral and the Bazaar,&#8221; May
1997, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar">http://www.catb.org/~esr/writings/cathedral-bazaar</link>&gt;.
The essay has been translated into nineteen languages to date.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="344">
		<number>344</number>
		<note>
			Yochai Benkler, &#8220; Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and the Nature
of the Firm,&#8221; <i>Yale Law Journal</i> 112, no. 369 (2002), at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.benkler.org/CoasesPenguin.html">http://www.benkler.org/CoasesPenguin.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="820">
	<ocn>820</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What is remarkable about peer production on open networks, said
Benkler, is that it undercuts the economic rationale for the firm;
commons-based peer production can perform certain tasks more
efficiently than a corporation. Those tasks must be modular and
divisible into small components and capable of being efficiently
integrated, Benkler stipulated. The larger point is that value is
created on open networks in very different ways than in conventional
markets. Asserting proprietary control on network platforms may prevent
huge numbers of people from giving your work (free) social visibility,
contributing new value to it, or remixing it. &#8220; The only thing
worse than being sampled on the Internet,&#8221; said Siva
Vaidhyanathan, with apologies to Oscar Wilde, &#8220; is not being
sampled on the Internet.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="821">
	<ocn>821</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The <i>New York Times</i>'s experience with its paid subscription
service, TimesSelect, offers a great example. The <i>Times</i> once
charged about fifty dollars a year for online access to its premier
columnists and news archives. Despite attracting more than 227,000
subscribers and generating about $10 million a year in revenue, the
<i>Times</i> discontinued the service in 2007.<en>345</en> A
<i>Times</i> executive explained that lost subscription revenues would
be more than offset by advertising to a much larger online readership
with free access. The <i>Financial Times</i> and the <i>Economist</i>
have dropped their paywalls, and the <i>Wall Street Journal</i> in
effect has done so by allowing free access via search engines and link
sites. From some leading citadels of capitalism, a rough consensus had
emerged: exclusivity can <i>decrease</i> the value of online
content.<en>346</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="345">
		<number>345</number>
		<note>
			Richard P&#233;rez-Pe&#241;a, &#8220; Times to Stop Charging for
Parts of Its Web Site,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, September 18,
2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="346">
		<number>346</number>
		<note>
			Frank Ahrens, &#8220; Web Sites, Tear Down That Wall,&#8221;
<i>Washington Post</i>, November 16, 2007, p. D1. See also Farhad
Manjoo, &#8220; The Wall Street Journal's Website Is Already (Secretly)
Free,&#8221; <i>Salon</i>, March 21, 2008, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://machinist.salon.com/blog/2008/03/21/wsj/index.html">http://machinist.salon.com/blog/2008/03/21/wsj/index.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="822">
	<ocn>822</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While enormous value can be created on open networks, it can take
different forms, notes David P. Reed, who studies information
architectures.<en>347</en> One of the most powerful types of network
value is what Reed calls &#8220; Group-Forming Networks,&#8221; or GFNs
&#8212; or what Benkler might call commons-based peer production and I
would call, less precisely, the commons. Reed talks about &#8220;
scale-driven value shifts&#8221; that occur as a network grows in size.
Greater value is created as a network moves from a broadcast model
(where &#8220; content is king&#8221;) to peer production (where
transactions dominate) and finally, to a group-forming network or
commons (where jointly constructed value is produced and shared).
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="347">
		<number>347</number>
		<note>
			David P. Reed, &#8220; The Sneaky Exponential &#8212; Beyond
Metcalfe's Law to the Power of Community Building,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.reed.com/Papers/GFN/reedslaw.html">http://www.reed.com/Papers/GFN/reedslaw.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="823">
	<ocn>823</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is unclear, as a theoretical matter, how to characterize the size
and behavior of various &#8220; value networks&#8221; on the Web today.
For simplicity's stake &#8212; and because Web platforms are evolving
so rapidly &#8212; I refer to two general value propositions, Web 2.0
and the commons. Web 2.0 is about creating new types of value through
participation in distributed open networks; the commons is a subset of
Web 2.0 that describes fairly distinct, self-governed communities that
focus on their own interests, which usually do not involve moneymaking.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="824">
	<ocn>824</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The rise of Web 2.0 platforms and the commons clearly has some serious
implications for business strategy and organization. Just consider how
Craigslist is displacing millions of dollars of classified newspaper
ads; how open-access journals are threatening the economic base of
commercial academic journals; and how usergenerated content is
competing with network television. At the same time, activities that
once occurred through informal social means (finding a date, organizing
a gathering, obtaining word-ofmouth recommendations) are increasingly
becoming commercial endeavors on the Web. Especially when the commons
has strong mechanisms to preserve its value-creating capacity, such as
the GPL, open networks are helping to convert more market activity into
commons-based activity, or at least shifting the boundary between
commodity markets and proprietary, high-value-added markets. As this
dynamic proceeds, the social and the commercial are blurring more than
ever before.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="825">
	<ocn>825</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Many &#8220; value chains&#8221; that have long sustained conventional
businesses are being disrupted. As described in chapter 5, more
efficient types of distributed media are disrupting the
production/distribution chain that sustains Centralized Media. The Long
Tail lets online consumers &#8220; pull&#8221; niche products that they
want rather than enduring a relentless marketing &#8220; push&#8221; of
products they don't want. Commons-based peer production is a nonmarket
version of the Long Tail: dispersed communities of people with niche
interests can find one another, form social communities, bypass the
market, and collaborate to create the niche resources that they want.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="826">
	<ocn>826</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The question facing many businesses is how to develop stable, long-term
business models that can coexist with productive commons, if not
leverage them for market gain. Their goal is to find ingenious ways to
&#8220; monetize&#8221; the social relationships of online communities
(by selling targeted advertising, personal data, niche products, etc.).
Open businesses aim to do this in a respectful, public-spirited way;
other, more traditional firms may have fewer scruples because, for
them, &#8220; it's all about the money.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="827">
	<ocn>827</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But here's the rub: a company can go only so far in monetizing the
value-generating capacities of a commons without enclosing it or
enraging the commoners. A company may consider itself shrewd for
acquiring the copyrights for user-generated content, for example, or
for blocking user access to third-party widgets that it disapproves
of.<en>348</en> But participants in Web 2.0 communities will protest or
simply leave if a corporate host starts to dictate obnoxious policies.
A company can try to run its Web 2.0 platform as a feudal fiefdom, but
it risks inciting users to revolt and start their own (nonmarket)
online communities, reinventing themselves as commoners. Although there
is an implicit social ethic to Web 2.0 platforms, none is necessarily
&#8220; free&#8221; in the Stallman sense of &#8220; freedom.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="348">
		<number>348</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Paula Lehman, &#8220; MySpace Plays Chicken with
Users,&#8221; BusinessWeek Online, April 12, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="828">
	<ocn>828</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unfortunately, there is no clear consensus about how exactly to define
an &#8220; open business.&#8221; Accordingly, assessments of their
social, political, or economic virtue can be slippery. Some analysts
such as Henry Chesbrough regard a business as &#8220; open&#8221; if it
relaxes or modifies its intellectual property controls, or changes its
organizational practices, as a way to reap value from open
networks.<en>349</en> Others believe that an open business should use
open-source software, and support the copying and sharing of works
through CC or other open-content licenses. Sometimes the idea of open
business is yoked to a vaguely defined notion of &#8220; social
responsibility.&#8221; It is not always clear whether this ethic is a
moral gloss or a structural feature, but in general open businesses
strive to practice a more open, accountable, and socially enlightened
vision of commerce.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="349">
		<number>349</number>
		<note>
			Henry Chesbrough, <i>Open Business Models: How to Thrive in the New
Innovation Landscape</i> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School Press,
2006).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="829">
	<ocn>829</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One champion of this vision is OpenBusiness, a Web site jointly created
by Creative Commons UK in partnership with CC Brazil and the FGV Law
School in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil. The mission of OpenBusiness is to
&#8220; analyze and explain models by which people can share their
knowledge and creativity with others whilst at the same time enjoying
the more traditional incentives of profit, individual success and
societal advancement.&#8221;<en>350</en> By its lights, an open
business is commons-friendly if it is committed to &#8220;
transparency,&#8221; &#8220; sustainable systems,&#8221; and to putting
&#8220; the health and welfare of people above everything else.&#8221;
An open business also tries to generate as many &#8220; positive
externalities&#8221; as possible &#8212; knowledge, social
relationships, revenues &#8212; which it is willing to share with its
stakeholders.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="350">
		<number>350</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.openbusiness.org">http://www.openbusiness.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="830">
	<ocn>830</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is perhaps best to approach open businesses as an eclectic social
phenomenon in search of a theory. As it has been said about Wikipedia,
&#8220; It works in practice, but not in theory.&#8221;<en>351</en> It
is risky to overtheorize phenomena that are still fluid and emerging.
Still, specific examples of open business can help us understand some
basic principles of open networks, and how some businesses are using CC
licenses to build innovative sorts of enterprises.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="351">
		<number>351</number>
		<note>
			From blog of Professor Karim Lakhani, Harvard Business School,
April 27, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="831">
	<ocn>831</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Share the Wealth, Grow a Commercial Ecosystem
	</text>
</object>
<object id="832">
	<ocn>832</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The idea that a company can make money by giving away something for
free seems so counterintuitive, if not ridiculous, that conventional
business people tend to dismiss it. Sometimes they protesteth too much,
as when Microsoft's Steve Ballmer compared the GNU GPL to a &#8220;
cancer&#8221; and lambasted open-source software as having &#8220;
characteristics of communism.&#8221;<en>352</en> In truth, &#8220;
sharing the wealth&#8221; has become a familiar strategy for companies
seeking to develop new technology markets. The company that is the
first mover in an emerging commercial ecosystem is likely to become the
dominant player, which may enable it to extract a disproportionate
share of future market rents. Giving away one's code or content can be
a great way to become a dominant first mover.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="352">
		<number>352</number>
		<note>
			Joe Wilcox and Stephen Shankland, &#8220; Why Microsoft is wary of
open source,&#8221; CNET, June 18, 2001; and Lea, Graham, &#8220; MS'
Ballmer: Linux is communism,&#8221; <i>Register</i> (U.K.), July 31,
2000.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="833">
	<ocn>833</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Netscape was one of the first to demonstrate the power of this model
with its release of its famous Navigator browser in 1994. The free
distribution to Internet users helped develop the Web as a social and
technological ecosystem, while helping fuel sales of Netscape's Web
server software. (This was before Microsoft arrived on the scene with
its Internet Explorer, but that's another story.) At a much larger
scale, IBM saw enormous opportunities for building a better product by
using GNU/Linux. The system would let IBM leverage other people's
talents at a fraction of the cost and strengthen its service
relationships with customers. The company now earns more than $2
billion a year from Linux-related services.<en>353</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="353">
		<number>353</number>
		<note>
			Yochai Benkler, <i>The Wealth of Networks</i> (Yale University
Press, 2006), Figure 2.1 on p. 47.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="834">
	<ocn>834</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Today, sharing and openness are key to many business strategies.
&#8220; Open Source: Now It's an Ecosystem,&#8221; wrote
<i>BusinessWeek</i> in 2005, describing the &#8220; gold rush&#8221; of
venture capital firms investing in startups with open-source products.
Most of them planned to give away their software via the Web and charge
for premium versions or for training, maintenance, and
support.<en>354</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="354">
		<number>354</number>
		<note>
			&#8220; Open Source: Now It's an Ecosystem,&#8221; BusinessWeek
Online, October 3, 2005.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="835">
	<ocn>835</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The pioneers in using open platforms to develop commercial ecosystems
on the Internet are Amazon, Google, Yahoo, and eBay. Each has devised
systems that let third-party software developers and businesses extend
their platform with new applications and business synergies. Each uses
systems that dynamically leverage users' social behaviors and so
stimulate business &#8212; for example, customer recommendations about
books, search algorithms that identify the most popular Web sites, and
reputation systems that enhance consumer confidence in sellers. Even
Microsoft, eager to expand the ecology of developers using its
products, has released 150 of its source code distributions under three
&#8220; Shared Source&#8221; licenses, two of which meet the Free
Software Foundation's definition of &#8220; free.&#8221;<en>355</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="355">
		<number>355</number>
		<note>
			Microsoft's Shared Source Licenses, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.microsoft.com/resources/sharedsource/licensingbasics/sharedsourcelicenses.mspx">http://www.microsoft.com/resources/sharedsource/licensingbasics/sharedsourcelicenses.mspx</link>&gt;;
see also Lessig blog, &#8220; Microsoft Releases Under
ShareAlike,&#8221; June 24, 2005, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://lessig.org/blog/2005/06/microsoft_releases_under_share.html">http://lessig.org/blog/2005/06/microsoft_releases_under_share.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="836">
	<ocn>836</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		More recently, Facebook has used its phenomenal reach &#8212; more than
80 million active users worldwide &#8212; as a platform for growing a
diversified ecology of applications. The company allows software
developers to create custom software programs that do such things as
let users share reviews of favorite books, play Scrabble or poker with
others online, or send virtual gifts to friends. Some apps are just for
fun; others are the infrastructure for independent businesses that sell
products and services or advertise. In September 2007, Facebook had
more than two thousand software applications being used by at least one
hundred people.<en>356</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="356">
		<number>356</number>
		<note>
			Vauhini Vara, &#8220; Facebook Gets Help from Its Friends,&#8221;
Wall Street Journal, June 22, 2007. See also Riva Richmond, &#8220; Why
So Many Want to Create Facebook Applications,&#8221; <i>Wall Street
Journal</i>, September 4, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="837">
	<ocn>837</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Open Content as a Gateway to Commercial Opportunities
	</text>
</object>
<object id="838">
	<ocn>838</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Of course, not every business can own a major platform, as Google,
eBay, and Facebook do. Still, there are many other opportunities. One
of the most popular is to use open platforms to attract an audience,
and then strike a deal with an advertiser or commercial distributor, or
sell premium services (&#8220;get discovered&#8221;). Another approach
is to use open content to forge a spirited community to which things
may be sold (&#8220;build a market on a commons&#8221;).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="839">
	<ocn>839</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i>Get discovered.</i></b> This dynamic has been played out
countless times on YouTube, MySpace, Facebook, and other high-traffic
social networking sites. An unknown remix artist suddenly becomes
famous when his track is discovered by a network swarm: the story of DJ
Danger Mouse that we saw in chapter 6. A band attracts a huge following
through viral word of mouth: the story of Jake Shapiro and Two Ton
Shoe's stardom in South Korea. There are even calculated scams to get
discovered, like the lonelygirl15 series of videos purportedly shot by
a teenage girl in her bedroom, which became a huge Internet sensation
in 2006.<en>357</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="357">
		<number>357</number>
		<note>
			Joshua Davis, &#8220; The Secret World of Lonelygirl,&#8221; Wired,
December 2006, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.12/lonelygirl.html">http://www.wired.com/wired/archive/14.12/lonelygirl.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="840">
	<ocn>840</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As any television network will tell you, the capacity to aggregate
audiences is worth a lot of money. The customary way of monetizing this
talent is to sell advertising. Or one can parlay newfound name
recognition into side deals with the mass media, which have always
depended upon &#8220; star power&#8221; as a draw. Thus, Ana Marie Cox
was able to parley her notoriety as a political gossip on her Wonkette
blog into a job as Washington editor of <i>Time</i> magazine. Perez
Hilton, a Hollywood blogger who attracted a following, was offered a
lucrative perch at the E! cable television channel. We saw in chapter 6
how producer Samuli Torssonen's <i>Star Wreck</i> attracted millions of
Internet viewers, enabling him to strike a deal with Universal Studios
to distribute a DVD version. With the same visions of stardom, or at
least paying gigs, in mind, thousands of bands now have fan sites,
music downloads, and banner ads on MySpace and other sites to promote
themselves.<en>358</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="358">
		<number>358</number>
		<note>
			Elizabeth Holmes, &#8220; Famous, Online,&#8221; <i>Wall Street
Journal</i>, August 8, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="841">
	<ocn>841</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC NonCommercial license is one way to help pursue the &#8220; get
discovered&#8221; business strategy. The license allows authors to seek
a global Internet audience without having to cede rights to any
commercial opportunities. It is not, however, a terribly reliable way
to make money, which is why some artists, especially musicians, find
fault with the implicit promise of the NC license. Many serious artists
regard the NC license as too speculative a mechanism to get paid for
one's creative work. It is a fair complaint, as far as it goes. The
real problem is the closed, highly concentrated music industry, which
has a hammerlock on marketing, radio play, and distribution. Newcomers
and mid-tier talent cannot get past the corporate gatekeepers to reach
an audience, let alone make money.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="842">
	<ocn>842</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In an attempt to bridge the sharing economy with the market, and
thereby open up some new channels of commercial distribution for
commoners, the Creative Commons in late 2007 introduced a new protocol,
CC+. The new project aims to make it easier for the owners of
NC-licensed content to signal that agreements, products, or services
beyond the scope of the CC licenses are on offer &#8212; for example,
commercial licensing, warranties, or higherquality copies. A
photographer who has hundreds of NC-licensed photos on Flickr would be
able to continue to let people use those photos for noncommercial
purposes &#8212; but through CC+, he could also sell licensing rights
to those who want to use the photos for commercial purposes. CC+ is a
metadata architecture and standard that allows third-party
intermediaries to develop services for consummating commercial
transactions. People can use CC+ as a simple &#8220;
click-through&#8221; mechanism for acquiring commercial rights for
music, photos, text, and other content.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="843">
	<ocn>843</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the earliest &#8220; copyright management&#8221; companies to
take advantage of the CC+ standard was RightsAgent, a Cambridge,
Massachusetts, company founded by Rudy Rouhana. RightsAgent essentially
acts as a go-between for people who create NC-licensed works on the Web
and those who wish to buy rights to use them for commercial purposes.
Just as PayPal facilitates the exchange of money on the Internet, so
RightsAgent aspires to be a paid intermediary for facilitating the sale
of user-generated content.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="844">
	<ocn>844</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The rise of CC+ and associated companies brings to mind Niva
Elkin-Koren's warning that the Creative Commons licenses can be a
slippery slope that merely promotes a property-oriented, transactional
mentality &#8212; the opposite of the commons. On the other hand, many
people operating in the noncommercial sharing economy, such as
musicians and photographers, have long complained that, as much as they
enjoy participating in the commons, they still need to earn a
livelihood.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="845">
	<ocn>845</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Revver is another company that has developed an ingenious way to
promote the sharing of content, yet still monetize it based on the
scale of its circulation. Revver is a Los Angeles&#8211;based startup
that hosts user-generated video. All videos are embedded with a special
tracking tag that displays an ad at the end. Like Google's AdWords
system, which charges advertisers for user &#8220;
click-throughs&#8221; on ad links adjacent to Web content, Revver
charges advertisers for every time a viewer clicks on an ad. The number
of ad views can be tabulated, and Revver splits ad revenues 50-50 with
video creators. Key to the whole business model is the use of the CC
AttributionNonCommercial-No Derivatives license. The license allows the
videos to be legally shared, but prohibits anyone from modifying them
or using them for commercial purposes.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="846">
	<ocn>846</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the most-viewed videos on Revver sparked a minor pop trend. It
showed kids dropping Mentos candies into bottles of CocaCola, which
produces an explosive chemical reaction. The video is said to have
generated around $30,000.<en>359</en> So is new media going to feature
silly cat videos and stupid stunts? Steven Starr, a co-founder of
Revver, concedes the ubiquity of such videos, but is quick to point to
&#8220; budding auteurs like Goodnight Burbank, Happy Slip, Studio8 and
LoadingReadyRun, all building audiences.&#8221; He also notes that
online, creators &#8220; can take incredible risks with format and
genre, can grow their own audience at a fraction of network costs, can
enjoy free syndication, hosting, audience-building and ad services at
their disposal.&#8221;<en>360</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="359">
		<number>359</number>
		<note>
			Revver entry at Wikipedia, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revver">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Revver</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="360">
		<number>360</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Steven Starr, &#8220; Is Web TV a Threat to
TV?&#8221; Wall Street Journal, August 7, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118530221391976425.html">http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118530221391976425.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="847">
	<ocn>847</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Blip.tv is another video content-sharing Web site that splits ad
revenues with video creators (although it is not automatic; users must
&#8220; opt in&#8221;). Unlike many videos on YouTube and Revver,
blip.tv tends to feature more professional-quality productions and
serialized episodes, in part because its founders grew out of the
&#8220; videoblogging&#8221; community. Blip.tv espouses an open
business ethic, with shout-outs to &#8220; democratization, openness,
and sustainability.&#8221; While there is a tradition for companies to
spout their high-minded principles, blip.tv puts some bite into this
claim by offering an open platform that supports many video formats and
open metadata standards. And it allows content to be downloaded and
shared on other sites. Users can also apply Creative Commons licenses
to their videos, which can then be identified by CC-friendly search
engines. For all these reasons, Lessig has singled out blip.tv as a
&#8220; true sharing site,&#8221; in contrast to YouTube, which he
calls a &#8220; faking sharing site&#8221; that &#8220; gives you tools
to <i>make</i> it seem as if there's sharing, but in fact, all the
tools drive traffic and control back to a single
site.&#8221;<en>361</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="361">
		<number>361</number>
		<note>
			Lessig blog post, &#8220; The Ethics of Web 2.0,&#8221; October 20,
2006, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/003570.shtml">http://www.lessig.org/blog/archives/003570.shtml</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="848">
	<ocn>848</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig's blog post on blip.tv provoked a heated response from blogger
Nicholas Carr, a former executive editor of the <i>Harvard Business
Review</i>. The contretemps is worth a close look because it
illuminates the tensions between Web 2.0 as a business platform and Web
2.0 as a commons platform. In castigating YouTube as a &#8220; fake
sharing site,&#8221; Carr accused Lessig of sounding like Chairman Mao
trying to root out counterrevolutionary forces (that is, capitalism)
with &#8220; the ideology of digital communalism.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="849">
	<ocn>849</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Like Mao, Lessig and his comrades are not only on the wrong side of
human nature and the wrong side of culture; they're also on the wrong
side of history. They fooled themselves into believing that Web 2.0 was
introducing a new economic system &#8212; a system of &#8220; social
production&#8221; &#8212; that would serve as the foundation of a
democratic, utopian model of culture creation. They were wrong. Web
2.0's economic system has turned out to be, in effect if not intent, a
system of exploitation rather than a system of emancipation. By putting
the means of production into the hands of the masses but withholding
from those same masses any ownership over the product of their work,
Web 2.0 provides an incredibly efficient mechanism to harvest the
economic value of the free labor provided by the very, very many and
concentrate it into the hands of the very, very few.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="850">
	<ocn>850</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The Cultural Revolution is over. It ended before it even began. The
victors are the counterrevolutionaries. And they have $1.65 billion [a
reference to the sale price of YouTube to Google] to prove
it.<en>362</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="362">
		<number>362</number>
		<note>
			Nicholas G. Carr, &#8220; Web 2.0lier than Thou,&#8221; Rough Type
blog, October 23, 2006. Joichi Ito has a thoughtful response in his
blog, &#8220; Is YouTube Web 2.0?&#8221; October 22, 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://joi.ito.com/archives/2006/10/22/is_youtube_web_20.html">http://joi.ito.com/archives/2006/10/22/is_youtube_web_20.html</link>&gt;;
and Lessig responded to Carr in his blog, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://lessig.org/blog/2006/10/stuck_in_the_20th_century_or_t.html">http://lessig.org/blog/2006/10/stuck_in_the_20th_century_or_t.html</link>&gt;.
The &#8220; communism discourse&#8221; persists, and not just among
critics of free culture. Lawrence Liang of CC India used this epigraph
in a book on open-content licenses: &#8220; There is a specter haunting
cultural production, the specter of open content licensing.&#8221;
which he attributes to &#8220; Karl Marx (reworked for the digital
era).&#8221; From Liang, <i>Guide to Open Content Licenses</i>
(Rotterdam, Netherlands: Piet Zwart Institute, Institute for
Postgraduate Studies and Research, Willem de Kooning Academy
Hogeschool, 2004).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="851">
	<ocn>851</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lessig's response, a warm-up for a new book, <i>Remix</i>, released in
late 2008, pointed out that there are really <i>three</i> different
economies on the Internet &#8212; commercial, sharing, and hybrid. The
hybrid economy now emerging is difficult to understand, he suggested,
because it &#8220; neither gives away everything, nor does it keep
everything.&#8221; The challenge of open business models, Lessig
argues, is to discover the &#8220; golden mean.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="852">
	<ocn>852</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It can be hard to conceptualize a &#8220; hybrid sector&#8221; when we
are accustomed to dividing the world into &#8220; private&#8221; and
&#8220; public&#8221; sectors, and &#8220; profit-making&#8221; and
&#8220; nonprofit&#8221; enterprises. Open business models quickly run
up against deep-seated prejudices that associate property with &#8220;
freedom&#8221; and sharing with &#8220; communism.&#8221; How can there
be a middle ground? Although some like Nicholas Carr seem to hanker for
the predatory enterprises of an earlier capitalism, only this time on
Web 2.0 platforms, that is not likely to happen in a world of
distributed computing. Power is too dispersed for predators to survive
very long, and besides, the commoners are too empowered.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="853">
	<ocn>853</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<b><i> Build a market on a commons.</i></b> A number of online business
models are based on building communities of deep social affection and
respect, and then using the community as a platform for selling
merchandise, advertising, or products. Interestingly, some of the most
successful &#8220; customer relationship&#8221; models revolve around
music. The Grateful Dead's strategy of building a business around a
rabid fan base (discussed in chapter 6) occurred well before the
Internet became prevalent. It is paradigmatic of the digital age,
nonetheless. If the band had locked up its music and prohibited free
taping of its concert performances and sharing of homemade tapes, it
would have effectively weakened the fan base that sustained its
business model. Sharing concert tapes actually made Deadheads more
inclined to buy t-shirts, official music releases, and concert tickets
because the tape sharing deepened the community's identity and
quasi-spiritual ethic. The Grateful Dead's focus on touring as opposed
to studio albums not only intensified the sharing ethic of its fan
base, it obliged the band to &#8220; keep on truckin' &#8221; in order
to keep earning money.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="854">
	<ocn>854</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Brazilian <i>tecnobrega</i> music scene discussed briefly in
chapter 7 is another example of artists making money through
respectful, in-person relationships with their fans. In the town of
Bel&#233;m, Brazil, <i>tecnobrega</i> artists release about four
hundred CDs every year, but none are sold in stores; street vendors
sell them for $1.50 apiece. The CDs function mostly as advertising for
live &#8220; sound system&#8221; parties on the outskirts of town that
attract as many as five thousand people and use state-of-the-art audio
technology. Immediately following the performances, some artists also
sell a significant number of &#8220; instant CDs&#8221; that are of
better quality (and more expensive) than those sold in the streets.
(Interestingly, street sales do not compete with after-concert sales.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="855">
	<ocn>855</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; In their live presentations, the tecnobrega DJ's usually
acknowledge the presence of people from various neighborhoods, and this
acknowledgement is of great value to the audience, leading thousands of
buy copies of the recorded live presentation,&#8221; said Ronaldo Lemos
of CC Brazil, who has studied Brazil's record industry.<en>363</en> The
same basic model is also at work in other grassroots musical genres in
Brazil, such as baile funk, which originated in the shantytowns of Rio
de Janeiro.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="363">
		<number>363</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Ronaldo Lemos, September 15, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="856">
	<ocn>856</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Artists make most of their money from these live performances, not from
CDs, said Lemos. Bands earn an average of $1,100 per solo performance
at these events, and $700 when playing with other bands &#8212; this,
in a region where the average monthly income is $350. Altogether, Lemos
estimates that the sound system parties as a business sector earn $1.5
million per month, on fixed assets of $8 million.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="857">
	<ocn>857</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The band Calypso has been approached several times by
traditional record labels,&#8221; said Lemos, &#8220; but they turned
down all the offers. The reason is that they make more money by means
of the existing business model. In an interview with the largest
Brazilian newspaper, the singer of the band said, &#8216; We do not
fight the pirates. We have become big <i>because</i> of piracy, which
has taken our music to cities where they would never have been.'
&#8221; Calypso has sold more than 5 million albums in Brazil and is
known for attracting as many as fifty thousand people to its concerts,
Lemos said.<en>364</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="364">
		<number>364</number>
		<note>
			Ronaldo Lemos, &#8220; From Legal Commons to Social Commons:
Developing Countries and the Cultural Industry in the 21st
Century,&#8221; 2006, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.icommons.org/resources/from-legal-commons-to-social-commons-brazil-and-the-cultural-industry-1">http://www.icommons.org/resources/from-legal-commons-to-social-commons-brazil-and-the-cultural-industry-1</link>&gt;.
See Paula Martini post on iCommons blog, &#8220; Over the Top: The New
(and Bigger) Cultural Industry in Brazil,&#8221; September 28, 2007, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.icommons.org/articles/over-the-top-thenew-and-bigger-cultural-industry-in-brazil">http://www.icommons.org/articles/over-the-top-thenew-and-bigger-cultural-industry-in-brazil</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="858">
	<ocn>858</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another highly successful open business model in the Brazilian music
scene is TramaVirtual, an open platform on which more than 15,000
musicians have uploaded some 35,000 albums. Fans can then download the
music for free. While this does not sound like a promising business
proposition, it makes a lot of sense in the context of Brazil's music
marketplace. Major record labels release a minuscule number of new
Brazilian music CDs each year, and they sell for about $10 to
$15.<en>365</en> Only the cultured elite can afford music CDs, and the
native musical talent &#8212; which is plentiful in Brazil &#8212; has
no place to go. With such a constricted marketplace, TramaVirtual has
become hugely popular by showcasing new and interesting music.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="365">
		<number>365</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="859">
	<ocn>859</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		TramaVirtual's artistic and social cachet &#8212; itself the product of
open sharing in a commons &#8212; has enabled it to develop a highly
respected brand identity. &#8220; By exploiting the trademark,&#8221;
said Lemos, &#8220; Trama has been able to create parallel businesses
that work with music, but not in the same way that a record label
does.&#8221;<en>366</en> For instance, Trama created a business that
sponsors free concerts at universities under its trademark sponsorship.
It then sells marketing rights at the concerts to cosmetic makers and
car companies. Musicians have gained wide public exposure through
Trama, and then used that association to negotiate international record
and marketing deals for themselves. CSS (Cansei de Ser Sexy) won a
record contract with the American label Sub Pop, for example.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="366">
		<number>366</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Ronaldo Lemos, November 6, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="860">
	<ocn>860</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For the past five years, a related business model for music on an
international scale has been emerging in Luxembourg. In only three
years, Jamendo has amassed a huge international following in much the
same way as TramaVirtual &#8212; by attracting music fans to its open
platform for free music sharing. (The name <i>Jamendo</i> is a mix of
the words <i>jam</i> and <i>crescendo</i>.) The site is not a music
retailer but a repository for free music &#8212; with a business model
overlay to pay the bills. Jamendo's purpose is not to maximize returns
to shareholders, in other words, but to service musicians and fans in a
self-sustaining way. It makes most of its money from &#8220; tip
jar&#8221; donations from fans and from advertising on the Web pages
and streamed music. Ad revenues are shared 50-50 with artists, and any
donations are passed along to individual artists, minus a small
transaction fee.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="861">
	<ocn>861</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Jamendo community is sizable and growing. By 2008 it had more than
357,000 active members from around the world. Part of the draw is the
catalog of more than 10,000 albums, all free. Unlike Magnatune, Jamendo
does not select the artists that are featured on its site; everyone is
welcome to upload his or her music. To help fans identify music they
like, the site offers many sophisticated tools. There are some 60,000
member-written reviews, custom playlists, community ratings of albums,
and &#8220; folksonomy&#8221; tags for albums and songs.<en>*9</en>
Fans are <i>urged</i> to download music through peerto-peer networks
such as BitTorrent and eMule because it reduces Jamendo's bandwidth
expenses.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*9">
		<symbol>*9</symbol>
		<note>
			Folksonomies, a cross of <i>taxonomy</i> and <i>folk</i>, are
essentially user-generated tags attached to each song and album, which
enables categories of music to emerge from the &#8220; bottom
up,&#8221; as fans regard the music, rather than through top-down
marketing categories.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="862">
	<ocn>862</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Users can listen, download, review, remix, and &#8216;
widgetize,'&#8221; said Sylvain Zimmer, the founder and chief
technology officer of Jamendo. As part of its commitment to musicians,
the site has a forum for artists and listings of concerts, as well as
open APIs<en>*10</en> so the Jamendo ecosystem can be integrated into
other software.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*10">
		<symbol>*10</symbol>
		<note>
			An API is an &#8220; application programming interface,&#8221; a
set of protocols that enable a software application to operate on a
computer operating system, library, or service. Many companies use
proprietary APIs to retain control over who may develop applications
that will interoperate with their software. Other companies that wish
to encourage development of compatible applications&#8212; and thus
promote a software ecosystem entwined with the operating system or
service &#8212; use open APIs.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="863">
	<ocn>863</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What's striking about Jamendo is its nonchalant international feel, as
if it were only natural to browse for &#8220; deathmetal,&#8221;
&#8220; powerpop,&#8221; &#8220; hypnotique,&#8221; &#8220;
ambient,&#8221; &#8220; psytrance,&#8221; and &#8220; jazzrock&#8221;
on the same site. (These are just a few of the scores of folksonomy
tags that can be used to browse the catalog.) &#8220; We are a Babel,
not a label,&#8221; said Zimmer, who reports that India and Japan are
heavy downloaders of Jamendo music. Complete, official versions of the
site are available in French, the original language for the site, and
now English and German. Incomplete versions of the site are available
in Spanish, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, Turkish, Italian, Swedish,
Czech, and Ukrainian.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="864">
	<ocn>864</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Virtually all the albums on Jamendo use one or more of the six basic CC
licenses. The CC ethic is a perfect match for the company's
community-driven business model, said Zimmer. &#8220; The best way of
detecting CC-incompatible content and commercial uses of NC-licensed
work is the community. The Creative Commons makes the community feel
more confident and active.&#8221;<en>367</en> He adds that if the
site's managers run too many ads, &#8220; the community will tell
you.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="367">
		<number>367</number>
		<note>
			Sylvain Zimmer of Jamendo, presentation at iCommons Summit,
Dubrovnik, Croatia, June 15, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="865">
	<ocn>865</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Commoners as Co-creators of Value
	</text>
</object>
<object id="866">
	<ocn>866</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For businesses operating on open networks, it is a mistake to regard
people merely as customers; they are collaborators and even
coinvestors. As more companies learn to interact closely with their
customers, it is only natural that conversations about the product or
service become more intimate and collaborative. The roles of the
&#8220; consumer&#8221; and &#8220; producer&#8221; are starting to
blur, leading to what some business analysts call the &#8220;
prosumer&#8221;<en>368</en> and the &#8220; decentralized co-creation
of value.&#8221;<en>369</en> The basic idea is that online social
communities are becoming staging areas for the advancement of business
objectives. Businesses see these communities as cost-effective ways to
identify promising innovations, commercialize them more rapidly, tap
into more reliable market intelligence, and nurture customer goodwill.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="368">
		<number>368</number>
		<note>
			Don Tapscott and Anthony D. Williams, <i>Wikinomics: How Mass
Collaboration Changes Everything</i> (New York Portfolio, 2006),
chapter 5, &#8220; The Prosumers.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="369">
		<number>369</number>
		<note>
			David Bollier, <i>The Rise of Collective Intelligence:
Decentralized Co-creation of Value as a New Paradigm of Commerce and
Culture</i> (Washington, DC: Aspen Institute Communications and Society
Program, 2008).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="867">
	<ocn>867</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Amateurs who share with one another through a loose social commons have
always been a source of fresh ideas. Tech analyst Elliot Maxwell
(citing Lessig) notes how volunteers helped compile the <i>Oxford
English Dictionary</i> by contributing examples of vernacular usage;
how the Homebrew Computer Club in the San Francisco Bay area developed
many elements of the first successful personal computer; and how
sharing among auto enthusiasts helped generate many of the most
important early automotive innovations.<en>370</en> In our time,
hackers were the ones who developed ingenious ways to use unlicensed
electromagnetic spectrum as a commons, which we now know as Wi-Fi. They
tinkered with the iPod to come up with podcasts, a new genre of
broadcasting that commercial broadcasters now emulate.<en>371</en>
Numerous self-organized commons have incubated profitable businesses.
Two movie buffs created the Internet Movie Database as separate Usenet
newsgroups in 1989; six years later they had grown so large that they
had merged and converted into a business that was later sold to
Amazon.<en>372</en> The Compact Disc Database was a free database of
software applications that looks up information about audio CDs via the
Internet. It was originally developed by a community of music fans as a
shared database, but in 2000 it had grown big enough that it was sold
and renamed Gracenote.<en>373</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="370">
		<number>370</number>
		<note>
			Elliot Maxwell, &#8220; Open Standards, Open Source, and Open
Innovation: Harnessing the Benefits of Openness,&#8221;
<i>Innovations:Technology, Governance, Globalization</i> 1, no. 3
(Summer 2006), at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.emaxwell.net">http://www.emaxwell.net</link>&gt;,
p. 150.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="371">
		<number>371</number>
		<note>
			Elliot E. Maxwell drew my attention to these examples in his
excellent essay &#8220; Open Standards, Open Source, and Open
Innovation.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="372">
		<number>372</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry, IMDB, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Movie_Database">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Movie_Database</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="373">
		<number>373</number>
		<note>
			Wikipedia entry, CDDB, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CDDB">http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CDDB</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="868">
	<ocn>868</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A commons can be highly generative because its participants are
tinkering and innovating for their own sake &#8212; for fun, to meet a
challenge, to help someone out. Amateurs are not constrained by
conventional business ideas about what may be marketable and
profitable. They do not have to meet the investment expectations of
venture capitalists and Wall Street. Yet once promising new ideas do
surface in the commons, market players can play a useful role in
supplying capital and management expertise to develop, improve, and
commercialize an invention.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="869">
	<ocn>869</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Because online commons are such a rich source of new ideas, the most
farsighted companies are trying to learn how they might be harnessed to
help them innovate and compete more effectively. MIT professor Eric von
Hippel is one of the foremost researchers of this process. His 2005
book <i>Democratizing Innovation</i> describes how the leading
participants in high-performance sports &#8212; extreme skiing,
mountain biking, skateboarding, surfing, and hot-rodding &#8212; are
forming &#8220; innovation communities&#8221; that work closely with
manufacturers.<en>374</en> The most active practitioners of these
sports are intimately familiar with the equipment and have their own
imaginative ideas about what types of innovations the sport needs.
Indeed, many of them have already jerry-rigged their own innovations
&#8212; better cockpit ventilation in sailplanes, improved boot and
bindings on snowboards, a method for cutting loose a trapped rope used
by canyon climbers. For companies willing to listen to and collaborate
with users, says von Hippel, &#8220; communities of interest are
morphing into communities of creation and communities of
production.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="374">
		<number>374</number>
		<note>
			Eric von Hippel, <i>Democratizing Innovation</i> (Cambridge, MA:
MIT Press, 2005), available at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://mitpress.mit.edu/democratizing_innovation_pdf">http://mitpress.mit.edu/democratizing_innovation_pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="870">
	<ocn>870</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Users that innovate can develop exactly what they want, rather
than relying on manufacturers to act as their (often very imperfect)
agents,&#8221; von Hippel writes. &#8220; Moreover, individuals users
do not have to develop everything they need on their own: they can
benefit from innovations developed and freely shared by
others.&#8221;<en>375</en> Besides finding empirical examples of this
trend, von Hippel has developed a theoretical vocabulary for
understanding how collaborative innovation occurs. He probes the user
motivations for &#8220; free revealing&#8221; of their knowledge, the
attractive economics that fuel &#8220; users' low-cost innovation
niches,&#8221; and the public policies that sometimes thwart
user-driven innovation (patent rights for a field may be fragmented,
anticopying restrictions such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
may prevent user tinkering, etc.).
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="375">
		<number>375</number>
		<note>
			Ibid., p. 1
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="871">
	<ocn>871</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		User-driven innovation is not as esoteric as the &#8220; extreme
sports&#8221; examples may suggest. It is, in fact, a growing paradigm.
In one of the more celebrated examples, Lego, the Danish toymaker,
invited some of its most fanatic users to help it redesign its
Mindstorms robotics kit. The kits are meant to let kids (and adults)
build a variety of customized robots out of a wild assortment of
plastic Lego pieces, programmable software, sensors, and
motors.<en>376</en> In 2004, when some Lego users reverse-engineered
the robotic &#8220; brain&#8221; for the Mindstorms kit and put their
findings on the Internet, Lego at first contemplated legal action. Upon
reflection, however, Lego realized that hackers could be a valuable
source of new ideas for making its forthcoming Mindstorms kit more
interesting and cool.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="376">
		<number>376</number>
		<note>
			Tapscott and Williams, <i>Wikinomics</i>, pp. 130&#8211;31.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="872">
	<ocn>872</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Lego decided to write a &#8220; right to hack&#8221; provision into the
Mindstorms software license, &#8220; giving hobbyists explicit
permission to let their imaginations run wild,&#8221; as Brendan I.
Koerner wrote in <i>Wired</i> magazine. &#8220; Soon, dozens of Web
sites were hosting thirdparty programs that help Mindstorms users build
robots that Lego had never dreamed of: soda machines, blackjack
dealers, even toilet scrubbers. Hardware mavens designed sensors that
were far more sophisticated than the touch and light sensors included
in the factory kit.&#8221;<en>377</en> It turns out that not only are
Lego fans happy to advise the company, the open process &#8220;
engenders goodwill and creates a buzz among the zealots, a critical
asset for products like Mindstorms that rely on word-of-mouth
evangelism,&#8221; said Koerner. In the end, he concluded, the
Mindstorm community of fanatics has done &#8220; far more to add value
to Lego's robotics kit than the company itself.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="377">
		<number>377</number>
		<note>
			Brendan I. Koerner, &#8220; Geeks in Toyland,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>,
February 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="873">
	<ocn>873</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Another improbable success in distributed, user-driven innovation is
Threadless, a Chicago-based t-shirt company. Threadless sells hundreds
of original t-shirt designs, each of which is selected by the user
community from among more than eight hundred designs submitted every
week. The proposed designs are rated on a scale of one to five by the
Web site's more than 600,000 active users. Winners receive cash awards,
recognition on the Web site, and their names on the t-shirt label.
Every week, Threadless offers six to ten new t-shirts featuring the
winning designs.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="874">
	<ocn>874</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2006, the company sold more than 1.5 million t-shirts without any
traditional kind of marketing. Its business model is so rooted in the
user community that Threadless co-founders Jake Nickell and Jacob
DeHart have declined offers to sell their t-shirts through
conventional, big-name retailers. Threadless's business model has
helped it overcome two major challenges in the apparel industry, write
Harvard Business School professor Karim R. Lakhani and consultant Jill
A. Panetta &#8212; the ability &#8220; to attract the right design
talent at the right time to create recurring fashion hits,&#8221; and
the ability &#8220; to forecast sales so as to be better able to match
production cycles with demand cycles.&#8221;<en>378</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="378">
		<number>378</number>
		<note>
			Karim R. Lakhani and Jill A. Panetta, &#8220; The Principles of
Distributed Innovation,&#8221; Research Publication No. 2007-7, Berkman
Center for Internet &amp; Society, Harvard Law School, October 2007, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://papers.ssrn.com/abstract_id=1021034">http://papers.ssrn.com/abstract_id=1021034</link>&gt;.
See also Darren Dahl, &#8220; Nice Threads,&#8221; <i>Southwest
Airlines Spirit</i>, December 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="875">
	<ocn>875</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A number of companies have started successful enterprises based on the
use of wikis, the open Web platforms that allow anyone to contribute
and edit content and collaborate. Evan Prodromou, the founder of
Wikitravel, a free set of worldwide travel guides, has identified four
major types of wiki businesses: service providers who sell access to
wikis (Wikispace, wetpaint, PBwiki); content hosters of wikis (wikiHow,
Wikitravel, Wikia); consultants who advise companies how to run their
own wikis (Socialtext); and content developers (WikiBiz, an offshoot of
Wikipedia).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="876">
	<ocn>876</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Since the success of a wiki-based business depends upon honoring the
integrity of wiki users, Prodromou scorns what he sees as the
backhanded strategies of business models based on &#8220;
wikinomics&#8221; and &#8220; crowdsourcing.&#8221; He sees such models
as sly attempts to get &#8220; suckers&#8221; to do free work for the
entrepreneur owning the business. A sustainable commercial wiki, said
Prodromou at a conference, respects the community of users and does not
try to exploit them. It strives to fulfill a &#8220; noble
purpose&#8221; for users and demonstrate in a transparent way that it
offers value. Any hint of trickery or calculation begins to sow
distrust and erode the community. Yet any wiki-based business must be
able to set boundaries that allow the owners to make responsible
business decisions; those decisions, however, must respect the wiki
community's values.<en>379</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="379">
		<number>379</number>
		<note>
			Evan Prodromou presentation, &#8220; Commercialization of Wikis:
Open Community that Pays the Bills,&#8221; South by Southwest
Interactive conference, March 10, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="877">
	<ocn>877</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is hard to predict what new models of &#8220; decentralized
cocreation of value&#8221; will take root and flourish, but the
experiments are certainly proliferating. Staples, the office supplies
store, now hosts a contest inviting the public to suggest inventions
that Staples can develop and sell under the its brand name.<en>380</en>
A number of massmarket advertisers have hosted competitions inviting
users to create ads for their products. One of the more interesting
frontiers in userdriven innovation is tapping the audience for
investment capital.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="380">
		<number>380</number>
		<note>
			William J. Bulkeley, &#8220; Got a Better Letter Opener?&#8221;
<i>Wall Street Journal</i>, July 13, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="878">
	<ocn>878</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		SellaBand (&#8220;You are the record company&#8221;) is a Web site that
invites bands to recruit five thousand &#8220; Believers&#8221; to
invest $10 apiece in their favorite bands; upon reaching the $50,000
mark, a band can make a professional recording, which is then posted on
the SellaBand site for free downloads. Bands and fans can split
advertising revenues with SellaBand.<en>381</en> Robert Greenwald, the
activist documentary filmmaker, used e-mail solicitations, social
networks, and the blogosphere to ask ordinary citizens to help finance
his 2006 film <i>Iraq for Sale: The War Profiteers</i>.<en>382</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="381">
		<number>381</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.sellaband.com">http://www.sellaband.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="382">
		<number>382</number>
		<note>
			William Booth, &#8220; His Fans Greenlight the Project,&#8221;
<i>Washington Post</i>, August 20, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="879">
	<ocn>879</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Reintegrating the Sharing and Commercial Economies
	</text>
</object>
<object id="880">
	<ocn>880</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If there is persistent skepticism about the very idea of open business
models, from both business traditionalists focused on the bottom line
and commoners committed to sharing, it is because the commons and the
commercial economy seem to represent such divergent moral values and
social orders. One depends upon reciprocal exchanges of monetary value,
with the help of individual property rights and contracts; the other
depends upon the informal social circulation of value, without
individual property rights or quid pro quos. A market is impersonal,
transactional, and oriented to a bottom line; a commons tends to be
personal and social and oriented to continuous relationships, shared
values, and identity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="881">
	<ocn>881</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet, as the examples above show, the market and the commons
interpenetrate each other, yin/yang style. Each &#8220; adds
value&#8221; to the other in synergistic ways. Historically, this has
always been true. Adam Smith, the author of <i>The Wealth of
Nations</i>, was also the author of <i>The Theory of Moral
Sentiments</i>, about the moral and social norms that undergird market
activity. The market has always depended upon the hidden subsidies of
the commons (folk stories, vernacular motifs, amateur creativity) to
drive its engine of wealth creation. And the commons builds its sharing
regimes amid the material wealth produced by the market (free software
is developed on commercially produced computers).
	</text>
</object>
<object id="882">
	<ocn>882</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What has changed in recent years is our perceptions. The actual role of
the commons in creative endeavors has become more culturally legible.
For businesses to function well on Web 2.0 platforms, they must more
consciously integrate social and market relationships in functional,
sustainable ways. If the results sometimes seem novel, if not bizarre,
it is partly because networking technologies are making us more aware
that markets are not ahistorical, universal entities; they are rooted
in social relationships. Open business models recognize this very
elemental truth, and in this sense represent a grand gambit to go back
to the future.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="883">
	<ocn>883</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		11 SCIENCE AS A COMMONS
	</text>
</object>
<object id="884">
	<ocn>884</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Web 2.0 tools, open access, and CC licenses are helping to
accelerate scientific discovery.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="885">
	<ocn>885</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was one of those embarrassing episodes in science: Two sets of
researchers published papers in a German organic chemistry journal,
<i>Angewandte Chemie</i>, announcing that they had synthesized a
strange new substance with &#8220; 12-membered rings.&#8221; Then, as
blogger and chemist Derek Lowe tells the story, &#8220; Professor
Manfred Cristl of Wurzburg, who apparently knows his pyridinium
chemistry pretty well, recognized this as an old way to make further
pyridinium salts, not funky twelve-membered rings. He recounts how over
the last couple of months he exchanged awkward emails with the two sets
of authors, pointing out that they seem to have rediscovered a
100-year-old reaction. . . .&#8221;<en>383</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="383">
		<number>383</number>
		<note>
			Derek Lowe, &#8220; Neat! Wish It Were True!&#8221; <i>In the
Pipeline</i> [blog], November 29, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://pipeline.corante.com">http://pipeline.corante.com</link>&gt;.
See also, Donna Wentworth, &#8220; Why We Need to Figure Out What We
Already Know,&#8221; Science Commons blog, January 4, 2008, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://sciencecommons.org/weblog/archives/2008/01/04/why-we-need-to-figure-out-what-we-already-know">http://sciencecommons.org/weblog/archives/2008/01/04/why-we-need-to-figure-out-what-we-already-know</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="886">
	<ocn>886</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the Internet age, people generally assume that these kinds of things
can't happen. All you have to do is run a Web search for &#8220;
pyridinium,&#8221; right? But as scientists in every field are
discovering, the existence of some shard of highly specialized
knowledge does not necessarily mean that it can be located or
understood. After all, a Google search for &#8220; pyridinium&#8221;
turns up 393,000 results. And even peer reviewers for journals (who may
have been partly at fault in this instance) have the same problem as
any researcher: the unfathomable vastness of the scientific and
technical literature makes it difficult to know what humankind has
already discovered.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="887">
	<ocn>887</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Paradoxically, even though academic science played the central role in
incubating the Internet (in conjunction with the military), it has not
fared very well in developing it to advance research. Most search
engines are too crude. Journal articles can be expensive and
inaccessible. They do not link to relevant Web resources or invite
reader comment. Nor do they contain metadata to facilitate
computer-based searches, collaborative filtering, and text mining.
Scientific databases are plentiful but often incompatible with one
another, preventing researchers from exploring new lines of inquiry.
Lab researchers who need to share physical specimens still have to
shuffle papers through a bureaucratic maze and negotiate with lawyers,
without the help of eBay- or Craigslist-like intermediaries.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="888">
	<ocn>888</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The World Wide Web was designed in a scientific laboratory to
facilitate access to scientific knowledge,&#8221; observed Duke law
professor James Boyle in 2007. &#8220; In every other area of life
&#8212; commercial, social networking, pornography &#8212; it has been
a smashing success. But in the world of science itself? With the
virtues of the open Web all around us, we have proceeded to build an
endless set of walled gardens, something that looks a lot like
Compuserv or Minitel and very little like a world wide web for
science.&#8221;<en>384</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="384">
		<number>384</number>
		<note>
			James Boyle, &#8220; The Irony of a Web Without Science,&#8221;
<i>Financial Times</i>, September 4, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/39166e30-5a7f-11dc-9bcd0000779fd2ac.html">http://www.ft.com/cms/s/2/39166e30-5a7f-11dc-9bcd0000779fd2ac.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="889">
	<ocn>889</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Therein lies a fascinating, complicated story. To be sure, various
scientific bodies have made great progress in recent years in adapting
the principles of free software, free culture, and Web 2.0 applications
to their research. Open-access journals, institutional repositories,
specialty wikis, new platforms for collaborative research, new
metatagging systems: all are moving forward in different, fitful ways.
Yet, for a field of inquiry that has long honored the ethic of sharing
and &#8220; standing on the shoulders of giants,&#8221; academic
science has lagged behind most other sectors.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="890">
	<ocn>890</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Part of the problem is the very nature of scientific knowledge. While
the conventional Web works fairly well for simple kinds of commerce and
social purposes, the Research Web for science requires a more
fine-grained, deliberately crafted structure.<en>385</en> Science
involves <i>practices</i>, after all; it is not just about information.
The &#8220; wisdom of the crowds&#8221; is not good enough. Scientific
knowledge tends to be significantly more specialized and structured
than cultural information or product recommendations. The Web systems
for organizing, manipulating, and accessing that knowledge,
accordingly, need to be more hierarchical and structured, often in
quite specific ways depending upon the discipline. A scientist cannot
just type &#8220; signal transduction genes in pyramidal neurons&#8221;
into a search engine; she needs to be able to locate specific genes and
annotations of them. Data may be strewn across dozens of different data
systems, and those are not likely to be interoperable. This means that
technical standards need to be coordinated, or some metasystem
developed to allow different data reservoirs to communicate with one
another. A scientist must be able to use computers to browse and
organize a vast literature. And so on.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="385">
		<number>385</number>
		<note>
			John Wilbanks, director of the Science Commons, introduced me to
this term.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="891">
	<ocn>891</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Much as scientists would like to build new types of Internet-based
commons, they have quickly run up against a thicket of interrelated
problems: overly broad copyright and patent limitations; access and
usage restrictions by commercial journal publishers and database
owners; and university rules that limit how cell lines, test animals,
bioassays, and other research tools may be shared. In a sense,
scientists and universities face a classic collective-action problem.
Everyone would clearly be better off if a more efficient infrastructure
and enlightened social ethic could be adopted &#8212; but few single
players have the resources, incentive, or stature to buck the
prevailing order. There is no critical mass for instigating a new
platform for scientific inquiry and &#8220; knowledge
management.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="892">
	<ocn>892</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Like so many other sectors confronting the Great Value Shift, science
in the late 1990s found itself caught in a riptide. The proprietarian
ethic of copyright and patent law was intensifying (as we saw in
chapter 2), spurring scientists and universities to claim private
ownership in knowledge that was previously treated as a shared
resource.<en>386</en> Yet at the same time the Internet was
demonstrating the remarkable power of open sharing and collaboration.
Even as market players sought to turn data, genetic knowledge, and much
else into private property rights, a growing number of scientists
realized that the best ideals of science would be fulfilled by
recommitting itself to its core values of openness and sharing. Open
platforms could also strengthen the social relationships that are
essential to so much scientific inquiry.<en>387</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="386">
		<number>386</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Jennifer Washburn, <i>University Inc.: The Corporate
Corruption of Higher Education</i> (New York: Basic Books, 2005); Derek
Bok, <i>Universities in the Marketplace: The Commercialization of
Higher Education</i> (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2003);
Sheldon Krimsky, <i>Science in the Private Interest: Has the Lure of
Profits Corrupted Biomedical Research</i> (New York: Rowman &amp;
Littlefield, 2003); and Corynne McSherry, <i>Who Owns Academic Work?
Battling for Control of Intellectual Property</i> (Cambridge, MA:
Harvard University Press, 2001).
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="387">
		<number>387</number>
		<note>
			John Seely Brown and Paul Duguid, <i>The Social Life of
Information</i> (Cambridge, MA: Harvard Business School Pulishing,
2000). See also, e.g., Jane E. Fountain, &#8220; Social Capital: Its
Relationship to Innovation in Science and Technology,&#8221; <i>Science
and Public Policy</i> 25, no. 2 (April 1998), pp. 103&#8211;15.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="893">
	<ocn>893</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps the most salient example of the power of open science was the
Human Genome Project (HGP), a publicly funded research project to map
the 3 billion base pairs of the human genome. Many other scientific
projects have been attracted by the stunning efficacy and efficiency of
the open research model. For example, the HapMap project is a
government-supported research effort to map variations in the human
genome that occur in certain clusters, or haplotypes. There is also the
SNP Consortium, a public-private partnership seeking to identify
single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) that may be used to identify
genetic sources of disease. Both projects use licenses that put the
genomic data into the public domain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="894">
	<ocn>894</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A 2008 report by the Committee for Economic Development identified a
number of other notable open research projects.<en>388</en> There is
the PubChem database, which amasses data on chemical genomics from a
network of researchers; the Cancer Biomedical Informatics Grid, a
network of several dozen cancer research centers and other
organizations that shares data, research tools, and software
applications; and TDR Targets a Web clearinghouse sponsored by the
World Health Organization that lets researchers share genetic data on
neglected diseases such as malaria and sleeping sickness. It is telling
that Bill Gates, who in his commercial life is a staunch advocate of
proprietary control of information, has been a leader, through his Bill
&amp; Melinda Gates Foundation, in requiring research grantees to share
their data.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="388">
		<number>388</number>
		<note>
			Committee for Economic Development, <i>Harnessing Openness to
Transform American Health Care</i> (Washington, DC: CED, 2008).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="895">
	<ocn>895</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There has even been the emergence of open-source biotechnology, which
is applying the principles of free software development to agricultural
biotech and pharmaceutical development.<en>389</en> Richard Jefferson,
the founder of Cambia, a nonprofit research institute in Australia,
launched the &#8220; kernel&#8221; of what he calls the first
opensource biotech toolkit. It includes patented technologies such as
TransBacter, which is a method for transferring genes to plants, and
GUSPlus, which is a tool for visualizing genes and understanding their
functions.<en>390</en> By licensing these patented research tools for
open use, Jefferson hopes to enable researchers anywhere in the
world&#8212; not just at large biotech companies or universities
&#8212; to develop their own crop improvement technologies.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="389">
		<number>389</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., Rockefeller Foundation, &#8220; 2005 Bellagio Meeting on
Open Source Models of Collaborative Innovation in the Life
Sciences&#8221; [report], Bellagio, Italy, September 2005. See also
Janet Elizabeth Hope, &#8220; Open Source Biotechnology,&#8221; Ph.D.
diss., Australian National University, December 2004.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="390">
		<number>390</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Richard Jefferson, September 7, 2006. See also
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.cambia.org">http://www.cambia.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="896">
	<ocn>896</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Viral Spiral in Science
	</text>
</object>
<object id="897">
	<ocn>897</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Sociologist Robert Merton is often credited with identifying the social
values and norms that make science such a creative, productive
enterprise. In a notable 1942 essay, Merton described scientific
knowledge as &#8220; common property&#8221; that depends critically
upon an open, ethical, peer-driven process.<en>391</en> Science is an
engine of discovery precisely because research is available for all to
see and replicate. It has historically tried to keep some distance from
the marketplace for fear that corporate copyrights, patents, or
contractual agreements will lock up knowledge that should be available
to everyone, especially future scientists.<en>392</en> Secrecy can also
make it difficult for the scientific community to verify research
results.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="391">
		<number>391</number>
		<note>
			Robert Merton, &#8220; Science and Democratic Social
Structure,&#8221; in <i>Social Theory and Social Structure</i>, 3d ed.
(New York: Free Press, 1968), pp. 604&#8211;15.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="392">
		<number>392</number>
		<note>
			Richard R. Nelson, &#8220; The Market Economy and the Scientific
Commons,&#8221; <i>Research Policy</i> 33, no. 3 (April 2004), pp.
455&#8211;71. See also Karim R. Lakhani et al., &#8220; The Value of
Openness in Scientific Problem Solving,&#8221; Harvard Business School
Working Paper 07-050, January 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/07-050.pdf">http://www.hbs.edu/research/pdf/07-050.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="898">
	<ocn>898</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although scientific knowledge eventually becomes publicly available, it
usually flows in semi-restricted ways, at least initially, because
scientists usually like to claim personal credit for their discoveries.
They may refuse to share their latest research lest a rival team of
scientists gain a competitive advantage. They may wish to claim patent
rights in their discoveries.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="899">
	<ocn>899</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		So scientific knowledge is not born into the public sphere, but there
is a strong presumption that it ought to be treated as a shared
resource as quickly as possible. As law scholar Robert Merges noted in
1996, &#8220; Science is not so much given freely to the public as
shared under a largely implicit code of conduct among a more or less
well identified circle of similarly situated scientists. In other words
. . . science is more like a limited-access commons than a truly open
public domain.&#8221;<en>393</en> In certain disciplines, especially
those involving large capital equipment such as telescopes and particle
accelerators, the sharing of research is regarded as a kind of
membership rule for belonging to a club.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="393">
		<number>393</number>
		<note>
			Robert Merges, &#8220; Property Rights Theory and the Commons: The
Case of Scientific Research,&#8221; <i>Social Philosophy and Policy</i>
13, no. 2 (Summer 1996), pp. 145&#8211;61.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="900">
	<ocn>900</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As Web 2.0 innovations have demonstrated the power of the Great Value
Shift, the convergence of open source, open access, and open science
has steadily gained momentum.<en>394</en> Creative Commons was mindful
of this convergence from its beginnings, but it faced formidable
practical challenges in doing anything about it. &#8220; From the very
first meetings of Creative Commons,&#8221; recalled law professor James
Boyle, a CC board member, &#8220; we thought that science could be the
killer app. We thought that science could be the place where Creative
Commons could really make a difference, save lives, and have a dramatic
impact on the world. There is massive, unnecessary friction in science
and we think we can deal with it. Plus, there's the Mertonian ideal of
science, with which Creative Commons couldn't fit more
perfectly.&#8221;<en>395</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="394">
		<number>394</number>
		<note>
			John Willinsky, &#8220; The Unacknowledged Convergence of Open
Source, Open Access and Open Science,&#8221; <i>First Monday</i> 10,
no. 8 (August 2005), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue10_8/willinsky/index.html">http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue10_8/willinsky/index.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="395">
		<number>395</number>
		<note>
			Interview with James Boyle, August 15, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="901">
	<ocn>901</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But despite its early interest in making the Web more
research-friendly, Creative Commons realized that science is a special
culture unto itself, one that has so many major players and niche
variations that it would be foolhardy for an upstart nonprofit to try
to engage with it. So in 2002 Creative Commons shelved its ambitions to
grapple with science as a commons, and focused instead on artistic and
cultural sectors. By January 2005, however, the success of the CC
licenses emboldened the organization to revisit its initial idea. As a
result of deep personal engagement by several Creative Commons board
members &#8212; computer scientist Hal Abelson, law professors James
Boyle and Michael Carroll, and film producer Eric Saltzman &#8212;
Creative Commons decided to launch a spin-off project, Science Commons.
The new initiative would work closely with scientific disciplines and
organizations to try to build what it now calls &#8220; the Research
Web.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="902">
	<ocn>902</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Science Commons aims to redesign the &#8220; information space&#8221;
&#8212; the technologies, legal rules, institutional practices, and
social norms &#8212; so that researchers can more easily share their
articles, datasets, and other resources. The idea is to reimagine and
reinvent the &#8220; cognitive infrastructures&#8221; that are so
critical to scientific inquiry. Dismayed by the pressures exerted by
commercial journal publishers, open-access publishing advocate
Jean-Claude Gu&#233;don has called on librarians to become &#8220;
epistemological engineers.&#8221;<en>396</en> They need to design
better systems (technical, institutional, legal, and social) for
identifying, organizing, and using knowledge. The payoff? Speedier
research and greater scientific discovery and innovation. It turns out
that every scientific discipline has its own special set of impediments
to address. The recurring problem is massive, unnecessary transaction
costs. There is an enormous waste of time, expense, bureaucracy, and
logistics in acquiring journal articles, datasets, presentations, and
physical specimens.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="396">
		<number>396</number>
		<note>
			Jean-Claude Gu&#233;don, &#8220; In Oldenburg's Long Shadow:
Librarians, Research Scientists, Publishers and the Control of
Scientific Publishing,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/mmproceedings/138guedon.shtml">http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/mmproceedings/138guedon.shtml</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="903">
	<ocn>903</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If transaction costs could be overcome, scientists could vastly
accelerate their research cycles. They could seek answers in unfamiliar
bodies of research literature. They could avoid duplicating other
people's flawed research strategies. They could formulate more
imaginative hypotheses and test them more rapidly. They could benefit
from a broader, more robust conversation (as in free software &#8212;
&#8220; with enough eyes, all bugs are shallow&#8221;) and use computer
networks to augment and accelerate the entire scientific process.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="904">
	<ocn>904</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		That is the vision of open science that Science Commons wanted to
address in 2005. It recognized that science is a large, sprawling world
of many institutional stakeholders controlling vast sums of money
driving incommensurate agendas. In such a milieu, it is not easy to
redesign some of the most basic processes and norms for conducting
research. Science Commons nonetheless believed it could play a
constructive role as a catalyst.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="905">
	<ocn>905</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was fortunate to have some deep expertise not just from its board
members, but from two Nobel Prize winners on its scientific advisory
panel (Sir John Sulston and Joshua Lederberg) and several noted
scholars (patent scholar Arti Rai, innovation economist Paul David, and
open-access publishing expert Michael B. Eisen). The director of
Science Commons, John Wilbanks, brought a rare mix of talents and
connections. He was once a software engineer at the World Wide Web
Consortium, specializing in the Semantic Web; he had founded and run a
company dealing in bioinformatics and artificial intelligence; he had
worked for a member of Congress; and he was formerly assistant director
of the Berkman Center at Harvard Law School.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="906">
	<ocn>906</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After obtaining free office space at MIT, Wilbanks set off to instigate
change within the scientific world &#8212; and then get out of the way.
&#8220; We're designing Science Commons to outstrip ourselves,&#8221;
Wilbanks told me. &#8220; We don't want to control any of this; we're
designing it to be decentralized. If we try to control it, we'll
fail.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="907">
	<ocn>907</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		With a staff of seven and a budget of only $800,000 in 2008, Science
Commons is not an ocean liner like the National Academy of Science and
the National Science Foundation; it's more of a tug-boat. Its strategic
interventions try to nudge the big players into new trajectories. It is
unencumbered by bureaucracy and entrenched stakeholders, yet it has the
expertise, via Creative Commons, to develop standard licensing
agreements for disparate communities. It knows how to craft legal
solutions that can work with technology and be understood by
nonlawyers.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="908">
	<ocn>908</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In 2006, Science Commons embarked upon three &#8220; proof of
concept&#8221; projects that it hopes will be models for other
scientific fields. The first initiative, the Scholar's Copyright
Project, aspires to give scientists the &#8220; freedom to archive and
reuse scholarly works on the Internet.&#8221; It is also seeking to
make the vast quantities of data on computerized databases more
accessible and interoperable, as a way to advance scientific discovery
and innovation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="909">
	<ocn>909</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A second project, the Neurocommons, is a bold experiment that aims to
use the Semantic Web to make a sprawling body of neurological research
on the Web more accessible. The project is developing a new kind of
Internet platform so that researchers will be able to do sophisticated
searches of neuroscience-related journal articles and explore datasets
across multiple databases.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="910">
	<ocn>910</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Finally, Science Commons is trying to make it cheaper and easier for
researchers to share physical materials such as genes, proteins,
chemicals, tissues, model animals, and reagents, which is currently a
cumbersome process. The Biological Materials Transfer Project resembles
an attempt to convert the pony express into a kind of Federal Express,
so that researchers can use an integrated electronic data system to
obtain lab materials with a minimum of legal complications and
logistical delays.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="911">
	<ocn>911</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In many instances, Science Commons has been a newcomer to reform
initiatives already under way to build open repositories of scientific
literature or data. One of the most significant is the openaccess
publishing movement, which has been a diverse, flourishing effort in
academic circles since the 1990s. It is useful to review the history of
the open access (OA) movement because it has been an important
pacesetter and inspiration for the open-science ethic.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="912">
	<ocn>912</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Open-Access Movement
	</text>
</object>
<object id="913">
	<ocn>913</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The open-access movement has a fairly simple goal: to get the
scientific record online and available to everyone. It regards this
task as one of the most fundamental challenges in science. Open-access
publishing generally consists of two modes of digital access &#8212;
openaccess archives (or &#8220; repositories&#8221;) and open-access
journals. In both instances, the publisher or host institution pays the
upfront costs of putting material on the Web so that Internet users can
access the literature at no charge.<en>*11</en>
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*11">
		<symbol>*11</symbol>
		<note>
			&#8220; Open access&#8221; can be a confusing term. In the context
of a rivalrous, depletable natural resource like timber or grazing
land, an open-access regime means that anyone can use and appropriate
the resource, resulting in its overexploitation and ruin. An
<i>open-access regime</i> is not the same as a <i>commons</i>, however,
because a commons does have rules, boundaries, sanctions against free
riders, etc., to govern the resource. However, in the context of an
infinite, nonrivalrous resource like information, which can be copied
and distributed at virtually no cost, an open-access regime does not
result in overexploitation of the resource. For this reason, open
access in an Internet context is often conflated with the commons
&#8212; even though &#8220; open access,&#8221; in a natural resource
context, tends to produce very different outcomes.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="914">
	<ocn>914</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The appeal of OA publishing stems from the Great Value Shift described
in chapter 5. &#8220; OA owes its origin and part of its deep appeal to
the fact that publishing to the Internet permits both wider
dissemination and lower costs than any previous form of
publishing,&#8221; writes Peter Suber, author of <i>Open Access
News</i> and a leading champion of OA.<en>397</en> &#8220; The
revolutionary conjunction is too good to pass up. But even lower costs
must be recovered if OA is to be sustainable.&#8221; In most cases,
publishing costs are met by scientific and academic institutions and/or
by subsidies folded into research grants. Sometimes an OA journal will
defray its publishing costs by charging authors (or their grant
funders) a processing fee for articles that they accept.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="397">
		<number>397</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html">http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/fosblog.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="915">
	<ocn>915</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Just as free software and music downloads have disrupted their
respective industries, so OA publishing has not been a welcome
development among large academic publishers such as Elsevier, Springer,
Kluwer, and Wiley. Online publishing usually costs much less than
traditional print publishing and it allows authors to retain control
over their copyrights. Both of these are a big incentive for
disciplines and universities to start up their own OA journals. In
addition, OA publishing makes it easier for research to circulate, and
for authors to reach larger readerships. This not only augments the
practical goals of science, it bolsters the reputation system and open
ethic that science depends upon.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="916">
	<ocn>916</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Commercial publishers have historically emphasized their shared
interests with scholars and scientists, and the system was amicable and
symbiotic. Academics would produce new work, validate its quality
through peer review, and then, in most cases, give the work to
publishers at no charge. Publishers shouldered the expense of editorial
production, distribution, and marketing and reaped the bulk of revenues
generated. The arrangement worked fairly well for everyone until
journal prices began to rise in the early 1970s. Then, as subscription
rates continued to soar, placing unbearable burdens on university
libraries in the 1990s, the Internet facilitated an extremely
attractive alternative: open-access journals. Suddenly, conventional
business models for scholarly publishing had a serious rival, one that
shifts the balance of power back to scientists and their professional
communities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="917">
	<ocn>917</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Publishers have long insisted upon acquiring the copyright of journal
articles and treating them as &#8220; works for hire.&#8221; This
transfer of ownership enables the publisher, not the author, to
determine how a work may circulate. Access to an article can then be
limited by the subscription price for a journal, the licensing fees for
online access, and pay-per-view fees for viewing an individual article.
Publishers may also limit the reuse, republication, and general
circulation of an article by charging high subscription or licensing
fees, or by using digital rights management. If a university cannot
afford the journal, or if a scholar cannot afford to buy individual
articles, research into a given topic is effectively stymied.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="918">
	<ocn>918</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Open-access champion John Willinsky notes, &#8220; The publishing
economy of scholarly journals is dominated by a rather perverse
property relation, in which the last investor in the research
production chain &#8212; consisting of university, researcher, funding
agency and <i>publisher</i> &#8212; owns the resulting work outright
through a very small investment in relation to the work's overall cost
and value.&#8221;<en>398</en> Scientists and scholars virtually never
earn money from their journal articles, and only occasionally from
their books. Unlike commercial writers, this is no problem for
academics, whose salaries are intended to free them to study all sorts
of niche interests despite the lack of &#8220; market demand.&#8221;
Their works are not so much &#8220; intellectual property&#8221; that
must yield maximum revenues as &#8220; royaltyfree literature,&#8221;
as Peter Suber calls it. Academics write and publish to contribute to
their fields and enhance their standing among their peers.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="398">
		<number>398</number>
		<note>
			Willinsky, &#8220; The Unacknowledged Convergence.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="919">
	<ocn>919</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Not surprisingly, many commercial publishers regard OA publishing as a
disruptive threat. It can, after all, subvert existing revenue models
for scholarly publishing. This does not mean that OA publishing cannot
support a viable business model. Much of OA publishing is sustained
through &#8220; author-side payments&#8221; to publishers. In certain
fields that are funded by research grants, such as biomedicine, grant
makers fold publishing payments into their grants so that the research
can be made permanently available in open-access journals. A leading
commercial publisher, BioMed Central, now publishes over 140 OA
journals in this manner. Hindawi Publishing Corporation, based in
Cairo, Egypt, publishes more than one hundred OA journals and turns a
profit. And Medknow Publications, based in Mumbai, India, is also
profitable as a publisher of more than forty OA journals.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="920">
	<ocn>920</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It remains an open question whether the OA business model will work in
fields where little research is directly funded (and thus upfront
payments are not easily made). As Suber reports, &#8220; There are
hundreds of OA journals in the humanities, but very, very few of them
charge a fee on the author's side; most of them have institutional
subsidies from a university say, or a learned
society.&#8221;<en>399</en> Yet such subsidies, in the overall scheme
of things, may be more attractive to universities or learned societies
than paying high subscription fees for journals or online access.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="399">
		<number>399</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Peter Suber, June 28, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="921">
	<ocn>921</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The tension between commercial publishers and academic authors has
intensified over the past decade, fueling interest in OA alternatives.
The most salient point of tension is the so-called &#8220; serials
crisis.&#8221; From 1986 to 2006, libraries that belong to the
Association of Research Libraries saw the cost of serial journals rise
321 percent, or about 7.5 percent a year for twenty consecutive
years.<en>400</en> This rate is four times higher than the inflation
rate for those years. Some commercial journal publishers reap profits
of nearly 40 percent a year.<en>401</en> By 2000 subscription rates
were so crushing that the Association of American Universities and the
Association of Research Libraries issued a joint statement that warned,
&#8220; The current system of scholarly publishing has become too
costly for the academic community to sustain.&#8221;<en>402</en> Three
years later, the high price of journals prompted Harvard, the
University of California, Cornell, MIT, Duke, and other elite research
universities to cancel hundreds of journal subscriptions &#8212; a
conspicuous act of rebellion by the library community.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="400">
		<number>400</number>
		<note>
			Association of Research Libraries, <i>ARL Statistics</i>
2005&#8211;06, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.arl.org/stats/annualsurveys/ar/stats/arlstats06.shtml">http://www.arl.org/stats/annualsurveys/ar/stats/arlstats06.shtml</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="401">
		<number>401</number>
		<note>
			Peter Suber, &#8220; Creating an Intellectual Commons through Open
Access,&#8221; in Charlotte Hess and Elinor Ostrom, eds.,
<i>Understanding Knowledge as a Commons: From Theory to Practice</i>
(Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 2007), p. 175.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="402">
		<number>402</number>
		<note>
			Association of Research Libraries, &#8220; Tempe Principles for
Emerging Systems of Scholarly Publishing,&#8221; May 10, 2000, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/tempe/index.shtml">http://www.arl.org/resources/pubs/tempe/index.shtml</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="922">
	<ocn>922</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As journal prices have risen, the appeal of OA publishing has only
intensified. Unfortunately, migrating to OA journals is not simply an
economic issue. Within academia, the reputation of a journal is deeply
entwined with promotion and tenure decisions. A scientist who publishes
an article in <i>Cell</i> or <i>Nature</i> earns far more prestige than
she might for publishing in a little-known OA journal.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="923">
	<ocn>923</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		So while publishing in OA journals may be economically attractive, it
flouts the institutional traditions and social habits that scientists
have come to rely on for evaluating scientific achievement. The OA
movement's challenge has been to document how OA models can help a
university, and so it has collaborated with university administrators
to showcase exemplary successes and work out new revenue models. It is
urging promotion and tenure committees, for example, to modify their
criteria to stop discriminating against new journals just because they
are new, and hence to stop discriminating against OA journals (which
are all new). Much of this work has fallen to key OA leaders like the
Open Society Institute, the Hewlett Foundation, Mellon Foundation and
the library-oriented SPARC (Scholarly Publishing and Academic Resources
Coalition) as well as individuals such as John Willinsky, Jean-Claude
Gu&#233;don, Stevan Harnad, and Peter Suber.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="924">
	<ocn>924</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of the first major salvos of the movement came in 2000, when
biomedical scientists Harold E. Varmus, Patrick O. Brown, and Michael
B. Eisen called on scientific publishers to make their literature
available through free online public archives such as the U.S. National
Library of Medicine's PubMed Central. Despite garnering support from
nearly 34,000 scientists in 180 countries, the measure did not
stimulate the change sought. It did alert the scientific world,
governments, and publishers about the virtues of OA publishing,
however, and galvanized scientists to explore next steps.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="925">
	<ocn>925</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At the time, a number of free, online peer-reviewed journals and free
online archives were under way.<en>403</en> But much of the momentum
for organized OA movement began in 2001, when the Open Society
Institute convened a group of leading librarians, scientists, and other
academics in Hungary. In February 2002 the group released the Budapest
Open Access Initiative, a statement that formally describes &#8220;
open access&#8221; as the freedom of users to &#8220; read, download,
copy, distribute, print, search or link to the full texts of . . .
articles, crawl them for indexing, pass them as data to software, or
use them for any other lawful purpose, without financial, legal or
technical barriers other than those inseparable from gaining access to
the Internet itself.&#8221;<en>404</en> Two subsequent statements, the
Bethesda Declaration and the Berlin Declaration, in June 2003 and
October 2003, respectively, expanded upon the definitions of open
access and gave the idea new prominence. (Suber calls the three
documents the &#8220; BBB definition&#8221; of open
access.)<en>405</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="403">
		<number>403</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/timeline.htm">http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/timeline.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="404">
		<number>404</number>
		<note>
			The Budapest Open Access Initiative can be found at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.soros.org/openaccess">http://www.soros.org/openaccess</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="405">
		<number>405</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm">http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/overview.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="926">
	<ocn>926</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Creative Commons licenses have been critical tools in the evolution of
OA publishing because they enable scientists and scholars to authorize
in advance the sharing, copying, and reuse of their work, compatible
with the BBB definition. The Attribution (BY) and
Attribution-Non-Commercial (BY-NC) licenses are frequently used; many
OA advocates regard the Attribution license as the preferred choice.
The protocols for &#8220; metadata harvesting&#8221; issued by the Open
Archives Initiative are another useful set of tools in OA publishing.
When adopted by an OA journal, these standardized protocols help users
more easily find research materials without knowing in advance which
archives they reside in, or what they contain.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="927">
	<ocn>927</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There is no question that OA is transforming the market for scholarly
publishing, especially as pioneering models develop. The Public Library
of Science announced its first two open-access journals in December
2002. The journals represented a bold, high-profile challenge by highly
respected scientists to the subscription-based model that has long
dominated scientific publishing. Although Elsevier and other publishers
scoffed at the economic model, the project has expanded and now
publishes seven OA journals, for biology, computational biology,
genetics, pathogens, and neglected tropical diseases, among others.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="928">
	<ocn>928</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		OA received another big boost in 2004 when the National Institutes for
Health proposed that all NIH-funded research be made available for free
one year after its publication in a commercial journal. The $28 billion
that the NIH spends on research each year (more than the domestic
budget of 142 nations!) results in about 65,000 peer-reviewed articles,
or 178 every day. Unfortunately, commercial journal publishers
succeeded in making the proposed OA policy voluntary. The battle
continued in Congress, but it became clear that the voluntary approach
was not working. Only 4 percent of researchers published their work
under OA standards, largely because busy, working scientists did not
consider it a priority and their publishers were not especially eager
to help. So Congress in December 2007 required NIH to mandate open
access for its research within a year of publication.<en>406</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="406">
		<number>406</number>
		<note>
			Peter Suber has an excellent account of the final OA legislation in
<i>SPARC Open Access Newsletter</i>, no. 17, January 2, 2008, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/01-02-08.htm">http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/newsletter/01-02-08.htm</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="929">
	<ocn>929</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		What may sound like an arcane policy battle in fact has serious
implications for ordinary Americans. The breast cancer patient seeking
the best peer-reviewed articles online, or the family of a person with
Huntington's disease, can clearly benefit if they can acquire, for
free, the latest medical research. Scientists, journalists, health-care
workers, physicians, patients, and many others cannot access the vast
literature of publicly funded scientific knowledge because of high
subscription rates or per-article fees. A freely available body of
online literature is the best, most efficient way to help science
generate more reliable answers, new discoveries, and commercial
innovations.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="930">
	<ocn>930</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While large publishers continue to dominate the journal market, OA
publishing has made significant advances in recent years. In June 2008,
the Directory of Open Access Journals listed more than 3,400
open-access journals containing 188,803 articles. In some fields such
as biology and bioinformatics, OA journals are among the top-cited
journals. In fact, this is one of the great advantages of OA
literature. In the networked environment, articles published in OA
journals are more likely to be discovered by others and cited, which
enhances the so-called impact of an article and the reputation of an
author.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="931">
	<ocn>931</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Although journals may or may not choose to honor OA principles, any
scientist, as the copyright holder of his articles, can choose to
&#8220; self-archive&#8221; his work under open-access terms. But
commercial publishers generally don't like to cede certain rights, and
authors usually don't know what rights to ask for, how to assert them
in legal language, and how to negotiate with publishers. So it is
difficult for most academics to assert their real preferences for open
access. To help make things simpler, SPARC and MIT developed what is
called an &#8220; author's addendum.&#8221; It is a standard legal
contract that authors can attach to their publishing contracts, in
which they reserve certain key rights to publish their works in
OA-compliant ways.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="932">
	<ocn>932</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Scholar's Copyright Project
	</text>
</object>
<object id="933">
	<ocn>933</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In an attempt to help the open-access movement, Science Commons in 2007
developed its own suite of amendments to publishing contracts. The goal
has been to ensure that &#8220; at a minimum, scholarly authors retain
enough rights to archive their work on the Web. Every Science Commons
Addendum ensures the freedom to use scholarly articles for educational
purposes, conference presentations, in other scholarly works or in
professional activities.&#8221;<en>407</en> The ultimate goal is to
enable authors &#8220; to have the clear and unambiguous freedom to
engage in their normal everyday scholarly activities without contending
with complex technology, continuous amendments to contracts or the need
for a lawyer.&#8221;<en>408</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="407">
		<number>407</number>
		<note>
			Science Commons brochure [undated].
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="408">
		<number>408</number>
		<note>
			Science Commons, &#8220; Scholar's Copyright Project &#8212;
Background Briefing,&#8221; at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://sciencecommons.org/literature/scholars_copyright.html">http://sciencecommons.org/literature/scholars_copyright.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="934">
	<ocn>934</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To make the whole process easier for scientists, Science Commons
developed the Scholar's Copyright Addendum Engine. This point-and-click
Web-based tool lets authors publish in traditional, subscription-based
journals while retaining their rights to post copies on the Internet
for download, without most copyright and financial restrictions. There
are also options for &#8220; drag and drop&#8221; self-archiving to
repositories such as MIT's DSpace and the National Library of
Medicine's PubMed Central. Besides making selfarchiving easier and more
prevalent, Science Commons hopes to standardize the legal terms and
procedures for self-archiving to avoid a proliferation of incompatible
rights regimes and document formats. &#8220; The engine seems to be
generating a dialogue between authors and publishers that never
existed,&#8221; said John Wilbanks. &#8220; It's not being rejected out
of hand, which is really cool. To the extent that the addendum becomes
a norm, it will start to open up the [contractual] limitations on
self-archiving.&#8221;<en>409</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="409">
		<number>409</number>
		<note>
			Interview with John Wilbanks, November 19, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="935">
	<ocn>935</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Harvard University gave self-archiving a big boost in February 2008
when its faculty unanimously voted to require all faculty to distribute
their scholarship through an online, open-access repository operated by
the Harvard library unless a professor chooses to &#8220; opt
out&#8221; and publish exclusively with a commercial journal. Robert
Darnton, director of the Harvard library, said, &#8220; In place of a
closed, privileged and costly system, [the open-access rule] will help
open up the world of learning to everyone who wants to
learn.&#8221;<en>410</en> Harvard's move was the first time that a
university faculty, and not just the administration, initiated action
to take greater control of its scholarly publishing. While some critics
complain the new policy does not go far enough, most OA advocates
hailed the decision as a major step toward developing alternative
distribution models for academic scholarship.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="410">
		<number>410</number>
		<note>
			Patricia Cohen, &#8220; At Harvard, a Proposal to Publish Free on
the Web,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, February 12, 2008. See also
Peter Suber's coverage of the decision in Open Access News, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2008/02/moreon-imminent-oa-mandate-at-harvard.html">http://www.earlham.edu/~peters/fos/2008/02/moreon-imminent-oa-mandate-at-harvard.html</link>&gt;,
and subsequent days.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="936">
	<ocn>936</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By far, the more ambitious aspect of the Scholar's Copyright project is
the attempt to free databases from a confusing tangle of copyright
claims. In every imaginable field of science &#8212; from anthropology
and marine biology to chemistry and genetics &#8212; databases are
vital tools for organizing and manipulating vast collections of
empirical data. The flood of data has vastly increased as computers
have become ubiquitous research tools and as new technologies are
deployed to generate entirely new sorts of digital data streams&#8212;
measurements from remote sensors, data streams from space, and much
more. But the incompatibility of databases &#8212; chiefly for
technical and copyright reasons &#8212; is needlessly Balkanizing
research to the detriment of scientific progress. &#8220; There is
plenty of data out there,&#8221; says Richard Wallis of Talis, a
company that has built a Semantic Web technology platform for open
data, &#8220; but it is often trapped in silos or hidden behind logins,
subscriptions or just plain difficult to get hold of.&#8221; He added
that there is a lot of data that is &#8220; just out there,&#8221; but
the terms of access may be dubious.<en>411</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="411">
		<number>411</number>
		<note>
			Donna Wentworth blog post, &#8220; Ensuring the freedom to
integrate &#8212; why we need an &#8216; open data' protocol,&#8221;
Science Commons blog, December 20, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://sciencecommons.org/weblog/archives/2007/12/20/ensuring-thefreedom-to-integrate">http://sciencecommons.org/weblog/archives/2007/12/20/ensuring-thefreedom-to-integrate</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="937">
	<ocn>937</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Questions immediately arise: Can a database be legally used? Who owns
it? Will the database continue to be accessible? Will access require
payment later on? Since data now reside anywhere in the world, any
potential user of data also has to consider the wide variations of
copyright protection for databases around the world.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="938">
	<ocn>938</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The question of how data shall be owned, controlled, and shared is a
profoundly perplexing one. History has shown the virtue of sharing
scientific data &#8212; yet individual scientists, universities, and
corporations frequently have their own interests in limiting how
databases may be used. Scientists want to ensure the integrity of the
data and any additions to it; they may want to ensure preferential
access to key researchers; companies may consider the data a lucrative
asset to be privately exploited. Indeed, if there is not some mechanism
of control, database producers worry that free riders will simply
appropriate useful compilations and perhaps sell it or use it for their
own competitive advantage. Or they may fail to properly credit the
scientists who compiled the data in the first place. Inadequate
database protection could discourage people from creating new databases
in the future.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="939">
	<ocn>939</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A National Research Council report in 1999 described the problem this
way: &#8220; Currently many for-profit and not-for-profit database
producers are concerned about the possibility that significant portions
of their databases will be copied or used in substantial part by others
to create &#8216; new' derivative databases. If an identical or
substantially similar database is then either re-disseminated broadly
or sold and used in direct competition with the original rights
holder's database, the rights holder's revenues will be undermined, or
in extreme cases, the rights holder will be put out of
business.&#8221;<en>412</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="412">
		<number>412</number>
		<note>
			National Research Council, <i>A Question of Balance: Private Rights
and the Public Interest in Scientific and Technical Databases</i>
(Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1999), p. 14.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="940">
	<ocn>940</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the late 1990s, when the Human Genome Project and a private company,
Celera, were competing to map the human genome, the publicly funded
researchers were eager to publish the genome sequencing data as quickly
as possible in order to prevent Celera or any other company from
claiming exclusive control over the information. They wanted the data
to be treated as &#8220; the common heritage of humanity&#8221; so that
it would remain openly accessible to everyone, including commercial
researchers. When Sir John Sulston of the Human Genome Project broached
the idea of putting his team's research under a GPL-like license, it
provoked objections that ownership of the data would set a worrisome
precedent. A GPL for data amounts to a &#8220; reach-through&#8221;
requirement on how data may be used in the future. This might not only
imply that data can be owned &#8212; flouting the legal tradition that
facts cannot be owned &#8212; it might discourage future data producers
from depositing their data into public databases.<en>413</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="413">
		<number>413</number>
		<note>
			John Sulston and Georgina Ferry, <i>The Common Threat: A Story of
Science, Politics, Ethics and the Human Genome</i> (Washington, DC:
Joseph Henry Press, 2002), pp. 212&#8211;13.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="941">
	<ocn>941</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The International HapMap Project attempted such a copyleft strategy
with its database of genotypes; its goal is to compare the genetic
sequences of different individuals to identify chromosomal regions
where genetic variants are shared.<en>414</en> The project initially
required users to register and agree to certain contract terms in order
to use the database. One key term prohibited users from patenting any
genetic information from the database or using patents to block usage
of HapMap data.<en>415</en> This viral, open-content license for data
seemed to provide a solution to the problem of how to keep data in the
commons. But in time the HapMap Project found that its license
inhibited people's willingness to integrate their own data with the
HapMap database. It therefore abandoned its license and now places all
of its data into the public domain; it is now available to be used by
anyone for any purpose, although it has issued guidelines for the
&#8220; responsible use and publication&#8221; of the data.<en>416</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="414">
		<number>414</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.hapmap.org">http://www.hapmap.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="415">
		<number>415</number>
		<note>
			Andr&#233;s Guadamuz Gonz&#225;lez, &#8220; Open Science: Open
Source Licenses in Scientific Research,&#8221; <i>North Carolina
Journal of Law &amp; Technology</i> 7, no. 2 (Spring 2006), pp.
349&#8211;50.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="416">
		<number>416</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.hapmap.org/guidelines_hapmap_data.html.en">http://www.hapmap.org/guidelines_hapmap_data.html.en</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="942">
	<ocn>942</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The basic problem with applying copyright law to databases is how to
draw the line between what is private property and what remains in the
commons. &#8220; If you try to impose a Creative Commons license or
free-software-style licensing regime on a database of uncopyrightable
facts,&#8221; explained John Wilbanks, &#8220; you create an enormous
amount of confusion in the user about where the rights start and
stop.&#8221;<en>417</en> It is not very practical for a working
scientist to determine whether copyright protection applies only to the
data itself, to the database model (the structure and organization of
the data), or to the data entry and output sheet. A scientist might
reasonably presume that his data are covered by copyright law, and then
use that right to apply a CC ShareAlike license to the data. But in
fact, the data could be ineligible for copyright protection and so the
CC license would be misleading; other scientists could ignore its terms
with impunity. At the other extreme, other scientists may be unwilling
to share their data at all lest the data circulate with no controls
whatsoever. Data are either overprotected or underprotected, but in
either case there is great ambiguity and confusion.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="417">
		<number>417</number>
		<note>
			Interview with John Wilbanks, November 19, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="943">
	<ocn>943</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For two years, Science Commons wrestled with the challenge of applying
the CC licenses to databases. Ultimately, the project came to the
conclusion that &#8220; copyright licenses and contractual restrictions
are simply the wrong tool, even if those licenses are used with the
best of intentions.&#8221; There is just too much uncertainty about the
scope and applicability of copyright &#8212; and thus questions about
any licenses based on it. For example, it is not entirely clear what
constitutes a &#8220; derivative work&#8221; in the context of
databases. If one were to query hundreds of databases using the
Semantic Web, would the federated results be considered a derivative
work that requires copyright permissions from each database owner?
There is also the problem of &#8220; attribution stacking,&#8221; in
which a query made to multiple databases might require giving credit to
scores of databases. Different CC licenses for different databases
could also create legal incompatibilities among data. Data licensed
under a CC ShareAlike license, for example, cannot be legally combined
with data licensed under a different license. Segregating data into
different &#8220; legal boxes&#8221; could turn out to impede, not
advance, the freedom to integrate data on the Web.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="944">
	<ocn>944</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After meeting with a variety of experts in scientific databases,
particularly in the life sciences, biodiversity, and geospatial
research, the Science Commons came up with an ingenious solution to the
gnarly difficulties. Instead of relying on either copyright law or
licenses, Science Commons in late 2007 announced a new legal tool, CC0
(CC Zero), which creates a legal and technical platform for a
scientific community to develop its own reputation system for sharing
data.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="945">
	<ocn>945</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		CC0 is not a license but a set of protocols. The protocols require that
a database producer waive all rights to the data based on intellectual
property law &#8212; copyrights, patents, unfair competition claims,
unfair infringement rights &#8212; a &#8220; quitclaim&#8221; that
covers everything. Then it requires that the database producer
affirmatively declare that it is not using contracts to encumber future
uses of the data. Once a database is certified as complying with the
protocols, as determined by Science Commons, it is entitled to use a
Science Commons trademark, &#8220; Open Access Data,&#8221; and CC0
metadata. The trademark signals to other scientists that the database
meets certain basic standards of interoperability, legal certainty,
ease of use, and low transaction costs. The metadata is a functional
software tool that enables different databases to share their data.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="946">
	<ocn>946</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; What we are doing,&#8221; said John Wilbanks, &#8220; is
reconstructing, contractually, the public domain. The idea is that with
any conforming implementation &#8212; any licensed database &#8212; you
have complete freedom to integrate with anything else. It creates a
zone of certainty for data integration.&#8221;<en>418</en> Unlike
public-domain data, the databases that Science Commons certifies as
meeting open-data protocols cannot be taken private or legally
encumbered. To qualify to use the Open Access Data mark, databases must
be interoperable with other databases licensed under the protocols. If
someone falsely represents that his data are covered by the license,
Science Commons could pursue a trademark infringement case.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="418">
		<number>418</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="947">
	<ocn>947</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To develop this scheme, Science Commons's attorney Thinh Nguyen worked
closely with Talis, a company that has built a Semantic Web technology
platform for open data and developed its own open database license.
Nguyen also worked with the company's legal team, Jordan Hatcher and
Charlotte Waelde, and with the Open Knowledge Foundation, which has
developed the Open Knowledge Definition.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="948">
	<ocn>948</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The CC0 approach to data represents something of a breakthrough because
it avoids rigid, prescriptive legal standards for a type of content
(data) that is highly variable and governed by different community
norms. CC0 abandons the vision of crafting a single, all-purpose
copyright license or contract for thousands of different databases in
different legal jurisdictions. Instead it tries to create a legal
framework that can honor a range of variable social norms that converge
on the public domain. Each research community can determine for itself
how to meet the CC0 protocols, based on its own distinctive research
needs and traditions. Different norms can agree to a equivalency of
public-domain standards without any one discipline constraining the
behaviors of another.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="949">
	<ocn>949</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The system is clever because it provides legal reliability without
being overly prescriptive. It is simple to use but still able to
accommodate complex variations among disciplines. And it has low
transaction costs for both producers and users of data. Over time, the
databases that comply with the CC0 protocols are likely to grow into a
large universe of interoperable open data.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="950">
	<ocn>950</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is still too early to judge how well the CC0 program is working, but
initial reactions have been positive. &#8220; The solution is at once
obvious and radical,&#8221; said Glyn Moody, a British journalist who
writes about open-source software. &#8220; It is this pragmatism,
rooted in how science actually works, that makes the current protocol
particularly important.&#8221; Deepak Singh, the co-founder of
Bioscreencast, a free online video tutorial library for the scientific
community, said, &#8220; I consider just the announcement to be a
monumental moment.&#8221;<en>419</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="419">
		<number>419</number>
		<note>
			Moody and Singh quotations from Donna Wentworth, Science Commons
blog post, December 20, 2007.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="951">
	<ocn>951</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Neurocommons
	</text>
</object>
<object id="952">
	<ocn>952</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Every day there is so much new scientific literature generated that it
would take a single person 106 years to read it all.<en>420</en> In a
single year, over twenty-four thousand peer-reviewed journals publish
about 2.5 million research articles.<en>421</en> Our ability to
generate content has far outstripped our ability to comprehend it. We
are suffering from a cognitive overload &#8212; one that can only be
addressed by using software and computer networks in innovative ways to
organize, search, and access information. For many years, Sir Tim
Berners-Lee, the celebrated inventor of the World Wide Web, and his
colleagues at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), based at MIT, have
been trying to solve the problem of information overload by developing
a &#8220; new layer&#8221; of code for the Web.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="420">
		<number>420</number>
		<note>
			Brian Athey, University of Michigan, presentation at Commons of
Science conference, National Academy of Science, Washington, DC,
October 3, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="421">
		<number>421</number>
		<note>
			Stevan Harnad, &#8220; Maximizing Research Impact Through
Institutional and National Open-Access Self-Archiving Mandates,&#8221;
<i>Electronics &amp; Computer Science E-Prints Repository</i>, May
2006, available at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://eprints.ecs.soron.ac.uk/12093/02/harnad-crisrey.pdf">http://eprints.ecs.soron.ac.uk/12093/02/harnad-crisrey.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="953">
	<ocn>953</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This visionary project, the so-called Semantic Web, aspires to develop
a framework for integrating a variety of systems, so they can
communicate with one another, machine to machine. The goal is to enable
computers to identify and capture information from anywhere on the Web,
and then organize the results in sophisticated and customized ways.
&#8220; If you search for &#8216; signal transduction genes in
parameter neurons,' &#8221; said John Wilbanks of Science Commons,
&#8220; Google sucks. It will get you 190,000 Web pages.&#8221; The
goal of the Semantic Web is to deliver a far more targeted and useful
body of specialized information.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="954">
	<ocn>954</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A key tool is the Unique Resource Identifier, or URI, which is
analogous to the Unique Resource Locator, or URL, used by the Web.
Affix a URI to any bit of information on the Web, and the Semantic Web
will (so it is hoped) let you mix and match information tagged with
that URI with countless other bits of information tagged with other
URIs. It would not matter if the bit of information resides in a
journal article, database, clinical image, statistical analysis, or
video; the point is that the URI would identify a precise bit of
information. By enabling cross-linking among different types of
information, the idea is that scientists will be able to make all sorts
of unexpected and serendipitous insights.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="955">
	<ocn>955</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		For example, geneticists studying Huntington's disease, a rare
neurodegenerative disorder, and experts studying Alzheimer's disease
are both exploring many of the same genes and proteins of the brain.
But because of the specialization of their disciplines, the chances are
good that they read entirely different scientific journals and attend
different conferences. There is no easy or systematic way for
scientists in one specialty to explore the knowledge that has developed
in another specialty. The Semantic Web could probably help.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="956">
	<ocn>956</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Unfortunately, for a grand dream that has been touted since the 1990s,
very little has developed. The W3C has been embroiled in the design
challenges of the Semantic Web for so long that many companies and
computer experts now scoff at the whole idea of the Semantic Web. There
have been too many arcane, inconclusive debates about computer syntax,
ontology language, and philosophical design choices that no one is
holding their breath anymore, waiting for the Semantic Web to arrive.
(Wikipedia defines a computer ontology as &#8220; a data model that
represents a set of concepts within a domain and the relationships
between those concepts. It is used to reason about the objects within
that domain.&#8221;) The vision of the Semantic Web may have the
potential to revolutionize science, but few people have seen much
practical value in it over the near term, and so it has garnered little
support.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="957">
	<ocn>957</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wilbanks, who once worked at the W3C, was frustrated by this state of
affairs. Although he has long believed in the promise of the Semantic
Web, he also realized that it is not enough to extol its virtues. One
must demonstrate its practicality. &#8220; The way to herd cats is not
to herd cats,&#8221; he said, citing a colleague, &#8220; but to put a
bowl of cream on your back stoop and run like hell.&#8221; For
Wilbanks, the bowl of cream is the Neurocommons knowledge base, a
project that seeks to integrate a huge amount of neuroscientific
research using Semantic Web protocols and is easy to use.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="958">
	<ocn>958</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; The way to overcome the inertia that the Semantic Web critics
rightly point out, is not to sit down and argue about
ontologies,&#8221; said Wilbanks. &#8220; It's to release something
that's useful enough that it's worth wiring your database into the
commons system. If I want to get precise answers to complicated
questions that might be found in my own database, among others, now I
can do that. I simply have to wire it into the Neurocommons. You don't
need to come to some magical agreement about ontology; you just need to
spend a couple of days converting your database to RDF [Resource
Description Framework, a set of Semantic Web specifications], and
then&#8212; boom! &#8212; I've got all of the other databases
integrated with mine.&#8221; By getting the ball rolling, Science
Commons is betting that enough neuroscience fields will integrate their
literature to the Neurocommons protocols and make the new commons a
lively, sustainable, and growing organism of knowledge.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="959">
	<ocn>959</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Using the &#8220; open wiring&#8221; of the Semantic Web, the
Neurocommons has already integrated information from fifteen of the top
twenty databases in the life sciences and neuroscience. The data have
been reformatted to conform to Semantic Web protocols and the
scientific literature, where possible, has been tagged so that it can
be &#8220; text-mined&#8221; (searched for specific information via URI
tags). &#8220; We have put all this stuff into a database that we give
away,&#8221; said Wilbanks. &#8220; It's already been mirrored in
Ireland, and more mirrors are going up. It's sort of like a &#8216;
knowledge server,' instead of a Web server.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="960">
	<ocn>960</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Commercial journal publishers already recognize the potential power of
owning and controlling metadata in scientific literature and datasets.
To leverage this control many are starting to make copyright claims in
certain kinds of metadata, and to amend their contracts with libraries
in order to limit how they may retrieve electronic information. &#8220;
There is a lot at stake here,&#8221; says Villanova law professor
Michael Carroll. &#8220; What Science Commons wants to do is make sure
that metadata is an open resource.&#8221;<en>422</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="422">
		<number>422</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Michael Carroll, August 7, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="961">
	<ocn>961</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wilbanks has high hopes that the Neurocommons project, by providing a
useful demonstration of Semantic Web tools, will hasten the
interoperability of specialized knowledge that is currently isolated
from related fields. It comes down to how to motivate a convergence of
knowledge. Instead of arguing about which discipline's ontology of
specialized knowledge is superior to another's &#8212; and making
little headway toward a consensus &#8212; Wilbanks has a strategy to
build a knowledge tool that is useful. Period. His bet is that a useful
&#8220; knowledge server&#8221; of integrated neuroscientific
information will be a powerful incentive for adjacent disciplines to
adapt their own literature and databases to be compatible. The point is
to get the commons going &#8212; while allowing the freedom for it to
evolve. Then, if people have disagreements or quibbles, they will be
free to change the ontologies as they see fit. &#8220; The version [of
the Neurocommons] that we are building is useful and it is free,&#8221;
Wilbanks said. &#8220; That means that if you want to integrate with
it, you can. It means that if you want to redo our work your way, you
can&#8212; as long as you use the right technical formats. You can
reuse all of our software.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="962">
	<ocn>962</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The problem with a field like neuroscience, which has so many exploding
frontiers, is that no single company or proprietary software platform
can adequately manage the knowledge. The information is simply too
copious and complex. Like so many other fields of knowledge that are
large and complicated, it appears that only an open-source model can
successfully curate the relevant information sources. A Web-based
commons can be remarkably efficient, effective, and scalable. This has
been the lesson of free and open-source software, wikis, and the Web
itself. Although it is too early to tell how the Neurocommons project
will evolve, the initial signs are promising. A number of foundations
that support research for specific diseases &#8212; Alzheimer's
disease, Parkinson's, autism, epilepsy, Huntington's disease &#8212;
have already expressed interest in the Neurocommons as a potential
model for advancing research in their respective fields.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="963">
	<ocn>963</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		Open Physical Tools
	</text>
</object>
<object id="964">
	<ocn>964</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Science is not just about text and data, of course. It also involves
lots of tangible <i>stuff</i> needed to conduct experiments. Typical
materials include cell lines, monoclonal antibodies, reagents, animal
models, synthetic materials, nano-materials, clones, laboratory
equipment, and much else. Here, too, sharing and collaboration are
important to the advance of science. But unlike digital bits, which are
highly malleable, the physical materials needed for experiments have to
be located, approved for use, and shipped. Therein lies another tale of
high transaction costs impeding the progress of science. As Thinh
Nguyen, counsel for Science Commons, describes the problem:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="965">
	<ocn>965</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The ability to locate materials based on their descriptions in journal
articles is often limited by lack of sufficient information about
origin and availability, and there is no standard citation for such
materials. In addition, the process of legal negotiation that may
follow can be lengthy and unpredictable. This can have important
implications for science policy, especially when delays or inability to
obtain research materials result in lost time, productivity and
research opportunities.<en>423</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="423">
		<number>423</number>
		<note>
			Thinh Nguyen, &#8220; Science Commons: Material Transfer Agreement
Project,&#8221; <i>Innovations</i>, Summer 2007, pp. 137&#8211;43, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/itgg.2007.2.3.137">http://www.mitpressjournals.org/doi/pdf/10.1162/itgg.2007.2.3.137</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="966">
	<ocn>966</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To the nonscientist, this transactional subculture is largely
invisible. But to scientists whose lab work requires access to certain
physical materials, the uncertainties, variations, and delays can be
crippling. Normally, the transfer of materials from one scientist to
another occurs through a Material Transfer Agreement, or MTA. The
technology transfer office at one research university will grant, or
not grant, an MTA so that a cell line or tissue specimen can be shipped
to a researcher at another university. Typically, permission must be
granted for the researcher to publish, disseminate, or use research
results, and to license their use for commercialization.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="967">
	<ocn>967</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While certain types of transactions involve material that could
conceivably generate high royalty revenues, a great many transactions
are fairly low-value, routine transfers of material for basic research.
Paradoxically, that can make it all the harder to obtain the material
because consummating an MTA is not a high priority for the tech
transfer office. In other cases, sharing the material is subject to
special agreements whose terms are not known in advance.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="968">
	<ocn>968</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Corporations sometimes have MTAs with onerous terms that prevent
academic researchers from using a reagent or research tool. Individual
scientists sometimes balk at sharing a substance because of the time
and effort needed to ship it. Or they may wish to prevent another
scientist from being the first to publish research results. Whatever
the motivation, MTAs can act as a serious impediment to verification of
scientific findings. They can also prevent new types of exploratory
research and innovation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="969">
	<ocn>969</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wilbanks describes the existing system as an inefficient, artisanal one
that needs to becomes more of a streamlined industrial system. Just as
Creative Commons sought to lower the transaction costs for sharing
creative works, through the use of standard public licenses, so Science
Commons is now trying to standardize the process for sharing research
materials. The idea is to reduce the transaction costs and legal risks
by, in Nguyen's words, &#8220; creating a voluntary and scalable
infrastructure for rights representation and
contracting.&#8221;<en>424</en> Like the CC licenses, the Science
Commons MTAs will consist of &#8220; three layers&#8221; of licenses
&#8212; the standard legal agreement, the machine-readable metadata
version, and the &#8220; humanreadable deed&#8221; that nonlawyers can
understand.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="424">
		<number>424</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="970">
	<ocn>970</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		There are already some successful systems in place for sharing research
materials, most notably the Uniform Biological Material Transfer
Agreement (UBMTA), which some 320 institutions have accepted, as well
as a Simple Letter Agreement developed by the National Institutes of
Health. The problem with these systems is that they cannot be used for
transfers of materials between academic and for-profit researchers. In
addition, there are many instances in which UBMTA signatories can opt
out of the system to make modifications to the UBMTA on a case-by-case
basis.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="971">
	<ocn>971</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To help standardize and streamline the whole system for sharing
research materials, Science Commons is working with a consortium of ten
research universities, the iBridge Network, to develop a prototype
system. The hope is that by introducing metadata to the system, and
linking that information to standard contracts and human-readable
deeds, scientists will be able to acquire research materials much more
rapidly by avoiding bureaucratic and legal hassles. Just as eBay,
Amazon, and Federal Express use metadata to allow customers to track
the status of their orders, so the Science Commons MTA project wants to
develop a system that will allow searching, tracking, and indexing of
specific shipments. It is also hoped that metadata links will be
inserted into journal articles, enabling scientists to click on a given
research material in order to determine the legal and logistical terms
for obtaining the material.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="972">
	<ocn>972</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Wilbanks envisions a new market of third-party intermediaries to
facilitate materials transfers: &#8220; There's an emerging network of
third parties &#8212; think of them as &#8216; biology greenhouses'
&#8212; who are funded to take in copies of research materials and
manufacture them on demand &#8212; to grow a quantity and mail them
out. What Science Commons is trying to do with the Materials Transfer
Project is to put together a functional system where materials can go
to greenhouses under standard contracts, with digital identifiers, so
that the materials can be cross-linked into the digital information
commons. Anytime you see a list of genes, for example, you will be able
to right-click and see the stuff that's available from the greenhouses
under standard contract, and the cost of manufacture and delivery in
order to access the tool. Research materials need to be available under
a standard contract, discoverable with a digital identifier, and
fulfillable by a third party. And there needs to be some sort of
acknowledgment, like a citation system.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="973">
	<ocn>973</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At one level, it is ironic that one of the oldest commons-based
communities, academic science, has taken so long to reengineer its
digital infrastructure to take advantage of the Internet and open
digital systems. Yet academic disciplines have always clung tightly to
their special ways of knowing and organizing themselves. The arrival of
the Internet has been disruptive to this tradition by blurring academic
boundaries and inviting new types of cross-boundary research and
conversation. If only to improve the conversation, more scientists are
discovering the value of establishing working protocols to let the
diverse tribes of science communicate with one another more easily. Now
that the examples of networked collaboration are proliferating,
demonstrating the enormous power that can be unleashed through sharing
and openness, the momentum for change is only going to intensify. The
resulting explosion of knowledge and innovation should be quite a
spectacle.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="974">
	<ocn>974</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		12 OPEN EDUCATION AND LEARNING
	</text>
</object>
<object id="975">
	<ocn>975</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Managing educational resources as a commons can make learning more
affordable and exciting.</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="976">
	<ocn>976</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the late 1990s, as Richard Baraniuk taught electrical engineering to
undergraduates at Rice University, the furthest thing from his mind was
revolutionizing learning. He just wanted to make digital signal
processing a more palatable subject for his students. Baraniuk, an
affable professor with a venturesome spirit, was frustrated that half
of his undergraduate class would glaze over when he taught signal
processing, perhaps because it involves a lot of math. But then he
explained the social ramifications of signal processing &#8212; for
wiretapping, the Internet, the airwaves, radar, and much more. Students
got excited.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="977">
	<ocn>977</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; If I wanted to reach a broader class of people, outside of Rice
University,&#8221; Baraniuk said, &#8220; that would be very difficult.
The standard thing is to write your own book.&#8221; But he quickly
realized that writing the 176th book ever written on signal processing
(he counted) would not be very efficient or effective. It would take
years to write, and then additional years to traverse the editorial,
production, and distribution process. And even if the book were
successful, it would reach only five thousand readers. Finally, it
would be a static artifact, lacking the timeliness and interactivity of
online dialogue. A book, Baraniuk ruefully observed, &#8220;
redisconnects things.&#8221;<en>425</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="425">
		<number>425</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Richard Baraniuk, January 21, 2008.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="978">
	<ocn>978</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As chance had it, Baraniuk's research group at Rice was just
discovering open-source software. &#8220; It was 1999, and we were
moving all of our workstations to Linux,&#8221; he recalled. &#8220; It
was just so robust and high-quality, even at that time, and it was
being worked on by thousands of people.&#8221; Baraniuk remembers
having an epiphany: &#8220; What if we took books and &#8216; chunked
them apart,' just like software? And what if we made the IP open so
that the books would be free to re-use and remix in different
ways?'&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="979">
	<ocn>979</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The vision was exciting, but the tools for realizing it were virtually
nonexistent. The technologies for collaborative authoring and the legal
licenses for sharing, not to mention the financing and outreach for the
idea, would all have to be developed. Fortunately, the Rice University
administration understood the huge potential and helped Baraniuk raise
$1 million to put together a skunk works of colleagues to devise a
suitable software architecture and nonprofit plan. A colleague, Don
Johnson, dubbed the enterprise &#8220; Connexions.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="980">
	<ocn>980</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The group made a number of choices that turned out to be remarkably
shrewd. Instead of organizing teaching materials into a &#8220;
course&#8221; or a &#8220; textbook,&#8221; for example, the Connexions
planners decided to build an open ecosystem of shared knowledge. Just
as the Web is &#8220; small pieces loosely joined,&#8221; as David
Weinberger's 2003 book put it, so Connexions decided that the best way
to structure its educational content was as discrete modules (such as
&#8220; signal processing&#8221;) that could be reused in any number of
contexts. The planners also decided to build a system on the open
Semantic Web format rather than a simple interlinking of PDF files.
This choice meant that the system would not be tethered to a
proprietary or static way of displaying information, but could adapt
and scale in the networked environment. Modules of content could be
more easily identified and used for many different purposes, in
flexible ways.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="981">
	<ocn>981</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By the summer of 2000, the first version of Connexions went live with
two Rice University courses, Fundamentals of Electronic Engineering and
Introduction to Physical Electronics. The goal was to let anyone create
educational materials and put them in the repository. Anyone could copy
and customize material on the site, or mix it with new material in
order to create new books and courses. Materials could even be used to
make commercial products such as Web courses, CD-ROMs, and printed
books. By the end of 2000, two hundred course modules were available on
Connexions: a modest but promising start.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="982">
	<ocn>982</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It turned out to be an auspicious moment to launch an open platform for
sharing. A wave of Web 2.0 applications and tools was just beginning to
appear on the Internet. Innovators with the savvy to take advantage of
open networks, in the style of free and open software, could amass huge
participatory communities in very short order. For Connexions, the
living proof was Kitty Schmidt-Jones, a private piano teacher from
Champaign, Illinois. She discovered Connexions through her husband and
posted a 276-page book on music theory to the site. &#8220; Kitty is
not the kind of person who would be a music textbook author,&#8221;
said Baraniuk, &#8220; but she thought that music education is
important, and said, &#8216; I can do this, too!' By 2007
<i>Understanding Basic Music Theory</i> had been downloaded more than
7.5 million times from people around the world. A Connexions staffer
attending a conference in Lithuania met an educator from Mongolia who
lit up at the mention of Schmidt-Jones. &#8220; We use her work in our
schools!&#8221; he said.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="983">
	<ocn>983</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Besides curating a collection of educational content, Connexions has
developed a variety of open-source applications to let authors create,
remix, share, and print content easily. The project has also developed
systems to let users rate the quality of materials. Professional
societies, editorial boards of journals, and even informal groups can
use a customizable software &#8220; lens&#8221; to tag the quality of
Connexions modules, which can then be organized and retrieved according
to a given lens.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="984">
	<ocn>984</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It was a stroke of good fortune when Baraniuk and his associates
learned, in 2002, that Lawrence Lessig was developing a new licensing
project called Creative Commons. As the CC team drafted its licenses,
Connexions helped it understand academic needs and then became one of
the very first institutional adopters of the CC licenses. Connexions
decided to require that its contributors license their works under the
least restrictive CC license, CC-BY (Attribution). This was a simple
decision because most textbook authors write to reach large
readerships, not to make money.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="985">
	<ocn>985</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The real expansion of Connexions as a major international repository of
teaching materials did not occur until early 2004, when the software
platform had been sufficiently refined. Then, with virtually no
publicity, global usage of the Connexions site took off. It helped that
Rice University has never sought to &#8220; own&#8221; the project.
Although it administers the project, the university has deliberately
encouraged grassroots participation from around the world and across
institutions. Electrical engineering faculty at ten major universities
are cooperating in developing curricula, for example, and diverse
communities of authors are adding to content collections in music,
engineering, physics, chemistry, bioinformatics, nanotechnology, and
history. In 2008, Connexions had 5,801 learning modules woven into 344
collections. More than 1 million people from 194 countries are using
the materials, many of which are written in Chinese, Italian, Spanish,
and other languages.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="986">
	<ocn>986</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One of Connexion's neatest tricks is offering printed textbooks for a
fraction of the price of conventional textbooks. Because the content is
drawn from the commons, a 300-page hardback engineering textbook that
normally sells for $125 can be bought for $25, through a
print-on-demand publishing partner, QOOP.com. Ten percent of the
purchase price is earmarked to support Connexions, and another 10
percent helps disadvantaged students obtain textbooks for free. Unlike
conventional textbooks, which may be a year or two old, Connexions
materials are generally up-to-date.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="987">
	<ocn>987</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By providing an alternative to the spiraling costs of academic
publishing, Connexions's publishing model may actually help a number of
academic disciplines pursue their scholarly missions. Over the past
decade, some sixty university presses have closed or downsized for
economic reasons. &#8220; If you're in art history, anthropology, or
the humanities, you get tenure based on your monographs published by a
university press,&#8221; Baraniuk said. &#8220; The problem is that, as
university presses shut down, there's nowhere to publish books
anymore.&#8221; It is often financially prohibitive to publish art
history books, for example, because such books typically require
highquality production and small press runs. An overly expensive market
structure is blocking the flow of new scholarly publishing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="988">
	<ocn>988</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One solution: a new all-digital hybrid business model for academic
publishing. As the Connexions platform has proved itself, Rice
University saw the virtue of reopening Rice University Press (RUP),
which it had closed ten years earlier.<en>426</en> The new RUP retains
the editorial structure, high standards, and focus on special fields of
a conventional academic press, but it now works within a &#8220;
branded partition&#8221; of Connexions. RUP posts all of its books
online as soon as the manuscripts are finalized, and all books are
licensed under a CC-BY (Attribution) license. The press does not have
to pay for any warehouse or distribution costs because any physical
copies of the books are printed on demand. The sales price includes a
mission-support fee for RUP and the author's royalty. &#8220; Because
the RUP has eliminated all the back-end costs,&#8221; said Baraniuk,
&#8220; they figure they can run it from five to ten times more cheaply
than a regular university press.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="426">
		<number>426</number>
		<note>
			Rice University Press homepage, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.ricepress.rice.edu">http://www.ricepress.rice.edu</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="989">
	<ocn>989</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Connexions publishing model has inspired a group of more than
twenty community colleges to develop its own publicdomain textbooks to
compete with expensive commercial textbooks. The Community College
Consortium for Open Educational Resources<en>427</en> &#8212; led by
Foothill&#8211;De Anza Community College District in Los Altos,
California &#8212; plans to publish the ten most popular textbooks used
in community colleges, and expand from there. The consortium will make
the books available for free online and sell hardcover versions for
less than thirty dollars. Even if the effort gains only a small slice
of the textbook market, it will help hold down the prices of commercial
textbooks and demonstrate the viability of a new publishing model. More
to the point, by slashing one of the biggest costs facing community
college students, the project will help thousands of lower-income
students to stay in college.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="427">
		<number>427</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://cccoer.pbwiki.com">http://cccoer.pbwiki.com</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="990">
	<ocn>990</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		MIT's OpenCourseWare Initiative
	</text>
</object>
<object id="991">
	<ocn>991</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The other pioneering visionary in open education has been MIT. In April
2001, MIT president Charles Vest shocked the world when he announced
that MIT would begin to put the materials for all two thousand of its
courses online for anyone to use, for free. The new initiative, called
OpenCourseWare, would cover a wide array of instructional materials:
lecture notes, class assignments, problem sets, syllabi, simulations,
exams, and video lectures. Putting the materials online in a
searchable, consistent format was expected to take ten years and cost
tens of millions of dollars. (The Hewlett and Mellon foundations
initially stepped forward with two $5.5 million grants, supplemented by
$1 million from MIT.)
	</text>
</object>
<object id="992">
	<ocn>992</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The project had its origins two years earlier, in 1999, when President
Vest charged a study group with exploring how the university might
develop online educational modules for lifelong learning. The
assumption was that it would sell MIT-branded course materials to the
budding &#8220; e-learning&#8221; market. At the time, Columbia
University was developing Fathom.com, a bold for-profit co-venture with
thirteen other institutions, to sell a wide variety of digital content.
Publishers and universities alike envisioned a lucrative new market for
academic and cultural materials.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="993">
	<ocn>993</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		OpenCourseWare (OCW) was a startling move because it flatly rejected
this ambition, and appeared to be either a foolish or magnanimous
giveaway of extremely valuable information. Knowledge was assumed to be
a species of property that should be sold for as dear a price as
possible; few people at the time recognized that the Great Value Shift
on the Internet was reversing this logic. The idea that giving
information away might actually yield greater gains&#8212; by enhancing
an institution's visibility, respect, and influence on a global scale
&#8212; was not seen as credible. After all, where's the money?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="994">
	<ocn>994</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After studying the matter closely, MIT decided that the online market
was not likely to be a boon, and that posting course materials online
would send a strong message about MIT's values. President Vest conceded
that the plan &#8220; looks counter-intuitive in a market-driven
world.&#8221; But he stressed that OpenCourseWare would combine &#8220;
the traditional openness and outreach and democratizing influence of
American education and the ability of the Web to make vast amounts of
information instantly available.&#8221;<en>428</en> Professor Steven
Lerman, one of the architects of the OCW plan, told the <i>New York
Times</i>, &#8220; Selling content for profit, or trying in some ways
to commercialize one of the core intellectual activities of the
university, seemed less attractive to people at a deep level than
finding ways to disseminate it as broadly as
possible.&#8221;<en>429</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="428">
		<number>428</number>
		<note>
			MIT press release, &#8220; MIT to make nearly all course materials
available free on the World Wide Web,&#8221; April 4, 2001.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="429">
		<number>429</number>
		<note>
			Carey Goldberg, &#8220; Auditing Classes at M.I.T., on the Web and
Free,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, April 4, 2001, p. 1.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="995">
	<ocn>995</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		MIT also realized the dangers of propertizing college courses and
teaching materials, said computer scientist Hal Abelson, another member
of the OCW study group (and a CC board member). Ownership, he said,
&#8220; can be profoundly destructive to the idea of a university
community . . . The more people can stop talking about property and
start talking about the nature of a faculty member's commitment to the
institution, the healthier the discussion will be. It's not really
about what you own as a faculty member; it's about what you do as a
faculty member.&#8221;<en>430</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="430">
		<number>430</number>
		<note>
			Interview with Hal Abelson, &#8220; OpenCourseWare and the Mission
of MIT,&#8221; <i>Academe</i>, September/October 2002, pp. 25&#8211;26.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="996">
	<ocn>996</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		School officials stressed that using MIT courseware on the Web is not
the same as an MIT education. Indeed, the free materials underscore the
fact that what really distinguishes an MIT education is one's
participation in a learning community. Unlike the Connexions content,
MIT's OpenCourseWare is a fairly static set of course materials; they
are not modular or constantly updated. In addition, they are licensed
under a CC BY-NC-SA (AttributionNonCommercial-ShareAlike.) license.
While this prevents businesses from profiting from MIT course
materials, it also prevents other educational institutions from
remixing them into new courses or textbooks.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="997">
	<ocn>997</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Despite these limitations, MIT's OCW materials have been profoundly
influential. The course Laboratory in Software Engineering, for
example, has been used by students in Karachi, Pakistan; the island of
Mauritius; Vienna, Austria; and Kansas City, Missouri, among scores of
other places around the world.<en>431</en> Ten of the leading Chinese
universities now use hundreds of MIT courses, leading three noted OER
experts, Daniel E. Atkins, John Seely Brown, and Allen L. Hammond, to
conclude that MIT's OCW &#8220; has had a major impact on Chinese
education.&#8221;<en>432</en> Noting the life-changing impact that OCW
has had on students in rural villages in China and West Africa, Atkins
and his co-authors cite &#8220; the power of the OCW as a means for
cross-cultural engagement.&#8221; Over the course of four years, from
October 2003 through 2007, the OCW site received nearly 16 million
visits; half were newcomers and half were repeat visits.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="431">
		<number>431</number>
		<note>
			David Diamond, &#8220; MIT Everyware,&#8221; <i>Wired</i>,
September 2003.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="432">
		<number>432</number>
		<note>
			Daniel E. Atkins, John Seely Brown, and Allen L. Hammond, &#8220; A
Review of the Open Educational Resources (OER) Movement: Achievements,
Challenges and New Opportunities,&#8221; February 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.oerderves.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/a-review-of-the-open-educational-re">http://www.oerderves.org/wp-content/uploads/2007/03/a-review-of-the-open-educational-re</link>&gt;
sources-oer-movement_final.pdf, p. 23.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="998">
	<ocn>998</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		OCW is becoming a more pervasive international ethic now that more than
120 educational institutions in twenty nations have banded together to
form the OpenCourseWare Consortium. Its goal is to create &#8220; a
broad and deep body of open educational content using a shared
model.&#8221;<en>433</en> Although plenty of universities are still
trying to make money from distance education courses, a growing number
of colleges and universities realize that OCW helps faculty connect
with other interested faculty around the world, build a college's
public recognition and recruitment, and advance knowledge as a public
good.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="433">
		<number>433</number>
		<note>
			OpenCourseWare Consortium, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.ocwconsortium.org">http://www.ocwconsortium.org</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="999">
	<ocn>999</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		The Rise of the Open Educational Resources Movement
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1000">
	<ocn>1000</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While Connexions and MIT's OpenCourseWare have understandably garnered
a great deal of attention, all sorts of fascinating educational
projects, big and small, have popped up on the Internet as Web 2.0
innovations matured. Some of these projects have become celebrated,
such as Wikipedia, the Public Library of Science, and the Internet
Archive. Others, though less celebrated, represent a dazzling mosaic of
educational innovation and new possibilities. In a sense, the Long Tail
has come to education; even the most obscure subjects have a
sustainable niche on the Internet. The groundswell has even produced
its own theorists, conveners, and infrastructure builders. Utah State
University hosts the Center for Open Sustainable Learning, which is a
clearinghouse for open educational tools. Carnegie Mellon has an Open
Learning Initiative that designs educational courses. And so on.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1001">
	<ocn>1001</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		While American institutions and educators have been the first movers in
this field, it has quickly taken on an international grassroots flavor.
Thousands of commoners from around the world have started their own
projects. MathWorld has become the Web's most extensive mathematical
resource. Curriki is a wiki that offers lessons plans and guidance for
teachers. The British Library's Online Gallery features digitized
versions of Mozart's musical diary and sketches by Leonardo da Vinci.
U.K. and Australian high school students can now use the Internet to
operate the Faulkes Telescope on the island of Maui, Hawaii. Students
around the world do much the same with Bugscope, a scanning electronic
microscope that can be operated remotely.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1002">
	<ocn>1002</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is hard to set a precise date when the practitioners in this area
realized that such wildly diverse projects might constitute a coherent
movement with a shared agenda. But as more grantees began to discover
each other, the movement-in-formation adopted a rather ungainly name to
describe itself &#8212; &#8220; Open Educational Resources,&#8221; or
OER.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1003">
	<ocn>1003</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Most OER projects share a simple and powerful idea &#8212; &#8220; that
the world's knowledge is a public good and that technology in general
and the World Wide Web in particular provide an extraordinary
opportunity for everyone to share, use and reuse knowledge.&#8221; That
is how Atkins and his co-authors define OER. It consists of &#8220;
teaching, learning and research resources that reside in the public
domain or have been released under an intellectual property license
that permits their free use or re-purposing by
others.&#8221;<en>434</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="434">
		<number>434</number>
		<note>
			Ibid.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1004">
	<ocn>1004</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The heart of the OER movement is, of course, open sharing and
collaboration. OER advocates regard learning as an intrinsically social
process, and so they believe that knowledge and learning tools ought to
freely circulate. Inspired by the GPL and the CC licenses, OER
advocates believe they should be free to copy, modify, and improve
their learning tools and pass them forward to others. There is a
presumption that artificial barriers to the free flow of information
should be eliminated, and that teachers and learners should be
empowered to create their own knowledge commons.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1005">
	<ocn>1005</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The OER movement has a special importance for people who want to learn
but don't have the money or resources, which is to say, people in
developing nations, low-income people, and people with specialized
learning needs. For the 4 billion people who live in the developing
world, schooling is a privilege, textbooks are rare, and money is
scarce. In many African nations, there would not be libraries if books
were not photocopied. The OER movement aspires to address these needs.
OER projects can provide important benefits in industrialized nations,
too, where subscriptions to research journals are often prohibitively
expensive and many community college students drop out because
textbooks cost more than tuition.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1006">
	<ocn>1006</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The OER movement is currently in a formative stage, still trying to
make sense of the many players in the movement and understand the
complex impediments to its progress. Some of this could be seen at a
&#8220; speed geeking&#8221; session at the iCommons Summit in 2007 in
Dubrovnik, Croatia. Speed geeking, a puckish variation on &#8220; speed
dating,&#8221; consists of people listening to a short presentation,
asking questions and then moving on to the next presentation. After
five minutes, a moderator blows a whistle and shouts, &#8220; Everyone
move &#8212; now!&#8221; A speed geek can learn about twelve different
projects, and meet twelve interesting people, in a single hour.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1007">
	<ocn>1007</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In this case, the speed geeking took place in a sweltering loft space
without air-conditioning, in a medieval building overlooking the
Adriatic Sea. At the first station, a group of participants marveled at
a sturdy lime-green laptop of a kind that was about to be distributed
to millions of children around the world. The One Laptop Per Child
project, the brainchild of Nicholas Negroponte of MIT's Media Lab, is
an ambitious nonprofit initiative to build a sturdy, kidfriendly laptop
filled with open-source software and Wi-Fi capabilities for
$100.<en>435</en> (The cost turned out to be $188, but is expected to
decline as production volume grows.) Hundreds of thousands of the
so-called XO laptops have now been distributed to kids in Peru,
Uruguay, Mexico and other poor nations.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="435">
		<number>435</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g., John Markoff, &#8220; For $150, Third-World Laptop Stirs
a Big Debate,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, November 30, 2006.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1008">
	<ocn>1008</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Tweet!</i> Next stop: the Free High School Science Textbooks project
in South Africa is developing a free set of science textbooks for
students in grades ten through twelve. The project depends on
volunteers to write modules of text about various physics, chemistry,
and mathematical topics. Paid editors then craft the text into a
coherent, high-quality textbook; printing is funded by donations.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1009">
	<ocn>1009</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Five minutes later, it was on to Educalibre, a Chilean project that is
installing free software on old computers so that they can be reused in
classrooms. Educalibre is also trying to integrate free software into
high school curricula, especially math. The project seeks to bring
open-source software principles into formal education.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1010">
	<ocn>1010</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Next, Delia Browne of the National Education Access Licence for
Schools, or NEALS, explained that some ten thousand Australian schools
pay millions of dollars each year to collecting societies in order to
reprint materials that the Australian schools themselves have produced.
NEALS wants to eliminate this expense, as well as millions of dollars
in photocopying expenses, by creating a vast new commons of freely
shareable educational materials. Its solution is to persuade Australian
schools, as copyright holders, to adopt a special license so that
participating schools can copy and share each other's materials.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1011">
	<ocn>1011</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Tweet!</i> At the next station, Ed Bice of San Francisco explained
how his nonprofit group, Meedan.net, is developing a &#8220; virtual
town square&#8221; for Arabic- and English-speaking Internet users.
Using realtime translation and social networking tools, the site
aspires to open up a new global conversation between Arabs and the rest
of the world. It plans to break down cultural barriers while opening up
educational opportunities to Arab populations.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1012">
	<ocn>1012</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>Tweet! Tweet!</i> Neeru Paharia, a former executive director of the
Creative Commons, introduced her fledgling project, AcaWiki. Paharia is
concerned that too many academic articles are locked behind paywalls
and are not readily accessible to everyone. AcaWiki plans to recruit
graduate students, academics, and citizens to write summaries of
academic papers. Since many grad students make abstracts as part of
their routine research, it would not be difficult to pool thousands of
summaries into a highly useful, searchable Web collection.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1013">
	<ocn>1013</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The speed geekers in Dubrovnik were sweaty and overstimulated at the
end, but gratified to learn that there are a great many OER projects
under way throughout the world; they just aren't very well known or
coordinated with one another. Two of the participants &#8212; J.
Philipp Schmidt of the University of the Western Cape and Mark Surman
of the Shuttleworth Foundation, both of South Africa &#8212; conceded
that &#8220; there is still a great deal of fuzziness about what this
movement includes,&#8221; and that &#8220; we don't yet have a good
&#8216; map' of open education.&#8221; But the significance of
grassroots initiatives is unmistakable. &#8220; There is a movement
afoot here,&#8221; they concluded, &#8220; and it is movement with an
aim no less than making learning accessible and adaptable for
all.&#8221;<en>436</en> &#8220; Education,&#8221; another participant
predicted, &#8220; will drive the future of the Commons
movement.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="436">
		<number>436</number>
		<note>
			J. Philipp Schmidt and Mark Surman, &#8220; Open Sourcing
Education: Learning and Wisdom from the iSummit 2007,&#8221; September
2, 2007, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://icommons.org/download_banco/open-sourcing-education-learning-and-wisdom-from-isummit-2007">http://icommons.org/download_banco/open-sourcing-education-learning-and-wisdom-from-isummit-2007</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1014">
	<ocn>1014</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In a sign that the OER movement is getting serious as a movement,
thirty of its leaders met in Cape Town, South Africa, and in January
2008 issued the Cape Town Open Education Declaration.<en>437</en> The
declaration is a call to make learning materials more freely available
online, and to improve education and learning by making them more
collaborative, flexible, and locally relevant. The declaration outlines
the challenge: &#8220; Many educators remain unaware of the growing
pool of open educational resources. Many governments and educational
institutions are either unaware or unconvinced of the benefits of open
education. Differences among licensing schemes for open resources
create confusion and incompatibility. And, of course, the majority of
the world does not have access to the computers and networks that are
integral to most current open education efforts.&#8221;
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="437">
		<number>437</number>
		<note>
			&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.capetowndeclaration.org">http://www.capetowndeclaration.org</link>&gt;.
Schmidt and Surman, &#8220; Open Sourcing Education.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1015">
	<ocn>1015</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		New funding support is materializing from foundations like the Open
Society Institute and the Shuttleworth Foundation, and the Creative
Commons has instigated a new project, ccLearn, headed by Ahrash
Bissell, to help coordinate OER factions and tackle barriers to further
progress.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1016">
	<ocn>1016</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Despite the challenges it faces, the Open Educational Resources
movement has a promising future if only because it has such an
appealing ethos and practical value. It offers to lower the costs and
increase the efficiencies of learning. It helps to generate
high-quality materials that address specific learning needs. Where
markets are too expensive or unresponsive, collective provisioning
through the commons can meet needs effectively and in socially
convivial ways.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1017">
	<ocn>1017</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Such intangible satisfactions may be one of the secrets of the OER
movement's success to date. Institutions and individuals take pleasure
in contributing to the public good. There is pleasure in helping people
who thirst for an education, whether in Africa or in a community
college, to acquire the resources they need. For learners, the OER
movement offers new, more flexible styles of learning. Over time, it
seems likely that OER projects will transform the familiar &#8220;
information transfer&#8221; models of formal education into more
informal and participatory learning communities. Passive students will
more easily become passionate, self-directed learners.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1018">
	<ocn>1018</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Finally, at a time of great geopolitical rivalries and cultural
animosities, the OER movement holds itself forth as an arena of
transnational cooperation. It regards diversity as a strength and
social inequity as a challenge to be squarely met. It is a measure of
the movement's idealism that Schmidt and Surman, the South African OER
commoners, compare open education to &#8220; a flock of migratory
geese, moving back and forth between North and South. The flock
combines birds from all places. Each goose takes a turn leading the
flock, taking the strain, and then handing over to their peers. The
flock is not confined to just the North, or the South. It flourishes as
a global movement.&#8221; 14
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1019">
	<ocn>1019</ocn>
	<text class="h4">
		CONCLUSION: THE DIGITAL REPUBLIC AND THE FUTURE OF DEMOCRATIC CULTURE
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1020">
	<ocn>1020</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		<i>You never change things by fighting the existing reality. To change
something, build a new model that makes the existing model obsolete.
&#8212; R. Buckminster Fuller</i>
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1021">
	<ocn>1021</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Legend has it that, upon leaving Independence Hall on the final day of
the Constitutional Convention in 1787, Benjamin Franklin was approached
by a woman, who asked, &#8220; Well, Doctor, what have we got &#8212; a
Republic or a Monarchy?&#8221; Franklin famously replied, &#8220; A
Republic, if you can keep it.&#8221; The American colonies had imagined
and engineered a new constitutional order, but its survival would
depend on countless new struggles and innovations. An American civic
culture had to be invented.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1022">
	<ocn>1022</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Franklin vignette might well be applied to the digital republic
that the commoners have built. Except that, instead of asking, &#8220;
Well, Mr. Stallman and Professor Lessig, what have we got &#8212; a
free culture or a proprietary tyranny?&#8221; the question might better
be posed to the commoners themselves. Their very existence answers the
question, Tyranny or freedom? Free culture exists. It exists to the
extent that people practice its ideals. It is not pervasive; many
people have no idea what it is; it overlaps in fuzzy ways with the
market. But it is flourishing wherever online communities have devised
satisfactory commons structures &#8212; through law, software, and
social norms &#8212; to capture the value that they create. Or, as the
American Framers put it, to secure the blessings of liberty to
ourselves and our posterity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1023">
	<ocn>1023</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As the preceding chapters make clear, the commoners are now a respected
force in culture, politics, and economics. Their influence can be felt
in varying degrees in the worlds of music, video, photography, and
books; in software, Web design, and Internet policies; in social
networks and peer-to-peer communities; in business, science, and
education; and in scores of countries that have ported the Creative
Commons licenses and developed their own commons-based projects.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1024">
	<ocn>1024</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Thanks to the Internet, the commons is now a distinct sector of
economic production and social experience. It is a source of &#8220;
value creation&#8221; that both complements and competes with markets.
It is an arena of social association, self-governance, and collective
provisioning that is responsive and trustworthy in ways that government
often is not. In a sense, the commons sector is a recapitulation of
civil society, as described by Alexis de Tocqueville, but with
different capacities.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1025">
	<ocn>1025</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Yet even with the great advances that the commoners have made in
building their own shared platforms, tools, and content, the digital
republic is not secure. In most countries, the commoners have less
conventional political power than corporations, which means that the
interests of citizens, consumers, and users are scanted in the policies
that govern market competition, intellectual property, and life on the
Internet.<en>438</en> Faced with the Great Value Shift, mass-media and
entertainment corporations are not eager to surrender their historic
market franchises to newcomers without a fight; they are resisting
competition from open business models and the commons.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="438">
		<number>438</number>
		<note>
			For a nice overview of these policy contests, see Yochai Benkler,
<i>The Wealth of Networks: How Social Production Transforms Markets and
Freedom</i> (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2006), chapter 11,
&#8220; The Battle Over the Institutional Ecology of the Digital
Environment,&#8221; pp. 383&#8211;459.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1026">
	<ocn>1026</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In the United States, cable broadcast operators and telephone carriers
are threatening the very future of the Internet as a commons
infrastructure. They wish to assert greater control over Web access and
traffic, and so are staunchly resisting &#8220; net neutrality&#8221;
rules that would require them to act as nondiscriminatory common
carriers. They would like to leverage their roles as oligopolistic
gatekeepers to the Internet, and boost their revenues, by choosing
whose Web sites will receive superior transmission and whose
communications may be censored or put in the &#8220; slow lane.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1027">
	<ocn>1027</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		At a further extreme, authoritarian countries such as China, Saudi
Arabia, Egypt, and Singapore have shown that national governments still
retain great powers to censor and control Internet
communications.<en>439</en> Even the United States government is
reportedly engaged in extensive surveillance of Internet traffic,
ostensibly for antiterrorism purposes. Meanwhile, many poor nations,
especially in Africa and Asia, are struggling simply to get online and
create their own digital commons.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="439">
		<number>439</number>
		<note>
			Shanthi Kalathil and Taylor C. Boas, <i>Open Networks, Closed
Regimes: The Impact of the Internet on Authoritarian Rule</i>
(Washington, DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2003).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1028">
	<ocn>1028</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		These battles are all part of a larger struggle over &#8220; the
institutional ecology of the digital environment,&#8221; in Yochai
Benkler's words &#8212; a struggle that is likely to continue for many
years. What powers and capabilities will the commoners and their
institutions have relative to business and government, and how will
they be able to protect and enhance the value created within the
commons?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1029">
	<ocn>1029</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		A New Species of Citizenship
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1030">
	<ocn>1030</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Perhaps the most enduring contribution of the free software, free
culture, and other &#8220; open movements&#8221; has been their
invention of a new species of citizenship. Despite significant
differences of philosophy and implementation, these commons share some
basic values about access, use, and reuse of creative works and
information. No matter their special passions, the commoners tend to be
improvisational, resourceful, self-directed, collaborative, and
committed to democratic ideals. They celebrate a diversity of
aesthetics, viewpoints, and cultures. They are egalitarian in spirit
yet respectful of talent and achievement. There is a strong
predilection to share because the accrual of digital contributions
(code, content, metatags) will lead to a greater good for all and
perhaps even democratic change. But there is no hostility to commercial
activity &#8212; indeed, there is a lively admiration for
entrepreneurialism &#8212; so long as it does not violate basic
creative and civic freedoms or core principles of the Internet
(openness, interoperability, sharing). The disagreements that do exist
center on how best to achieve those goals.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1031">
	<ocn>1031</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As this book has shown, the Internet is enabling a new species of
citizenship in modern life. It is not just a &#8220; nice thing.&#8221;
It is a powerful force for change. The new technologies have been
instrumental in helping the commoners imagine and build a digital
republic of their own. Over the long term, this citizenship and the
culture that it is fostering are likely to be a politically
transformative force. They just might help real-world democracies
restore a measure of their waning legitimacy and
competence.<en>440</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="440">
		<number>440</number>
		<note>
			David Bollier, <i>The Rise of Netpolitik: How the Internet Is
Changing International Politics and Diplomacy</i> (Washington, DC:
Aspen Institute Communications and Society Program, 2003).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1032">
	<ocn>1032</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		David R. Johnson, a lawyer and scholar, describes the citizen of the
Internet &#8212; the &#8220; netizen&#8221; &#8212; as a significant
historical development because he or she can potentially compete with
government as a source of binding rule sets. In a brilliant essay,
&#8220; The Life of the Law Online,&#8221; Johnson writes that &#8220;
we haven't had a real competition for survival among rule sets. The
competition is only between the rule of (our one) law and, presumably,
anarchy. So the tendency of all rule sets to become more complicated
over time, especially when written by people considering only parts of
the system in analytical isolation, has not been checked by
evolutionary forces.&#8221;<en>441</en> Government has an unchecked
monopoly on lawmaking even though its relationship to the governed,
whose consent is vital, is now greatly attenuated.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="441">
		<number>441</number>
		<note>
			David R. Johnson, &#8220; The Life of the Law Online,&#8221;
<i>First Monday</i> 11, no. 2 (February 2006), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_2/johnson/index.html">http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_2/johnson/index.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1033">
	<ocn>1033</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		One evolutionary &#8220; competitor&#8221; to government-made law and
to markets is the netizen &#8212; or, in my terms, the commoner. For
the most part, members of a commons generate and maintain the rules
that govern their collective. By Johnson's reckoning, the commons must
be considered a new social metabolism for creating law; it is a new
type of &#8220; legal organism.&#8221; It is, in Johnson's words,
&#8220; a selfcausing legal order composed of systems that adopt goals
that serve the values of those they regulate, without excessively
imposing those goals on others.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1034">
	<ocn>1034</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		A commons is a kind of biological entity operating in a complex
cultural ecosystem. It has its own internal systems for managing its
affairs, interacting with its environment, repairing itself, and
defining its own persistent identity. It is a force by which ordinary
people can express their deepest interests and passions, directly and
without institutional mediation, on a global stage. This is an
unprecedented capacity in communications, culture, and, indeed, human
history.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1035">
	<ocn>1035</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		To understand why the commoner represents a great leap forward in
citizenship, it helps to consider the history of citizenship in the
oldest democracy in the world, the United States. In his book <i>The
Good Citizen</i>, sociologist Michael Schudson describes the evolution
of three distinct types of citizenship over the past three centuries:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1036">
	<ocn>1036</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		When the nation was founded, being a citizen meant little more than for
property-owning white males to delegate authority to a local gentleman
&#8212; and accept his complimentary glass of rum on election day. This
&#8220; politics of assent&#8221; gave way early in the nineteenth
century to a &#8220; politics of parties.&#8221; Parties conducted
elaborate campaigns of torchlight processions and monster meetings;
voting day was filled with banter, banners, fighting and drinking. . .
. The third model of citizenship, ushered in by Progressive reformers,
was a &#8220; politics of information.&#8221; Campaigning became less
emotional and more educational. Voting was by secret
ballot.<en>442</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="442">
		<number>442</number>
		<note>
			Michael Schudson, <i>The Good Citizen: A History of American Civic
Life</i> (New York: Free Press, 1998), dust jacket.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1037">
	<ocn>1037</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		We are heirs to the &#8220; politics of information,&#8221; a model of
citizenship that presumes, as economics does, that we are rational
actors who, if armed with sufficient quantities of high-quality
information, will make educated decisions and optimize civic outcomes.
But as Walter Lippmann noted and Schudson echoes, &#8220; if democracy
requires omnicompetence and omniscience from its citizens, it is a lost
cause.&#8221;<en>443</en> Life is too busy, fast, and complex. A new
type of citizenship is needed. Schudson offers a fairly weak
prescription &#8212; the &#8220; monitorial citizen,&#8221; a watchdog
who vigilantly monitors the behavior of power.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="443">
		<number>443</number>
		<note>
			Ibid., p. 310.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1038">
	<ocn>1038</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		But it is precisely here that the Internet is offering up a new, more
muscular model of citizenship. I call it <i>history-making
citizenship</i>. The rise of the blogosphere over the past ten years is
emblematic of this new paradigm of citizenship. So is
citizen-journalism, free software, Wikipedia, the Open Educational
Resources movement, open business models like Jamendo and Flickr, and
the Creative Commons and iCommons communities. In one sense, the
citizenship that these groups practice is &#8220; monitorial&#8221; in
that their members spend a great deal of time watching and discussing.
But &#8220; monitoring&#8221; barely begins to describe their
activities. The commoners have the ability &#8212; rare in pre-Internet
civic life &#8212; to publish and incite others to action, and then
organize and follow through, using a growing variety of powerful tools.
With the advent of blogs, meetups, social networking, text messaging,
and many other digital systems, citizens are able to communicate,
coordinate, organize, and take timely action on a wide range of
matters, including matters of public and political concern.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1039">
	<ocn>1039</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		I call the new sorts of citizen behaviors &#8220; history-making&#8221;
because ordinary people are able to assert moral agency and participate
in making change.<en>444</en> This capacity is not reserved chiefly to
large, impersonal institutions such as corporations, government
agencies, and other bureaucracies. It is not a mere &#8220;
participatory citizenship&#8221; in which people can volunteer their
energies to a larger a more influential leader, political party, or
institution in order to help out. It is a citizenship in which <i>the
commoners themselves</i> choose projects that suit their talents and
passions. Dispersed, unorganized groups of strangers can build their
own platforms and social norms for pursuing their goals; instigate
public action that would not otherwise occur (and that may clash with
the practices of existing institutions); and push forward their own
distinctive agenda.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="444">
		<number>444</number>
		<note>
			I am inspired in this choice of terms by Charles Spinosa, Frnando
Flores, and Hubert L. Dreyfus in their book, <i>Disclosing New Worlds:
Entrepreneurship, Democratic Action, and the Cultivation of
Solidarity</i> (Cambridge, MA: MIT Press, 1997).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1040">
	<ocn>1040</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		These behaviors exist in some measure in offline realms, of course, but
they are a growing norm in the digital republic. A few examples will
suffice to make the point. The Web helped create and propel a handful
of cause-oriented candidacies &#8212; Howard Dean, Ron Paul, Ned
Lamont<en>*12</en> &#8212; who rapidly raised enormous sums of money,
galvanized large numbers of passionate supporters, and altered
mainstream political discourse. Although none prevailed in their races,
Barack Obama made a quantum leap in online organizing in 2008, raising
$50 million in a single month from supporters via the Internet. Obama's
candidacy was buoyed by the rise of the &#8220; netroots&#8221; &#8212;
Web activists with a progressive political agenda&#8212; whose size and
credibility enable them to sway votes in Congress, raise significant
amounts of campaign funds, and influence local activism. The stories
are now legion about blogs affecting political life &#8212; from the
resignation of Senate majority leader Trent Lott after he praised the
racist past of Senator Strom Thurmond at his hundredth birthday party,
to the electoral defeat of Senate candidate George Allen after his
uttering of an ethnic slur, <i>macaca</i>, was posted on YouTube.
	</text>
	<endnote symbol="*12">
		<symbol>*12</symbol>
		<note>
			Lamont was an insurgent candidate for U.S. Senate from Connecticut
challenging Senator Joseph Lieberman in a campaign that helped
culturally validate opposition to the U.S. war in Iraq.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1041">
	<ocn>1041</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Citizens are now able to initiate their own policy initiatives without
first persuading the mainstream media or political parties to validate
them as worthy. For example, a handful of citizens troubled by evidence
of &#8220; hackable&#8221; electronic voting machines exposed the
defects of the Diebold machines and the company's efforts to thwart
public scrutiny and reforms.<en>445</en> (The effort has led to a
nationwide citizen effort, www.blackboxvoting.org, to expose security
problems with voting machines and vote counting.) An ad hoc group of
activists, lawyers, academics, and journalists spontaneously formed
around a public wiki dealing with the lethal side effects of a
bestselling antipsychotic drug Zyprexa, and the manufacturer's
allegedly illegal conduct in suppressing evidence of the drug's risks.
(Prosecutors later sought a $1 billion fine against Eli
Lilly.)<en>446</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="445">
		<number>445</number>
		<note>
			See, e.g.,Yochai Benkler, <i>The Wealth of Networks</i>, pp.
225&#8211;32.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="446">
		<number>446</number>
		<note>
			Jonah Bossewitch, &#8220; The Zyprexa Kills Campaign: Peer
Production and the Frontiers of Radical Pedagogy,&#8221;
<i>Re-public</i>, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=144">http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=144</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1042">
	<ocn>1042</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The Web is giving individuals extra-institutional public platforms for
articulating their own facts and interpretations of culture. It is
enabling them to go far beyond voting and citizen vigilance, to mount
citizen-led interventions in politics and governance. History-making
citizens can compete with the mass media as an arbiter of cultural and
political reality. They can expose the factual errors and lack of
independence of <i>New York Times</i> reporters; reveal the editorial
biases of the &#8220; MSM&#8221; &#8212; mainstream media &#8212; by
offering their own videotape snippets on YouTube; they can even be
pacesetters for the MSM, as the blog Firedoglake did in its relentless
reporting of the &#8220; Scooter&#8221; Libby trial (Libby, one of Vice
President Cheney's top aides, was convicted of obstruction of justice
and perjury in connection with press leaks about CIA agent Valerie
Plame.) Citizen-journalists, amateur videographers, genuine experts who
have created their own Web platforms, parodists, dirty tricksters, and
countless others are challenging elite control of the news agenda. It
is no wonder that commercial journalism is suffering an identity
crisis. Institutional authority is being trumped by the &#8220; social
warranting&#8221; of online communities, many of which function as a
kind of participatory meritocracy.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1043">
	<ocn>1043</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		History-making citizenship is not without its deficiencies. Rumors,
misinformation, and polarized debate are common in this more open,
unmediated environment. Its crowning virtue is its potential ability to
mobilize the energies and creativity of huge numbers of people.
GNU/Linux improbably drew upon the talents of tens of thousands of
programmers; certainly our contemporary world with its countless
problems could use some of this elixir&#8212; platforms that can elicit
distributed creativity, specialized talent, passionate commitment, and
social legitimacy. In 2005 Joi Ito, then chairman of the board of the
Creative Commons, wrote: &#8220; Traditional forms of representative
democracy can barely manage the scale, complexity and speed of the
issues in the world today. Representatives of sovereign nations
negotiating with each other in global dialog are limited in their
ability to solve global issues. The monolithic media and its
increasingly simplistic representation of the world cannot provide the
competition of ideas necessary to reach informed, viable
consensus.&#8221;<en>447</en> Ito concluded that a new,
not-yetunderstood model of &#8220; emergent democracy&#8221; is likely
to materialize as the digital revolution proceeds. A civic order
consisting of &#8220; intentional blog communities, ad hoc advocacy
coalitions and activist networks&#8221; could begin to tackle many
urgent problems.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="447">
		<number>447</number>
		<note>
			Joichi Ito, &#8220; Emergent Democracy,&#8221; chapter 1 in John
Lebkowsky and Mitch Ratcliffe, eds., <i>Extreme Democracy</i> (Durham,
NC: Lulu.com, 2005), at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://extremedemocracy.com/chapters/Chapter%20One-Ito.pdf">http://extremedemocracy.com/chapters/Chapter%20One-Ito.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1044">
	<ocn>1044</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Clearly, the first imperative in developing a new framework to host
representative democracy is to ensure that the electronic commons be
allowed to exist in the first place. Without net neutrality, citizens
could very well be stifled in their ability to participate on their own
terms, in their own voices. If proprietary policies or technologies are
allowed to override citizen interests (Verizon Wireless in 2007
prevented the transmission of abortion rights messages on its
text-messaging system, for example<en>448</en>), then any hope for
historymaking citizenship will be stillborn.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="448">
		<number>448</number>
		<note>
			Adam Liptak, &#8220; Verizon Reverses Itself on Abortion
Messages,&#8221; <i>New York Times</i>, September 27, 2007, at
&lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/27/business/27cnd-verizon.html">http://www.nytimes.com/2007/09/27/business/27cnd-verizon.html</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1045">
	<ocn>1045</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Beyond such near-term concerns, however, the emerging digital republic
is embroiled in a much larger structural tension with &#8211;
terrestrial &#8220; real world&#8221; governments. The commoner is
likely to regard the rules forged in online commons as more legitimate
and appropriate than those mandated by government. Again, David R.
Johnson:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1046">
	<ocn>1046</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		The goals of a successful legal organism must be agreed upon by those
who live within it, because a legal system is nothing more than a
collective conversation about shared values. When it ceases to be that
kind of internally entailed organism, the law becomes mere power,
social &#8220; order&#8221; becomes tyranny, and the only option, over
the long term at least, is war.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1047">
	<ocn>1047</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		Organisms can't be repaired from the outside. But, with reference to
interactions that take place primarily online, among willing
participants who seek primarily to regulate their own affairs, that's
exactly where existing governments are situated &#8212; outside the
vibrant, self-regulating online spaces they seek to regulate. Their
efforts to engineer the Internet as if it were a mechanism are not only
fundamentally illegitimate but doomed by the very nature of the thing
they seek to regulate. They are trying to create social order, of
course. But they have not recognized . . . that order in complex
systems creates itself.<en>449</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="449">
		<number>449</number>
		<note>
			Johnson, &#8220; The Life of the Law Online.&#8221;
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1048">
	<ocn>1048</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		After all, he or she is likely to have had a more meaningful personal
role in crafting those rules. Now, of course, people live their lives
in both online and terrestrial environments; there is no strict
division between the two. That said, as people's lives become more
implicated in Internet spaces, citizens are likely to prefer the
freedoms and affordances of the open-networked environment to the
stunted correlates of offline politics, governance, and law.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1049">
	<ocn>1049</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Indeed, this may be why so many activists and idealists are attracted
to online venues. There is a richer sense of possibility. Contemporary
politics and government have been captured by big money, professionals,
and concentrated power. By contrast, in the digital republic, the ethic
of transparency deals harshly with institutional manipulations,
deceptions, and bad faith. They literally become part of your &#8220;
permanent record,&#8221; forever available via a Google search. More
fundamentally, the digital republic has a basic respect for everyone's
ability to contribute. It respects the principle of open access for
all. The &#8220; consent of the governed&#8221; really matters. How
sobering it is, then, to return to the &#8220; real world&#8221; of the
American polity &#8212; or most other national governments &#8212; and
realize that &#8220; money talks and bullshit walks.&#8221; How
depressing to realize that the system is highly resistant to ordinary
citizen action, such is the mismatch of resources.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1050">
	<ocn>1050</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The growing dissonance between the American system of governance, as
practiced, and the more open, meritocratic online world was surely a
factor in Lessig's decision in 2007 to step down as CEO of Creative
Commons, a move that eventually took place in April 2008. Lessig's
crushing responsibilities as the leader of Creative Commons &#8212; the
international travel, the fund-raising, the strategic planning, the
public events and movement obligations &#8212; had surely taken its
toll. Feeling a personal need for new challenges as well as a
responsibility to let new leaders emerge within the CC world, Lessig
announced an ambitious new agenda for himself &#8212; tackling the
&#8220; systemic corruption&#8221; of the democratic process in
Congress. He joined with Joe Trippi, the campaign manager for Howard
Dean's 2004 presidential run, to launch a new organization, Change
Congress, which seeks to ban special-interest campaign contributions,
secure public financing for campaigns, and bring greater transparency
to congressional proceedings. In a shuffle of roles, longtime board
member James Boyle &#8212; who had been especially active on science
and education initiatives &#8212; became the new chairman of Creative
Commons. Board member Joi Ito, who had been chairman for a brief
period, became CEO.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1051">
	<ocn>1051</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		If Lessig is going to succeed in using the tools of the digital
republic to reform and rejuvenate the American polity (and perhaps
inspire other governments as well), he will have to confront the rather
deeply rooted premises of the official constitutional order. The
fast-paced, commons-based governance of the digital republic is
naturally going to clash with a system of governance that revolves
around bureaucratic hierarchies, a slow-moving system of law, archaic
types of political intermediaries, and electoral principles designed
for eighteenth-century life. Can the two be reconciled? The structural
tensions are likely to be a significant and persistent issue for many,
many years.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1052">
	<ocn>1052</ocn>
	<text class="h5">
		A Long-Term Power Shift?
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1053">
	<ocn>1053</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is hard to get a fix on this long-term transformation because the
struggles to actualize an emergent democracy, as envisioned by Ito, are
strangely apolitical and intensely political at the same time. They are
apolitical in the sense that commoners are chiefly focused on the
pragmatic technical challenges of their individual projects; they are
not usually involved in official policymaking in legislatures or before
courts and government agencies. Yet free software and free culture
projects are highly political in the sense that commons projects, taken
together over time, represent a profound challenge to the conventional
market order and political culture. For example, Wikitravel, Jamendo,
and open-access journals arguably provide better value than the
commercial alternatives. The success of free software punctures the
foundational assumptions of copyright law, making it easier to
challenge new expansions of copyright law. Participatory commons are
diverting viewer &#8220; eyeballs&#8221; away from commercial media and
its genres of culture, spurring the growth of new hybrid forms of
user-generated content. These kinds of effects, which advance project
by project, month by month, are likely to have a longterm
transformational impact. A new social ethic is taking root.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1054">
	<ocn>1054</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Free culture, though culturally progressive, is fairly nonjudgmental
about ideological politics. When American conservatives decided they
wanted to start Conservapedia because they found Wikipedia too liberal,
Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales was happy to bless it: &#8220; Free
culture knows no bounds . . . We welcome the reuse of our work to build
variants. That's directly in line with our mission.&#8221;<en>450</en>
Anthropology professor E. Gabriella Coleman has found a similar
ecumenicism in the free software movement, which is agnostic about
conventional politics but adamant about its own polity of
freedom.<en>451</en> Thus, the FOSS movement has no position with
respect to social justice or globalization issues, but it does demand a
strict commitment to the &#8220; four freedoms&#8221; of software
development. Johan S&#246;derberg makes much the same case in his book
<i>Hacking Capitalism</i>.<en>452</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="450">
		<number>450</number>
		<note>
			Robert Mackey, &#8220; Conservapedia: The Word Says it All,&#8221;
<i>New York Times</i>, March 8, 2007, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/03/08/conservapedia-the-word-says-it-all/?scp=1&amp;sq=wales+conservapedia">http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2007/03/08/conservapedia-the-word-says-it-all/?scp=1&amp;sq=wales+conservapedia</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="451">
		<number>451</number>
		<note>
			E. Gabriella Coleman, &#8220; The Political Agnosticism of Free and
Open Source Software and the Inadvertent Politics of Contrast,&#8221;
<i>Anthropology Quarterly</i> 77, no. 3 (Summer 2004), pp.
507&#8211;19. See also her Ph.D. dissertation, &#8220; The Social
Construction of Freedom in Free and Open Source Software: Hackers,
Ethics and the Liberal Tradition,&#8221; abstract at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://healthhacker.org/biella/coleman-abstract.pdf">http://healthhacker.org/biella/coleman-abstract.pdf</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
	<endnote notenumber="452">
		<number>452</number>
		<note>
			Johan S&#246;derberg, <i>Hacking Capitalism: The Free and Open
Source Software Movement</i> (New York: Routledge, 2007).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1055">
	<ocn>1055</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		As projects like GNU/Linux, Wikipedia, open courseware, open-access
journals, open databases, municipal Wi-Fi, collections of CC-licensed
content, and other commons begin to cross-link and coalesce, the
commons paradigm is migrating from the margins of culture to the
center. The viral spiral, after years of building its infrastructure
and social networks, may be approaching a Cambrian explosion, an
evolutionary leap.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1056">
	<ocn>1056</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		History suggests that any new style of politics and polity will arrive
through models developed <i>from within</i> the edifice of existing
law, markets, and culture. A revolutionary coup or showdown with
existing institutions will not be necessary. Superior working models
&#8212; running code and a healthy commons &#8212; will trump polemics
and exhortation.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1057">
	<ocn>1057</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Ideological activists and political professionals are likely to scoff
at this scenario. After all, they are suspicious of distributed
political power, if not hostile to it. They prefer the levers of
consolidated power (laws, court rulings, police powers) that are within
their sphere of influence to the dispersed, sovereign powers of an
online multitude. The latter is highly resistant to capture and
control, and in that sense, profoundly threatening to the traditional
configurations of political power. We have already seen how the
mandarins of journalism, politics, and business are quick to lash out
at the noncredentialed masses who dare to put forward their own
interpretations of the world.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1058">
	<ocn>1058</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		However necessary it is to engage in the official governance of a
nation, corrupted though it may be, the commoners have shown that
building their own functioning commons can be a powerful force for
change as well. A commons of technical standards for the Web &#8212;
how mundane! &#8212; can achieve more than most antitrust lawsuits. A
common pool of information can prevent a company from reaping easy
monopoly rents from the control of a public good. Instead, the company
must &#8220; move upstream&#8221; to provide more specialized forms of
value (for example, sophisticated graphing of the information or data
analysis). A commons may also be affirmatively helpful to businesses,
as Eric von Hippel has shown, by aggregating a body of aficionados into
a social community that can articulate customer needs and preferences
in highly efficient ways: the commons as a cheap form of R &amp; D and
marketing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1059">
	<ocn>1059</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		In either case, the rise of a commons can be disruptive not just
because it changes how market power is exercised, but because it may
disperse power to a broader community of participants. Recall Johnson's
observation that a commons is a &#8220; self-causing legal order&#8221;
that competes with other legal orders. Individuals who affiliate with
an online community may acquire the ability to manage their own social
relationships and group identity.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1060">
	<ocn>1060</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This is not just a form of marketplace power, it is a form of
<i>political</i> power. In effect, a group may be able to neutralize
the power of corporations to use brands to organize their identities.
By developing its own discourse and identity, an online community can
reject their treatment as a demographic cohort of consumers. They can
assert their broader, nonmarket concerns. As a group of commoners, they
are less susceptible to propaganda, ideology, and commercial journalism
as tools for organizing their political allegiances. They have greater
civic sovereignty.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1061">
	<ocn>1061</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		&#8220; Free cooperation aims at distributing power,&#8221; argues
Geert Lovink, a Dutch media theorist:
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1062">
	<ocn>1062</ocn>
	<text class="indent1">
		I am not saying that power as such disappears, but there is certainly a
shift, away from the formal into the informal, from accountable
structures towards a voluntary and temporal connection. We have to
reconcile with the fact that these structures undermine the
establishment, but not through recognizable forms of resistance. The
&#8220; anti&#8221; element often misses. This is what makes
traditional, unreconstructed lefties so suspicious, as these networks
just do their thing and do not fit into this or that ideology, be it
neoliberal or autonomous Marxist. Their vagueness escapes any attempt
to deconstruct their intention either as proto-capitalist or
subversive.<en>453</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="453">
		<number>453</number>
		<note>
			Geert Lovink, &#8220; Theses on Wiki Politics,&#8221; an exchange
with Pavlos Hatzopoulos, <i>Re-public</i>, at &lt;<link
xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink" xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=135">http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=135</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1063">
	<ocn>1063</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This can be disorienting. Energies are not focused on resisting an
oppressor, but rather on building innovative, positive alternatives. In
Buckminster Fuller's terms, free culture is mostly about building new
models that make the existing models obsolete. Instead of forging an
identity in relation to an adversary, the movement has built an
identity around an affirmative vision and the challenge of
<i>becoming</i>. People feel fairly comfortable with a certain level of
ambiguity because the whole environment is so protean, diverse,
evolving, and dynamic.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1064">
	<ocn>1064</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The GPL and the CC licenses are ingenious hacks because they navigate
this indeterminate ideological space with legally enforceable tools,
while looking to informal social practice and norms to provide stable
governance. (&#8220;Order without law,&#8221; in law professor Robert
Ellickson's formulation.)<en>454</en> The licenses use the existing
legal order to achieve their goals (the sharing of tools and content),
and so the strategies are not seen as politically provocative. Yet the
licenses are nonetheless politically transformative because they help
new communities of practice to organize themselves and do work that may
question core premises of copyright law, conventional economics, and
government policy in general.
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="454">
		<number>454</number>
		<note>
			Robert Ellickson, Order Without Law: How Neighbors Settle Disputes
(Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2005).
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1065">
	<ocn>1065</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The beauty of this &#8220; ideological straddle&#8221; is that it
enables a diverse array of players into the same tent without inciting
sectarian acrimony. (There is some, of course, but mostly at the
margins.) Ecumenical tolerance is the norm because orthodoxies cannot
take root at the periphery where innovation is constantly being
incubated. In any case, there is a widespread realization in the
networked world that shared goals are likely to require variable
implementations, depending on specific needs and contexts.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1066">
	<ocn>1066</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It may appear that the free software hacker, blogger, tech
entrepreneur, celebrity musician, college professor, and biological
researcher have nothing in common. In truth, each is participating in
social practices that are incrementally and collectively bringing into
being a new sort of democratic polity. French sociologist Bruno Latour
calls it the &#8220; pixellation of politics,&#8221;<en>455</en> which
conjures up a pointillist painting slowly materializing. The new polity
is more open, participatory, dynamically responsive, and morally
respected by &#8220; the governed&#8221; than the nominal democracies
of nation-states. The bureaucratic state tends to be too large and
remote to be responsive to local circumstances and complex issues; it
is ridiculed and endured. But who dares to aspire to transcend it?
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="455">
		<number>455</number>
		<note>
			Bruno Latour, &#8220; We Are All Reactionaries Today,&#8221;
Re-public, at &lt;<link xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink"
xlink:type="simple"
xlink:href="http://www.republic.gr/en/?p=129">http://www.republic.gr/en/?p=129</link>&gt;.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1067">
	<ocn>1067</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Sooner or later, history-making citizenship is likely to take up such a
challenge. It already has. What is the digital republic, after all, but
a federation of self-organized communities, each seeking to fulfill its
members' dreams by developing its own indigenous set of tools, rules,
and ethics? The power of the commons stems from its role as an
organizing template, and not an ideology. Because it is able to host a
diverse and robust ecosystem of talent without squeezing it into an
ideological straitjacket, the commons is flexible and resilient. It is
based on people's sincerest passions, not on remote institutional
imperatives or ideological shibboleths. It therefore has a foundational
support and energy that can outperform &#8220; mainstream&#8221;
institutions.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1068">
	<ocn>1068</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		This, truly, is the animating force of the viral spiral: the capacity
to build one's own world and participate on a public stage. (Cicero:
&#8220; Freedom is participation in power.&#8221;) When such energies
are let loose in an open, networked environment, all sorts of new and
interesting innovations emerge. Since an online commons does not have
the burden of turning a profit or supporting huge overhead, it can wait
for serendipity, passion, and idiosyncratic brilliance to surface, and
then rely on the Internet to propagate the fruits virally.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1069">
	<ocn>1069</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Oddly enough, entrenched commercial interests do not seem to be alarmed
by the disruptive long-term implications of free culture. If the users
of CC licenses genuflect before the altar of copyright law, it would
appear, that is sufficient. Due respect is being shown. Meanwhile, at
the level of social practice, the commoners are gradually building a
very different moral economy that converges, from different paths, on a
new type of civic order. In <i>Code</i>, Lessig called it &#8220;
freedom without anarchy, control without government, consensus without
power.&#8221;
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1070">
	<ocn>1070</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		It is not entirely clear how the special capacities of bottom-up
networks &#8212; a &#8220; non-totalizing system of structure that
nonetheless acts as a whole,&#8221; in Mark Taylor's words &#8212; can
be integrated with conventional government and institutions of power.
It is easy to imagine a future confrontation in the political culture,
however, as the citizens of the digital republic confront the stodgy
bureaucratic state (corporate and governmental). The latter will have
the advantages of constitutional authority and state and economic
power, but the former are likely to have the advantages of social
legitimacy, superior on-the-ground information, and creative energy.
How the digital republic will confront the old regime, or supplant it
gradually as archaic institutions collapse over time, is the stuff of
future history.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1071">
	<ocn>1071</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Theory has its limits. The building of the digital republic was in many
ways animated by theory, of course, chiefly the rejection of certain
theories of copyright law and the invention of new narratives about
creativity and the commons. But this project has not been an
intellectual, theory-driven enterprise so much as a vast, collective
enterprise of history-making citizenship. Using the affordances of
digital technologies, individuals have stepped out of their customary
or assigned roles to invent entirely new vehicles for creativity,
social life, business, politics, science, and education. Individuals
have come together to make some remarkable new tools and institutions
to serve their needs and preferences.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1072">
	<ocn>1072</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The story of the commons is, in this sense, the story of a series of
public-spirited individuals who are determined to build new vehicles
for protecting shared wealth and social energies. It is the story of
Richard Stallman fighting the privatization of software and the
disenfranchisement of the hacker community. It is the story of Eric
Eldred's determination to go to jail if necessary to defend his ability
to build a Web site for great American literature. The viral spiral, as
I have called it, truly gained momentum when Lawrence Lessig, as a
boundary-breaking law professor, decided to mount a constitutional test
case and then to assemble a larger effort to imagine and build a new
licensing scheme for sharing.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1073">
	<ocn>1073</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		The viral spiral then spins off in dozens of directions as newly
empowered people discover the freedoms and satisfactions that can
accrue to them through this ancient yet now rediscovered and
refurbished social vessel. Taken together, countless commons projects
are validating some new models of human aspiration. Instead of
presuming that a society must revolve around competitive individuals
seeking private, material gain (the height of &#8220;
rationality,&#8221; economists tell us), the commons affirms a broader,
more complex, and more enlightened paradigm of human self-interest. If
the Invisible Hand presumes to align private interest and the public
good, the commons has shown that cooperation and sharing can also serve
this goal with great versatility and sophistication.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1074">
	<ocn>1074</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Over the long term, the real meaning of the viral spiral may lie in our
discovery that the new platforms that we use to create and organize
knowledge, and relate to one another, is changing how we think and how
we conceptualize our place in the world. John Seely Brown, the former
director of Xerox PARC, has said, &#8220; From my perspective, a key
property of participatory cultures is that they help to create both a
culture of learning and a culture of doing. The social basis of doing
(e.g. networked communities of interest/ practice) that you see
emerging here actually form reflective practicum(s). This, in turn,
ends up grounding epistemology &#8212; ways of knowing &#8212; and
provides a pathway back to a kind of pragmatism that Dewey first talked
about that is situated between realism and idealism. This is the
pathway to creating a learning society and a culture that can embrace
change by unleashing and affording productive inquiry in powerful and
exciting ways.&#8221;<en>456</en>
	</text>
	<endnote notenumber="456">
		<number>456</number>
		<note>
			John Seely Brown, personal communication, January 26, 2008.
		</note>
	</endnote>
</object>
<object id="1075">
	<ocn>1075</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		By empowering us to &#8220; step into history&#8221; and take greater
responsibility for more aspects of our lives, it is no exaggeration to
say that the commons encourages us to become more integrated human
beings. We learn to integrate our production with our consumption, our
learning with our doing, and our ideals with practical realities. This
is surely why the viral spiral has been so powerfully transformative.
It has helped bring our personal needs and interests into a closer,
more congenial alignment with the institutions that serve us. We may be
caught in a messy transition, and there remains much to negotiate and
debate, but we should count our blessings. Few generations are as
fortunate in being able to imagine and build a new commons sector of
such liberating potential.
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1076">
	<ocn>1076</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Endnotes
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1077">
	<ocn>1077</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Endnotes
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1078">
	<ocn>1078</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Index
	</text>
</object>
<object id="1079">
	<ocn>1079</ocn>
	<text class="norm">
		Index
	</text>
</object>
</body>
</document>

