skip to main | skip to sidebar

open...

open source, open genomics, open content

Showing posts with label zealots. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zealots. Show all posts

07 July 2008

(Still) Defending Openness in the EU

On Open Enterprise blog.

Posted by glyn moody at 11:11 AM 0 comments   Links to this post

Labels: ACT, eif, eu, intellectual monopolies, mark blafkin, open enterprise, rand, royalty-free, zealots

Newer Posts Older Posts Home
Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)

Subscribe Now: Feed Icon

Subscribe in a reader

feeds

main feed

alternative feed

Blog Archive

  • ▼ 2008 (897)
    • ▼ September (18)
      • Asterisk Discovers Again Why Open Source is a Star...
      • Open Source Surveillance
      • AT&T: Proud of its Pathetic Patent Pathology
      • Why Open Source Will Save the World
      • Cracking the GNU/Linux Security Cliché
      • Sharing is Part of the Human Condition
      • I Don't Want to Say We Told You so...
      • Why the Dell Inspiron Mini 9 Doesn't Really Delive...
      • The Networked NGO
      • Cardiff Council Welshes on Welsh Culture
      • US Discovers It's Part of the World
      • ContactPoint: What is it Good For?
      • Chrome: Google's Anti-Browser
      • The Beijing Bounce
      • The Beginning of the End for the ISO?
      • How Low Can They Go?
      • Wanna Job?
      • Write to Them: European Interoperability Framework...
    • ► August (94)
      • YouTube: A Video Commons?
      • Constant Dripping Wears Away the Stone
      • A City of Shared Stories
      • The Greening - and Maturing - of Boris
      • The End of the American Net
      • "Piracy" Is Not Theft
      • Open Access Day
      • Pre-installed Software: A Better Way
      • Google Backtracks on Eclipse and Mozilla Licences
      • Words Fail Us
      • Ordnance Survey: Right Out of Order
      • Mozilla Gets Google's Moolah for 3 More Years
      • A Tortured Relationship
      • After the Games Have Ended...
      • Linux-Powered Radios
      • Why Firefox Will Be Ubiquitous
      • Somebody's Heard the Music
      • When Will They Ever Learn...?
      • “Open for Business” Open for Business
      • Could Microsoft's Photosynth Have Been Free Softwa...
      • Attack of the GNU/Linux Ultraportables, Part 2
      • Stop European Software Patents (Again)
      • The Operating System as Prison
      • Of Microsoft, Retraining Costs, and TCOs
      • PA Consulting? Pah!
      • Copywrong
      • How Sick Are Patents? Ask Indonesia
      • Why Kindle Must Support ODF
      • Net Neutrality Explained for Old Technologists
      • Opening Up Democracy's Source Code
      • Two Japans
      • Linux Foundation Interview with Mozilla's Mitchell...
    • ► July (92)
    • ► June (115)
    • ► May (78)
    • ► April (136)
    • ► March (107)
    • ► February (116)
    • ► January (141)
  • ► 2007 (1380)
    • ► December (135)
    • ► November (162)
    • ► October (134)
    • ► September (80)
    • ► August (83)
    • ► July (105)
    • ► June (97)
    • ► May (92)
    • ► April (100)
    • ► March (95)
    • ► February (112)
    • ► January (185)
  • ► 2006 (1274)
    • ► December (127)
    • ► November (127)
    • ► October (143)
    • ► September (141)
    • ► August (112)
    • ► July (168)
    • ► June (143)
    • ► May (120)
    • ► April (71)
    • ► March (42)
    • ► February (32)
    • ► January (48)
  • ► 2005 (21)
    • ► December (21)

About Me

glyn moody
I have been a technology journalist and consultant for a quarter of a century, covering the Internet since March 1994, and the free software world since 1995. One early feature I wrote was for Wired in 1997: The Greatest OS that (N)ever Was. My most recent books are Rebel Code: Linux and the Open Source Revolution, and Digital Code of Life: How Bioinformatics is Revolutionizing Science, Medicine and Business. I can be contacted at glyn dot moody at gmail dot com Privacy Policy
View my complete profile

Subscribe with Bloglines

Get Firefox!

 
Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-No Derivative Works 2.0 UK: England & Wales Licence. Please link back to the original post.