open...
open source, open genomics, open creation
30 November 2009
Estonia's Open Source Shame
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Last week I wrote about the curious case of Mr Kallas, vice president of the European Commission. He seemed to have problems with the word “...
Harnessing Openness in Higher Education
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Surprisingly, perhaps, education was one of the late-comers to the openness party (couldn't be all those fiercely protective academic eg...
2 comments:
Open Source House
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One of the central questions this blog tries to answer is to what extent the principles behind open source software can be applied to other ...
2 comments:
27 November 2009
Time to Abolish the Olympics?
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This is incredible: An American author and broadcaster claims Canadian border officials questioned her about whether she would discuss the ...
8 comments:
Openness as the Foundation for Global Change
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What do you do after Inventing the Web? That's not a question most of us have to face, but it is for Sir Tim Berners-Lee. Heading up the...
26 November 2009
Of Government 2.0, Open Source and Open Data
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Great to see this in Australian Senator Kate Lundy's big speech "Government 2.0: co-designing a better democracy": Open sourc...
UK Data Retention: the First 70 Years
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If you thought retention of communications data was a new habit of the UK government, think again : What was also new to me is the fact that...
Who Owns Science? The Manchester Manifesto
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One of my heroes, Sir John Sulston, has a piece in the Guardian today with the intriguing headline "How science is shackled by intell...
2 comments:
25 November 2009
A Proportionate Response to "Proportionate"
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There is a nauseating piece of troll-bait in the Guardian today. It's called "My DNA dilemma", and in it Alan Johnson attemp...
9 comments:
24 November 2009
And Another Reason that Rupe is Wrong...
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...about his plans to gag Google, and embrace the beauteous Bing: For the plan to work, it will also require that the vast, endlessly proli...
6 comments:
Promoting Open Source Science
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Open source science certainly seems to be catching on lately: there have been as many articles on the subject in the last few months as in t...
4 comments:
The Internet's Infinite Subversion
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Another nicely clueful piece in the Guardian : The emancipatory potential of the free dissemination of intellectual property through infini...
4 comments:
23 November 2009
Software Copyright vs. Software Patents
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Here's an noteworthy story about the different kinds of protection that can be given to software: Mit einer Stellungnahme vom 16.11.200...
4 comments:
Of Credibility, Openness and Scientific Tribalism
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I've steered clear of the Climate Research Unit (CRU) break-in since emotions are still running high, while information content remains ...
Has Microsoft Got a Job for You...
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Since it's Monday morning, I thought I'd start the week gently, with a little humour, courtesy of a Microsoft job ad. After all, who...
1 comment:
22 November 2009
Opening up the Black Box of Scientific Research
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I've written before about the idea of applying openness/open source ideas to science, but here's an interesting new project that at...
A Modest Proposal: "How to Fix Capitalism"
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"How to Fix Capitalism" is an insanely ambitious post that ranges over, well, just about everything concerned with business and a...
12 comments:
The Copyright Ratchet Racket Explained
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I and many others have noted how changes in copyright law only ever work in one direction: to *increase* copyright's term and to give gr...
7 comments:
20 November 2009
Mandelson's Madness
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The trajectory of the Digital Economy Bill has been extraordinary, constantly experiencing will-he-won't-he moments as successive consul...
2 comments:
18 November 2009
Sir Tim: "Public Data is a Public Good"
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The man - er, knight - himself comments on the opening up of the Ordnance Survey, and concludes with these thoughts: Data is beginning to ...
2 comments:
Free Culture Forum: Getting it Together
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As regular readers will know, I write a lot about the related areas of openness, freedom, transparency and the commons, but it's rare to...
17 November 2009
Has Ordnance Survey Managed to Find a Clue?
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This is better than I was expecting: Speaking at a seminar on Smarter Government in Downing Street later today, attended by Sir Tim Berners...
4 comments:
16 November 2009
British Library's Bitter Digital Milestone
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Oh look, the British Library thinks it has passed a milestone : The British Library has added the 500,000th item to its long-term Digital Li...
12 comments:
15 November 2009
Free Software for All Russian Schools in Jeopardy
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I've written before about Russia's ambitious plan to install free software throughout its education system. Worrying news suggest...
14 comments:
13 November 2009
The Economics of Ecosystems
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The general area of the economics of ecosystems is something that I have been banging on about for while. Now we have a Web site and even ...
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