David M. Berry, Giles Moss (eds.): Libre Culture: Meditations on Free Culture, 2nd ed. (2008)

15 April 2012, dusan

Libre Culture is the essential expression of the free culture/copyleft movement. This anthology, brought together here for the first time, represents the early groundwork of Libre Society thought. Referring to the development of creativity and ideas, capital works to hoard and privatize the knowledge and meaning of what is created. Expression becomes monopolized, secured within an artificial market-scarcity enclave and finally presented as a novelty on the culture industry in order to benefit cloistered profit motives. In the way that physical resources such as forests or public services are free, Libre Culture argues for the freeing up of human ideas and expression from copyright bulwarks in all forms.”

Publisher Pygmalion Books, Winnipeg, 2008
Res Divini Juris Libre Commons Licence
172 pages
via archive.org

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Journal of Digital Humanities 1:1 (2012)

5 April 2012, dusan

The Journal of Digital Humanities is a comprehensive, peer-reviewed, open access journal that features the best scholarship, tools, and conversations produced by the digital humanities community in the previous quarter.

The journal offers expanded coverage of the digital humanities by publishing scholarly work beyond the traditional research article, selecting content from open and public discussions in the field, and by encouraging continued discussion through peer-to-peer review.

Contributions by Tim Hitchcock, Trevor Owens, Scott Weingart, Chad Black, Marc Downie and Paul Kaiser, Jeremy Boggs, Alison Booth, Daniel J. Cohen, Mitchell S. Green, Anne Houston, and Stephen Ramsay, Nik Honeysett and Michael Edson, Fred Gibbs, Natalia Cecire, Benjamin M. Schmidt, William G. Thomas, Jean Bauer, Patrick Murray-John, Elijah Meeks, Tom Scheinfeldt and Ryan Shaw, Mark Sample, Alexis Lothian, Peter Bradley, Tim Sherratt, Moya Z. Bailey, Amy Earhart, Boone B. Gorges, Jeremy Boggs, David McClure, Eric Rochester, and Wayne Graham

Vol. 1, No. 1, Winter 2011
Editors: Daniel J. Cohen, Joan Fragaszy Troyano
Associate Editors: Sasha Hoffman, Jeri Wieringa
Publisher Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media, April 2012
ISSN 2165-6673

more information (digitalhumanitiesnow.org)

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GLI.TC/H 20111 Reader[r0r] (2012)

10 March 2012, dusan

A selection of texts from authors and artists about digital decay, signal interruption, system collapse, and failure.

GLI.TC/H is a physical and virtual assembly of artists, hackers, moshers, dirty mediators, noise makers, circuit benders, p/h/i/l/o/s/o/p/h/e/r/s, and those who find wonder in that which others call broken.

GLI.TC/H is an annual international noise && [dirty] new-media event/conference/symposium/festival/gathering for makers and breakers.

With contributions by Tom McCormack, Curt Cloninger, Jon Satrom, Nick Briz, Rosa Menkman, Iman Moradi, Hannah Piper Burns, Evan Meaney, Channel TWo, Mez, Jon Cates, Matthew Fuller, JODI, Alexander Galloway, A Bill Miller, Laimonas Zakas, Iman Moradi

Editors: Nick Briz, Evan Meaney, Rosa Menkman, William Robertson, Jon Satrom, Jessica Westbrook
Publisher: Unsorted Books, February 2012
ISBN: 978-4-9905200-1-4
Copy<it>right license, copying/sharing is encouraged/appreciated
61 pages

authors
GlitchBlog, GlitchBlog (Archived)
GlitchWiki
project’s Kickstarter page

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