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  1. Libre culture: meditations on free culture.David M. Berry & Giles Moss - unknown
    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 (...)
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  • Marxism and Media Studies: Key Concepts and Contemporary Trends, Mike Wayne.Lee Salter - 2006 - Historical Materialism 14 (2):215-227.
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  • Hacking Hacked! The Life Cycles of Digital Innovation.Alessandro Delfanti & Johan Söderberg - 2015 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 40 (5):793-798.
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  • Free Space Optics in the Czech Wireless Community: Shedding Some Light on the Role of Normativity for User-Initiated Innovations.Johan Söderberg - 2011 - Science, Technology, and Human Values 36 (4):423-450.
    The article investigates how users in the Czech wireless network community invented a technology for sending data over visible, red light. For five years, this was the most affordable method for connecting computers. The development of this technology was guided by the idea that it should be controlled by its users. With reference to this experiment, it is argued that a shared ethical and/or political vision can contribute to the establishment of norms within user communities encouraging their members to share (...)
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  • Open Genetic Code: on open source in the life sciences.Eric Deibel - 2014 - Life Sciences, Society and Policy 10 (1):1-23.
    The introduction of open source in the life sciences is increasingly being suggested as an alternative to patenting. This is an alternative, however, that takes its shape at the intersection of the life sciences and informatics. Numerous examples can be identified wherein open source in the life sciences refers to access, sharing and collaboration as informatic practices. This includes open source as an experimental model and as a more sophisticated approach of genetic engineering. The first section discusses the greater flexibly (...)
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  • Free your ‘most open’ Android: a comparative discourse analysis on Android.Lela Mosemghvdlishvili & Jeroen Jansz - 2020 - Critical Discourse Studies 17 (1):56-71.
    Through this paper, we convey a comparative analysis of how Google Inc. and the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) discursively construct and contest Android, a dominant mobile operating system. Methodologically, we use political discourse theory to engage in the textual analysis; identify and compare key signifiers and nodal points across the exemplary texts from the two actors, and interpret their meaning vis à vis contextual insights about the political economy of Android’s production. Albeit being marketed as ‘the first truly open (...)
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