First Monday
Vol.11, No.6-5. June 2006.
http://www.firstmonday.org/issues/issue11_6/index.html
FM10 Openness: Code, Science, and Content:
Selected Papers from the First Monday Conference, 15-17 May 2006
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●Monday morning, 15 May 2006: Open journals
Tactical memory: The politics of openness in the construction of memory
by Sandra Braman
Open access publishing: A developing country view
by Jennifer I. Papin-Ramcharan and Richard A. Dawe
Accidental open access and the hazards involved: Preliminary experiences on Internet-based publishing in a Peruvian university
by Eduardo Villanueva
The value of openness in an attention economy
by Michael Goldhaber
Libraries, licensing and the challenge of stewardship
by Sharon Farb
Strategies for developing sustainable open access scholarly journals
by David J. Solomon
Effect of open access on African journals funding and sustainability
by Samuel Utulu
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●Monday afternoon, 15 May 2006: Open communities
Developing and sustaining volunteer-driven content
by Jimmy Wales
Managing risk and opportunity in Creative Commons enterprises
by Andrew Rens
Trust and Wikipedia:The roles of social capitals on participatory knowledge production
by Cathy Ma
Diversity, attention and symmetry in a many-to-many information society
by Philippe Aigrain
Selling the view, not the river
by Prayas Abhinav
The case for open markets in education
by Steve Midgley
Constructing a framework to enable an open source reinvention of journalism
by Leonard Witt
Digitizing more than organizational DNA
by Jonathan Riehl
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●Tuesday morning, 16 May 2006: Open science
Open science
by Tim Hubbard
FLOSS methods in biotechnology: Data, information and knowledge in context
by Andrea Glorioso
Investigating the “public” in the Public Library of Science: Gifting economics in the Internet community
by Charlotte Tschider
Variants of openness
by Felix Stalder
Openness in communication
by Jon Hoem
Conspicuous contributions: Social esteem in peer communities
by David Neice
Open access as a source for agricultural information for sustainable development in Indonesia
by Widharto
Rational sharing and its limits
by Wai-Yin Ng
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●Tuesday afternoon, 16 May 2006: On openness
Notions of openness
by Joseph Reagle
The fog of copyleft
by Aaron Krowne and Raymond Puzio
Openness, access to government information and Caribbean governance
by Fay Durrant
Given enough minds…: Bridging the ingenuity gap
by Hassan Masum and Mark Tovey
Aligning the ideals of free software and free knowledge with the South African Freedom Charter
by Bob Jolliffe
Ethical and economic issues surrounding freely available images found on the Web
by Eric Lease Morgan
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●Wednesday morning, 17 May 2006: Open source
How sustainable business forms around open software, and lessons for other media
by Brian Behlendorf
Patterns of sustained collaborative creativity across open computerization movements
by Walt Scacchi
Analysis of open source principles in diverse collaborative communities
by Jill Coffin
Free access to open content and the role of NGOs in the use and design of free software and open hardware in developing countries
by Vedran Vucic
Profiting from the commons: The open source paradigm in the software industry
by Andrea Bonaccorsi, Monica Merito, Lucia Piscitello, and Cristina Rossi
Creative Commons licenses and open content collaboration: Experience and observations from Creative Commons Taiwan
by Yi-hsuan Lin
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●Wednesday afternoon, 17 May 2006
Chicago Manifesto on Openness