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Students for Free Culture

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250:), a voting machine manufacturer accused of making bug-ridden and insecure electronic voting machines. The SCDC had been concerned about electronic voting machines using proprietary software rather than open source software, and kept an eye on the situation. Their alarm grew when a copy of Diebold's internal e-mail archives leaked onto the Internet, revealing questionable practices at Diebold and possible flaws with Diebold's machines, and they were spurred into action when Diebold began sending legal threats to voting activists who posted the e-mails on their websites. Diebold was claiming that the e-mails were their copyrighted material, and that anyone who posted these e-mails online was infringing upon their intellectual property. The SCDC posted the e-mail archive on its website and prepared for the inevitable legal threats. 84: 33: 288:
The network of contacts that Smith and Pavlosky built during the lawsuit, including dozens of students around the country who had also hosted the Diebold memos on their websites, gave them momentum they needed to found an international student movement based on the same free culture principles as the
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Students for Free Culture is sometimes referred to as "FreeCulture", "the Free Culture Movement", and other variations on the "free culture" theme, but none of those are its official name. It is officially Students for Free Culture, as set for in the new bylaws that were ratified by its chapters on
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for voting. It is meant to make long-term, high-level decisions, and should not meddle excessively in lower-level decisions. Practical everyday decisions will be made by the Core team, composed of any students who are members of chapters and meet the attendance requirements. Really low-level
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The mission of the Free Culture movement is to build a bottom-up, participatory structure to society and culture, rather than a top-down, closed, proprietary structure. Through the democratizing power of digital technology and the Internet, we can place the tools of creation and distribution,
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decisions and minutiae will be handled by a coordinator, who ideally will be a paid employee of the organization, and other volunteers and assistants. A new board of directors was elected in February 2008, and a new Core Team was assembled shortly thereafter. There is no coordinator yet.
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Today the organization focuses on providing services to its local campus chapters, including web services such as mailing lists and wikis, pamphlets and materials for tabling, and organizing conferences where chapter members can meet up. Active chapters are located at schools such as
365:). While these one-shot websites succeeded in attracting attention from the press and encouraged students to get involved, they didn't directly help the local chapters, and the organization now concentrates less on web campaigns than it did in the past. However, their recent 305:
less than a month beforehand.) The SCDC became the first Freeculture.org chapter (beginning the process of changing its name to Free Culture Swarthmore), and students from other schools in the area who attended the launch went on to found chapters on their campuses, including
234:'s OSCON 2002 speech entitled "free culture" however, they expanded the club's scope to cover cultural participation in general (rather than just in the world of software and computers), and began tackling issues such as copyright reform. In September 2004, SCDC was renamed 519:
With the passage of official bylaws, Students for Free Culture now has a clear governance structure which makes it accountable to its chapters. The supreme decision-making body is the Board of Directors, which is elected once a year by the chapters, using a
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FreeCulture.org began by launching a number of internet campaigns, in an attempt to raise its profile and bring itself to the attention of college students. These have covered issues ranging from defending artistic freedom
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communication and collaboration, teaching and learning into the hands of the common person -- and with a truly active, connected, informed citizenry, injustice and oppression will slowly but surely vanish from the earth.
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On April 23, 2004, Smith and Pavlosky announced the official launch of FreeCulture.org, in an event at Swarthmore College featuring Lawrence Lessig as the keynote speaker (Lessig had released his book
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decentralization of creativity—getting ordinary people and communities involved with art, science, journalism and other creative industries, especially through new technologies
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Students for Free Culture began as a loose confederation of student groups on different campuses, but it has been moving towards becoming an official tax-exempt non-profit.
281:, they sued Diebold for abusing copyright law to suppress freedom of speech online. After a year of legal battles, the judge ruled that posting the e-mails online was a 1509: 1198: 834: 985: 562: 489:
liberating parties, where the organizers help people replace the proprietary DRM-encumbered operating system on their iPods with a free software system like
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Within a couple of months of founding the SCDC, Smith and Pavlosky became embroiled in the controversy surrounding Diebold Election Systems (now
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ideals, such as cultural participation and access to information. It was inspired by the work of former Stanford, now Harvard, law professor
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reforming copyright, patent, and trademark law in the public interest, ensuring that new creators are not stifled by old creators
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and began building a website, while contacting student activists at other schools who could help them start the organization.
143:. Students for Free Culture has over 30 chapters on college campuses around the world, and a history of grassroots activism. 1337: 266: 136: 54: 214:. The SCDC was founded in 2003 by students Luke Smith and Nelson Pavlosky, and was originally focused on issues related to 1178: 1046: 210:
Students for Free Culture had its origins in the Swarthmore Coalition for the Digital Commons (SCDC), a student group at
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The NYU chapter made headlines when it began protesting outside of record stores against DRM on CDs during the
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According to its website, Students for Free Culture has four main functions within the free culture movement:
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Antenna Alliance, a project that provides free recording space to bands, releases their music online under
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for help, and discovered that they had an opportunity to sign on to an existing lawsuit against Diebold,
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who had also received legal threats from Diebold. With pro bono legal representation from EFF and the
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October 1, 2007, which changed its name from FreeCulture.org to Students for Free Culture.
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It has yet to publish a more "official" mission statement, but some of its goals are:
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Networking with other people, companies and organizations in the free culture movement
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Creating and providing resources for its chapters and for the general public
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scandal, resulting in similar protests around New York and Philadelphia.
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Blog posts about Students for Free Culture/FreeCulture.org in the media
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Students for Free Culture has stated its goals in a "manifesto":
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licenses, and distributes the music to college radio stations,
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Student political organizations in the United States
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making important information available to the public
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They purchased the domain name 1353:Organization for Transformative Works 720:, Legal Affairs article on the launch 631:"FreeCulture.org crosses 13 - Lessig" 7: 948:, Spring 2008 Board Election results 588:Web Archives, Free Culture manifesto 550:, Students for Free Culture chapters 384:Increased emphasis on local chapters 696:Nelson Pavlosky (January 1, 2004). 872:, USC FC NOTLD speed remix contest 338:(Save The iPod), from celebrating 25: 607:, About Students for Free Culture 44:to comply with Knowledge (XXG)'s 1174:Commercial use of copyleft works 82: 31: 1154:Alternative compensation system 895:"銀座カラー横浜エスト店|お得なキャンペーンで脱毛リリース!" 443:chapter developed and released 220:digital restrictions management 1525:Intellectual property activism 1338:Electronic Frontier Foundation 267:Electronic Frontier Foundation 190:Outreach to youth and students 137:Electronic Frontier Foundation 1: 1179:Commons-based peer production 1047:Legal aspects of file sharing 707:– via Internet Archive. 698:"Lessig speaks at Swarthmore" 1274:Access to Knowledge movement 1515:Copyright law organizations 584:September 18, 2008, at the 367:Down With DRM video contest 1551: 944:February 27, 2008, at the 837:September 3, 2006, at the 603:November 28, 2011, at the 546:September 5, 2006, at the 330:February 11, 2012, at the 248:Premier Election Solutions 226:, inspired largely by the 1388:Students for Free Culture 1284:Cultural environmentalism 1241:Prizes instead of patents 1037:Digital rights management 565:October 12, 2007, at the 378:digital rights management 372:November 6, 2006, at the 107:Students for Free Culture 81: 77:Students for Free Culture 1343:Free Software Foundation 771:, PhiladelphiaWeekly.com 361:August 15, 2006, at the 279:Stanford Cyberlaw Clinic 228:Free Software Foundation 57:may contain suggestions. 42:may need to be rewritten 1474:RiP!: A Remix Manifesto 1184:Electronic sell-through 1079:Monopolies of knowledge 1022:Censorship by copyright 853:, NYU's Film Remix 2006 682:March 12, 2007, at the 507:on university campuses. 352:business method patents 236:Free Culture Swarthmore 1488:The Internet's Own Boy 1294:Free software movement 1121:software patent debate 1027:Copyright infringement 882:Business.NewsForge.com 503:a campaign to promote 162: 1289:Free-culture movement 1199:Libertarian positions 1194:Free-software license 1159:Anti-copyright notice 1002:Intellectual property 868:May 17, 2011, at the 411:University of Florida 312:Franklin and Marshall 224:treacherous computing 157: 121:, who wrote the book 1209:Open-design movement 462:art shows featuring 109:, formerly known as 1149:All rights reversed 1017:Artificial scarcity 820:SharingIsDaring.org 810:, NYU's CC art show 789:on October 16, 2008 586:Library of Congress 391:New York University 325:Barbie in a Blender 275:Online Policy Group 242:OPG v. Diebold case 78: 1467:Good Copy Bad Copy 1413:Alexandra Elbakyan 1317:Copyright Alliance 851:FreeCultureNYU.org 808:FreeCultureNYU.org 658:. November 3, 2003 656:The New York Times 629:Lessig, Lawrence. 334:) to fighting the 318:Internet campaigns 257:notices under the 212:Swarthmore College 1497: 1496: 1396: 1395: 1348:Open Rights Group 961:Official homepage 356:Cereal Solidarity 342:licenses and the 308:Bryn Mawr College 230:. After watching 104: 103: 72: 71: 46:quality standards 16:(Redirected from 1542: 1428:Richard Stallman 1373:Public Knowledge 1333:Creative Commons 1307: 1214:Open music model 995: 988: 981: 972: 949: 936: 930: 924: 918: 912: 906: 905: 903: 901: 891: 885: 879: 873: 860: 854: 848: 842: 829: 823: 817: 811: 805: 799: 798: 796: 794: 785:. 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Index

FreeCulture.org

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talk page

freeculture.org
free culture
Lawrence Lessig
Free Culture
NGOs
Creative Commons
Electronic Frontier Foundation
Public Knowledge
Swarthmore College
free software
digital restrictions management
treacherous computing
Free Software Foundation
Lawrence Lessig
Free Culture Swarthmore
Premier Election Solutions
takedown
DMCA
ISP
Electronic Frontier Foundation
OPG v. Diebold
Online Policy Group
Stanford Cyberlaw Clinic
fair use

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