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The right to remix

Date post: 29-Aug-2014
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The ‘right to remix’
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Page 1: The right to remix

The ‘right to remix’

Page 2: The right to remix

(1)web 2.0 and ownership

Page 3: The right to remix

<From ‘What is Web 2.0’ at http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/6228>

Page 4: The right to remix

<From ‘What is Web 2.0’ at http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/6228>

Page 5: The right to remix

<From ‘What is Web 2.0’ at http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/6228>

Page 6: The right to remix

(2)lower barriers to entry

by using standards

Page 7: The right to remix

(a)legal standards

Page 8: The right to remix

creativecommons.org

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Page 11: The right to remix

(b)remixability/hackability

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Page 13: The right to remix

sharing the process

Page 14: The right to remix

Cafune

Page 15: The right to remix

sharing decisions

Page 16: The right to remix
Page 17: The right to remix

sharing the work

Page 18: The right to remix
Page 19: The right to remix

sharing the ideas

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web 2.0 is about participation

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and you can only ensure participation through

sharing.

Page 22: The right to remix

Web 2.0 Design Patterns

Some Rights Reserved. Intellectual property protection limits re-use and prevents experimentation. Therefore: When benefits come from collective adoption, not private restriction, make sure that barriers to adoption are low. Follow existing standards, and use licenses with as few restrictions as possible. Design for "hackability" and "remixability."

<From ‘What is Web 2.0’ at http://www.oreillynet.com/lpt/a/6228>


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