commonification sharing and creative commons. alexandros nousias
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Commonification, Sharing and Creative Commons: Towards Platforms of Digital Dignity
Alexandros Nousias CC Greece
Agenda
1. Current Platform Trends
2. Commonification
3. Sharing
4. The Creative Commons
5. Digital Dignity
6. Thinking Out Loud
Platform Design as a Philosophy
• What a person is.
• Where meaning comes from.
• The nature of freedom.
Platform Design as a Philosophy
• What a person is.
• Where meaning comes from.
• The nature of freedom.
• The nature of an ideal society
Commons Declaration Policy
The commons collaborative economy represents a different public policy model. Organisational commons models can be an inspiration for public administrations, becoming more efficient and making better use of public resources, as well as opening, new channels for the participation and activation of civil society in solving common problems and public needs through commons-private partnerships. It is a way of moving from prevailing privatisation to ‘commonification’, through the involvement of citizens and democratic institutions in the provision and production of public goods and services, without having to fall into a private framework or state recentralisation, but via the activation of citizenship.
Source, contributors and more info at: http://procomuns.net/en/policy/
‘Commonification’
• Norms
• Procedures
• Customary institutions
• ‘Datafication’ (of reality)
• Control rather than ownership (of the data)
Open Value Network
• Open, horizontal, large scale cooperation and coordination.
• Responsible stewardship of the shared wealth & assets.
Open Value Network
• Open, horizontal, large scale cooperation and coordination.
• Responsible stewardship of the shared wealth & assets.
• Allowing individual access, use, authorship and ownership ‘where appropriate’.
Open Value Network
• Open, horizontal, large scale cooperation and coordination.
• Responsible stewardship of the shared wealth & assets.
• Allowing individual access, use, authorship and ownership ‘where appropriate’.
• Careful accounting of individual inputs and outcomes via a common ledger system.
Open Value Network
• Open, horizontal, large scale cooperation and coordination.
• Responsible stewardship of the shared wealth & assets.
• Allowing individual access, use, authorship and ownership ‘where appropriate’.
• Careful accounting of individual inputs and outcomes via a common ledger system.
• Distribution of fair rewards based on contributions measured by actual contributions, experience, influence etc.
Our Hypotheses 1/2
1. People would claim ownership and be willing to make data available if they start benefit from it.
2. Sharing is a good business.
3. The individual shall decide.
4. We need processes for value judgments regarding privacy, copyrights, fair use, exceptions/limitations, sharing, ethics etc.
Key Points
• Discovery: Creating vibrant, usable commons, both on the platforms where open content is hosted and also for those works individually hosted (search content, analytics, meta-tagging, one click attribution).
• Collaboration: Helping creators across sectors, disciplines and geographies to work together, to share open content and create new works.
• Advocacy: Pushing for positive reforms.
Dignity as Human Exceptionalism
• Greek / Roman philosophy: The ability of exercising virtuous control over itself. • Christian philosophy: Divine creation and existence in the image and
likeness of God. • Modern philosophy: Rational autonomy and the ability of self
determination. • Post-modern philosophy: Humanity’s social recognition of each
other’s value.
Dignity as a source of rights to...
• manage/control/own our data;
• access content;
• share;
• reuse/mash up;
• fair reciprocities (reputation, micropayments etc.);
• own our identity;
• regeneration;
• live…
Dignity as a source of duties to...
• care;
• respect;
• contribute;
• attribute;
• share alike;
• reward;
• assume biological realism*;
Dignity as the ‘Elevator Pitch’
• Ethics of the Commons: From ‘legality’ to ‘legitimacy’.
• ‘MyData’: From ‘surveillance capitalism’ to human centric processing.
• Collective Privacy: Limit potential harms to the group itself that can derive from invasive/discriminatory processing.
Ethics of the Commons • Human centric.
• Usable.
• Guarantees of autonomous individualism.
• Dynamic social relationships, culture and ecosystems.
• Commons based reciprocities.
• Open business environment.
• Trusted peer production.
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