The Minute Memes project: reframing copyright restrictions one idea at a time, through a series of short, captivating, classroom-ready videos by award-winning artist and animator Nina Paley.
The BookLiberator is an affordable personal book digitizer. We'll be selling it from our online store soon, for around $300-$350 USD. If you think you might want one, sign up here to be notified when they're available -- there's no commitment. More about the project...
What happens when an award-winning filmmaker releases her film for free on the Internet? Everybody wins...
The Surprising Origins (and Future) of Copyright
Learn the unexpected history of copyright: its origins as a censorship law transformed into a monopoly to support the nascent publishing industry, and how helping writers and artists was not its goal then or now.
The "Creator-Endorsed" Mark:
A seal that enables artists to signal which distributors share revenue with them, while still allowing the artist's work to spread freely.
To document the public perception of copyright today, we went around Chicago with a video camera over two days in the summer of 2006, asking strangers what they think about copyright...
A documentary film focusing on animator Nina Paley and her decision to release her feature film Sita Sings the Blues under a Creative Commons Share Alike license.
The talk lasts about 90 minutes, including the question-and-answer period. The audience members' backgrounds were in library science, computer science, publishing, and law, so the Q&A is as useful as the talk.
CopyrightReform.us, a good advocacy site (more from the "reform it" than "scrap it and start over" school), with up-to-date news about recent copyright outrages.
anticopyright.org, a list of anti-copyright resources, focusing (though not exclusively) on economic arguments.
public.resource.org makes government information more accessible to the public, fighting copyright restrictions when necessary