Wizards of OS: Difference between revisions
→Wizards of OS 4 - Information Freedom Rules: Citizendium announcement |
|||
Line 14: | Line 14: | ||
==Wizards of OS 4 - Information Freedom Rules== |
==Wizards of OS 4 - Information Freedom Rules== |
||
The [[Wizards of OS 4]] took place from September 14 to September 16, 2006. Some of the topics were the future of [[Creative Commons]], [[open music]] and the compensation of artists and [[Europe|European]] [[copyright]] [[legislation]]. |
The [[Wizards of OS 4]] took place from September 14 to September 16, 2006. Some of the topics were the future of [[Creative Commons]], [[open music]] and the compensation of artists and [[Europe|European]] [[copyright]] [[legislation]]. [[Larry Sanger]] announced an initial proposal of his project [[Citizendium]]. |
||
==External link== |
==External link== |
Revision as of 11:08, 3 December 2006
- For the OpenBSD theme song "Wizard of OS", see Wizard of OS (song).
Wizards of OS (Wizards of Operating Systems, or "WOS") is a Berlin-based conference.
Its topics are the cultural and political potentials of free software, software technology, digital networks and media, and more generally information freedom and open cooperation in the creation and proliferation of knowledge. The conference is interdisciplinary and aims to be a platform of exchange between, chiefly, scientists, engineers, social researchers, scholars from the humanities, artists and activists.
The name is a word play on Wizard of Oz. The acronym OS stands for operating system (not open source).
WOS3
The first Wizards of OS conference took place in 1999, the third conference in 2004 had the topic "The Future of the Digital Commons" and featured, among others, the launch of the German translation of the Creative Commons licenses.
See also: List of speakers at Wizards of OS
Wizards of OS 4 - Information Freedom Rules
The Wizards of OS 4 took place from September 14 to September 16, 2006. Some of the topics were the future of Creative Commons, open music and the compensation of artists and European copyright legislation. Larry Sanger announced an initial proposal of his project Citizendium.