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Short stories and anthologies: With a Little Help has been released
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* ''[[Makers (Cory Doctorow novel)|Makers]]'' (Tor Books, 2009) and under a Creative Commons Licence
* ''[[Makers (Cory Doctorow novel)|Makers]]'' (Tor Books, 2009) and under a Creative Commons Licence
* ''[[For The Win (Cory Doctorow novel)|For The Win]]'' (Tor Books, 2010) and under a Creative Commons Licence
* ''[[For The Win (Cory Doctorow novel)|For The Win]]'' (Tor Books, 2010) and under a Creative Commons Licence
* ''[http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/columns-and-blogs/cory-doctorow/article/45565-zen-and-the-art-of-self-publishing.html?page=1 Pirate Cinema]'' (Tor Books, May 2012) and under a Creative Commons Licence


===Short stories and anthologies===
===Short stories and anthologies===
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* "[http://blogoscoped.com/archive/2007-09-17-n72.html Scroogled]" originally appeared in Radar, 2007
* "[http://blogoscoped.com/archive/2007-09-17-n72.html Scroogled]" originally appeared in Radar, 2007
* '"[http://www.archive.org/details/TrueNames True Names]", (short story with [[Benjamin Rosenbaum]]) in ''Fast Forward 2'', edited by [[Lou Anders]], ISBN 978-1-59102-692-1, 2008
* '"[http://www.archive.org/details/TrueNames True Names]", (short story with [[Benjamin Rosenbaum]]) in ''Fast Forward 2'', edited by [[Lou Anders]], ISBN 978-1-59102-692-1, 2008
* "[http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/columns-and-blogs/cory-doctorow/article/44848-with-a-little-twitter-help.html With A Little Help]", (short stories collection)
* "[http://www.publishersweekly.com/pw/by-topic/columns-and-blogs/cory-doctorow/article/44848-with-a-little-twitter-help.html With A Little Help]", (short stories collection), December 2010


===Other===
===Other===

Revision as of 14:29, 20 December 2010

Cory Doctorow
Occupationauthor, blogger
GenreScience fiction, postcyberpunk
Notable worksDown and Out in the Magic Kingdom, Little Brother
Notable awardsJohn W. Campbell Award for Best New Writer, John W. Campbell Memorial Award, Prometheus Award, Sunburst Award
SpouseAlice Taylor
ChildrenPoesy Emmeline Fibonacci Nautilus Taylor Doctorow
Website
http://www.craphound.com/

Cory Doctorow (Template:Pron-en; born July 17, 1971) is a Canadian blogger, journalist, and science fiction author who serves as co-editor of the blog Boing Boing. He is an activist in favour of liberalising copyright laws and a proponent of the Creative Commons organisation, using some of their licences for his books. Some common themes of his work include digital rights management, file sharing, and post-scarcity economics.[1]

Life and career

Born in Toronto, Ontario, Canada to Trotskyist teachers,[2] Doctorow was raised in a Jewish activist[3] household. His father was born in a refugee camp in Azerbaijan[4] and Doctorow became involved in the nuclear disarmament movement and as a Greenpeace campaigner as a child. He received his high school diploma from SEED School, a free school in Toronto, and dropped out of four universities without attaining a degree.

He later served on the board of directors for the Grindstone Island Co-operative on Big Rideau Lake in Ontario.

In 1992 Doctorow went on a volunteer trip to Costa Rica with Youth Challenge International (YCI), which he found "profoundly good and profoundly enriching".[5]

In June 1999, he co-founded the free software P2P company Opencola with John Henson and Grad Conn. The company was sold to the Open Text Corporation of Waterloo, Ontario in the summer of 2003.[1]

Doctorow moved to London and worked as European Affairs Coordinator for the Electronic Frontier Foundation for four years,[1] helping to set up the Open Rights Group, before quitting to pursue writing full-time in January 2006. Upon his departure, Doctorow was named a Fellow of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.[1]

He was named the 2006-2007 Canadian Fulbright Chair in Public Diplomacy at the USC Center on Public Diplomacy, jointly sponsored by the Royal Fulbright Commission,[6] the Integrated Media Systems Center, and the USC Center on Public Diplomacy. The academic Chair included a one year writing and teaching residency at the University of Southern California in Los Angeles.[1][7]

He then returned to London. He is a frequent public speaker on copyright issues.

In 2009, Doctorow became the first Independent Studies Scholar in Virtual Residence at the University of Waterloo in Ontario, Canada. He was formerly a student in the program in 1993-94, but left without completing a thesis.

Doctorow is married to Alice Taylor, and together they have one daughter, named Poesy Emmeline Fibonacci Nautilus Taylor Doctorow, who was born in 2008.[8] Cory Doctorow and Alice Taylor married on Sunday, October 26, 2008.[9]

Other work and fellowships

He served as Canadian Regional Director of the Science Fiction and Fantasy Writers of America in 1999.

Together with Austrian art group monochrom he initiated the Instant Blitz Copy Fight project, for which people from all over the world are asked to take flash pictures of copyright warnings in movie theaters.[10]

At the 2003 Torcon 3 World Science Fiction Convention, Doctorow was a featured guest.[citation needed]

On October 31, 2005, Doctorow was involved in a controversy over digital rights management with Sony-BMG, as told in Wikinomics.[11]

Cory Doctorow at the Singularity Summit at Stanford in 2006

Doctorow is a regular contributor to the TVOntario podcast Search Engine, formerly on CBC.

Fiction

Down and Out in the Magic Kingdom, Doctorow's first novel, was published in January 2003, and was the first novel released under one of the Creative Commons licences, allowing readers to circulate the electronic edition as long as they neither made money from it nor used it to create derived works. The electronic edition was released simultaneously with the print edition.

In March 2003, it was re-released under a different Creative Commons licence that allowed derivative works such as fan fiction, but still prohibited commercial usage. It was nominated for a Nebula Award,[12] and won the Locus Award for Best First Novel in 2004. A semi-sequel short story called Truncat was published on Salon.com in August 2003.

Doctorow's other novels have been released under Creative Commons licences that allow derived works and prohibit commercial usage, and he has followed the model of making digital versions available, without charge, at the same time that print versions are published.

His Sunburst Award-winning short story collection A Place So Foreign and Eight More, was also published in 2004: "0wnz0red" from this collection was nominated for the 2004 Nebula Award for Best Novelette.[13]

Doctorow (left) pictured at the 2006 Lift Conference with fellow Boing Boing contributor Jasmina Tešanović (centre) and cyberpunk author Bruce Sterling (right).

Doctorow released the bestselling novel Little Brother in 2008 under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-ShareAlike licence.[14] It was nominated for a 2009 Hugo Award, and won the 2009 Prometheus Award,[15] Sunburst Award,[16] and the John W. Campbell Memorial Award.

Makers was released in October 2009, and is being serialized for free on the Tor Books website.[17]

Doctorow's newest young adult novel, For The Win, was released in May, 2010. The novel is available free on the author's website as a Creative Commons download, and is also published in traditional paper form by Tor Books. The book is centered around massively multiplayer online role-playing games.

Nonfiction and other writings

Doctorow's nonfiction works include his first book, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Publishing Science Fiction (co-written with Karl Schroeder and published in 2000), and his contributions to Boing Boing, the weblog he co-edits, as well as regular columns in Popular Science and Make magazines. He is a Contributing Writer to Wired magazine, and contributes occasionally to other magazines and newspapers such as the New York Times Sunday Magazine, the Globe and Mail, Asimov's Science Fiction magazine, and the Boston Globe. In 2004, he wrote an essay on Wikipedia included in The Anthology at the End of the Universe, comparing Internet attempts at Hitchhiker's Guide-type resources, including a discussion of the Wikipedia article about himself.

Doctorow contributed the foreword to Sound Unbound: Sampling Digital Music and Culture (The MIT Press, 2008) edited by Paul D. Miller a.k.a. DJ Spooky. He also was a contributing writer for the book Worldchanging: A User's Guide for the 21st Century.[18]

He popularized the term Metacrap in a 2001 essay titled "Metacrap: Putting the torch to seven straw-men of the meta-utopia."[19] Some of his non-fiction published between 2001 and 2007 has been collected by Tachyon Publications as Content: Selected Essays on Technology, Creativity, Copyright, and the Future of the Future.

Opinions on intellectual property

Doctorow believes that copyright laws should be liberalized to allow for free sharing of all digital media. He has also advocated filesharing.[20] He argues that copyright holders should have a monopoly on selling their own digital media, and copyright laws should only come into play when someone attempts to sell a product currently under someone else's copyright.

Doctorow is an opponent of DRM, claiming that it limits the free sharing of digital media and frequently causes problems for legitimate users (including registration problems that lock users out of their own purchases and prevent them from being able to move their media to other devices and platforms).[21]

Cory Doctorow wears a red cape, goggles and a balloon as he receives the 2007 EFF Pioneer Award, spoofing an xkcd webcomic in which he is mentioned.

The webcomic xkcd occasionally features a partially fictional version of Doctorow who lives in a hot air balloon "up in" the blogosphere ("above the tag clouds") and wears a red cape and goggles, such as in the comic "Blagofaire".[22] When Doctorow won the 2007 EFF Pioneer Award, the presenters gave him a red cape, goggles and a balloon.[23]

Awards

Bibliography

Science fiction novels

Short stories and anthologies

Other

  • Ebooks: Neither E Nor Books. (online text) (February 12, 2004)
  • Glenn Yeffeth, ed., The Anthology at the End of the Universe?, chapter titled "Wikipedia: A Genuine H2G2-Minus the Editors", by Cory Doctorow, Benbella Books ISBN 1-932100-56-3
  • The Complete Idiot's Guide to Publishing Science Fiction (self-help, Alpha Books, 2000)
  • Essential Blogging (tech help, O'Reilly and Associates, 2002). ISBN 0-596-00388-9
  • /usr/bin/god (novel; Tor Books) — In a June 11, 2008 interview with the Onion's A.V. Club, Doctorow stated that the book was "on the shelf more or less permanently, although it might be resurrected at some point.[27]
  • Content: Selected Essays on Technology, Creativity, Copyright, and the Future of the Future (September, 2008)
  • There’s a Great Big Beautiful Tomorrow / Now is the Best Time of Your Life (Novella, forthcoming)

References

  1. ^ a b c d e "Cory Doctorow; USC Center on Public Diplomacy". Uscpublicdiplomacy.com. 1971-07-17. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  2. ^ Cory Doctorow (2006-01-01). "About Cory Doctorow". Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  3. ^ MacDonald, Katherine (2003-03-31). "Interview: Cory Doctorow". Strange Horizons. Retrieved 2007-12-22.
  4. ^ "Azeri "donkey video" bloggers arrested". 2009-09-02. Retrieved 2009-09-02.
  5. ^ Doctorow, Cory. "Youth Challenge International" (PDF). Retrieved 2010-09-05.
  6. ^ "2006 Award Recipients" (PDF). Royal Fulbright Commission web site. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-02-29. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  7. ^ Brock Read (2007-04-06). "A Blogger Infiltrates Academe". Chronicle of Higher Education, Volume 53, Issue 31, Page A30. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  8. ^ Cory Doctorow (2008-02-03). "Fine News". Boing Boing. Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  9. ^ "Little Brother UK edition signed!". BoingBoing. BoingBoing. 2008-10-27. Retrieved 2008-10-27.
  10. ^ "Instant Blitz Copy Fight web site". Retrieved 2008-02-09.
  11. ^ Tapscott, Dan (2006). Wikinomics. Portfolio/Penguin Books. pp. 34–37. ISBN 978-1-59184-138-8. {{cite book}}: Unknown parameter |coauthors= ignored (|author= suggested) (help)
  12. ^ "The Nebula Award Listing; Science Fiction & Fantasy Books by Award". Worldswithoutend.com. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  13. ^ "The Locus Index to SF Awards: 2004 Nebula Awards". Locusmag.com. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  14. ^ "Little Brother Blog". Craphound.com. 2008-04-28. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  15. ^ a b "Libertarian Futurist Society". Lfs.org. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  16. ^ a b "2009 Winners: The Sunburst Awards". Retrieved 2009-09-30.
  17. ^ "Cory Doctorow's Makers; Blog posts". Tor.com. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  18. ^ WorldChanging: User's guide for the 21st Century
  19. ^ "Metacrap". Well.com. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  20. ^ Doctorow, Cory (2004-12-12). "Steal This File Sharing Book - A-Z HOWTO for file-sharing". Boing Boing. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  21. ^ "Cory Doctorow at Cambridge Business Lectures". Video.google.com. 22 July 2008. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  22. ^ xkcd.com/239 (see also [e.g.], xkcd.com/345, xkcd.com/482, xkcd.com/497, xkcd.com/498, and xkcd.com/527)
  23. ^ "Cory Doctorow, Part II". xkcd. 2007-03-28. Retrieved 2007-09-05.
  24. ^ "The Long List of Hugo Awards, 2000". Nesfa.org. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  25. ^ "EFF: Yochai Benkler, Cory Doctorow, and Bruce Schneier Win EFF Pioneer Awards".
  26. ^ "The John W. Campbell Memorial Award Listing". Worldswithoutend.com. Retrieved 2010-11-16.
  27. ^ Robinson, Tasha (2008-06-11). "Cory Doctorow / The A.V. Club". The Onion. Retrieved 2008-06-11.


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