June 28th, 2007 by Kevin Driscoll
The movement toward a more free culture has united the strangest assortment of characters. Hip-hop DJs mingle with free software hackers, ivy league lawyers make smalltalk with teenage media activists, kindergarten teachers talk shop with dotcom millionaires. To overground this diversity, I am seeking a statement of your personal vision for a free culture future.
In other words, what does winning look like?
Imagine your life after five successful years working on your free culture projects. How is your day-to-day existence different? What does a city look like? How have the lives of your parents and friends changed? What does it feel like to live in a more free culture? Does it smell different? Sound different?
To contribute to this project, please visit the Developing Vision page on the Free Culture wiki. There you will find space to add your vision.
The submission deadline is on July 11.
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June 21st, 2007 by Brendan Ballou
Hi Everyone-
My name is Brendan Ballou, and I’m from the Free Culture chapter at Columbia. Some of you may have already heard about EFF’s onion router (Tor, http://tor.eff.org/). Basically Tor is a program that prevents outside parties (your university, your ISP, the RIAA, etc) from tracking your movements on the web (all of it – including file sharing). It’s an incredibly useful tool - one in fact that Chinese dissidents use to keep information from the Chinese government.
Last semester we modified Tor to run only over the Columbia University intranet. Our modified program, the Columbia University Local Area Tor (CU-LATOR) ran much faster than the standard version, and now we want to expand to other universities that participate in Internet2 (to maintain network speed). If you would be interested in having your school participate in this larger, nation-wide uni-tor (we’re working on a name), please email me, because the more schools that participate, the faster the network will run and the safer all our information will be. You don’t need to be a coder to be involved, we just need boots on the ground to help publicize the program and get people to use it. You can check if your school participates in Internet2 here: http://members.internet2.edu/university/universities.cfm
However, if you are a coder we need your help too. Our version of Tor is shaky on windows boxes - so if you’re interested in improving the program for windows email Ron Gejman at rsg2119@columbia.edu.
This is a fun project, and an important one too. We hope we can get your help in keeping students’ data safe and private.
Best,
Brendan Ballou
bcb2114@columbia.edu
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June 20th, 2007 by Fred Benenson
Thanks to some generous sponsorship from iCommons, many FreeCulture.org students were able to make it to the Summit in Dubrovnik Croatia this year. Here’s a group photo we took at the end of the fourth day:

Click the photo for more shots from my trip.
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