In this article, we examine how non-membership organizations that claim stewardship over a transnational public or common good, such as the environmental or digital commons, develop combinations of formal and informal recursivity to develop and maintain regulatory conversations with their dispersed user communities. Based on a case study of Creative Commons, an organization that developed what have become the most widely used open licenses for digital content, we show how rhetorical openness to informal feedback from legitimacy communities in different sectors and countries can improve the feasibility and diffusion of standards. However, as long as the standard-setter's methods of making decisions on the basis of such feedback remains opaqu...
Following the agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) intellectua...
Digital technology presents ongoing challenges to the traditional copyright model. This paper discus...
This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons<br />Attribution 2.5 license avail...
In this article, we examine how non-membership organizations that claim stewardship over a transnati...
This thesis explores and explains the development of the Creative Commons (CC) as an alternative to ...
How have the Creative Commons’ ownership rules used by free websites like Wikipedia or Flickr and in...
This symposium contribution examines the disintermediating and reintermediating roles played by Crea...
How have the Creative Commons’ ownership rules used by free websites like Wikipedia or Flickr and in...
This chapter explores the role that community forms of social organization play in transnational sta...
Copyright law\u27s default settings inhibit sharing and adaptation of creative works even though new...
When Victor Hugo in 1878, with an inaugural address at the Paris World exhibition, helped to initiat...
This paper explores the internal social structures among producers who are radically committed to op...
Collaboration, sharing, and cooperation are a driving force for human evolution. Creative Commoners ...
The proliferation of creative work produced and available in a digital commons has enabled a new for...
In response to problems of overprotection perceived in America\u27s copyright scheme, the founders o...
Following the agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) intellectua...
Digital technology presents ongoing challenges to the traditional copyright model. This paper discus...
This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons<br />Attribution 2.5 license avail...
In this article, we examine how non-membership organizations that claim stewardship over a transnati...
This thesis explores and explains the development of the Creative Commons (CC) as an alternative to ...
How have the Creative Commons’ ownership rules used by free websites like Wikipedia or Flickr and in...
This symposium contribution examines the disintermediating and reintermediating roles played by Crea...
How have the Creative Commons’ ownership rules used by free websites like Wikipedia or Flickr and in...
This chapter explores the role that community forms of social organization play in transnational sta...
Copyright law\u27s default settings inhibit sharing and adaptation of creative works even though new...
When Victor Hugo in 1878, with an inaugural address at the Paris World exhibition, helped to initiat...
This paper explores the internal social structures among producers who are radically committed to op...
Collaboration, sharing, and cooperation are a driving force for human evolution. Creative Commoners ...
The proliferation of creative work produced and available in a digital commons has enabled a new for...
In response to problems of overprotection perceived in America\u27s copyright scheme, the founders o...
Following the agreement on Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) intellectua...
Digital technology presents ongoing challenges to the traditional copyright model. This paper discus...
This article is published under the terms of the Creative Commons<br />Attribution 2.5 license avail...