Hi Sage and all,
Thanks for looping me in. I haven't been following the Wikimedia mailing list before now, so forgive me if I miss something.
I (and, infrequently, others) use the #FundFreeCulture hashtag on Twitter to keep track of free and open projects that you can contribute money to, whether that's through donation drives, crowdfunding, conventional sales and commissions, subscriptions, etc.
What Quim Gil seems to be suggesting is taking advantage of the metadata of Kickstarter (and IndieGoGo and Patreon would be the other big ones) to identify projects. I think #public-domain, #free-knowledge and #creative-commons would all be useful tags to have in common use.
There is already a page on Kickstarter for Creative Commons projects https://www.kickstarter.com/pages/creativecommons, although it only shows ongoing and successfully funded projects (not failed projects), and it is not necessarily updated (for example, I alerted them to Blades in the Dark https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/2080350433/blades-in-the-dark, which will be partially CC BY-NC-SA licensed, and they haven't added it).
In terms of funding free culture, please do check out the FOSsil Bank. The most useful pages for you are probably:
- http://fossilbank.wikidot.com/fundfreeculture (this collects all entries to the wiki that allow for monetary contributions in some way) - http://fossilbank.wikidot.com/patreon (this collects all libre Patreon pages) - http://fossilbank.wikidot.com/promised-libre-works (this collects works that I've come across that the creator says will be libre licensed in the future. This is where I put Kickstarter projects that have been funded but haven't yet been released)
I'm excited to join the conversation,
Chris
*Chris Sakkas**Admin of the FOSsil Bank wiki http://fossilbank.wikidot.com/ and the Living Libre blog http://www.livinglibre.com and Twitter feed https://twitter.com/#%21/living_libre.*
On 23 March 2015 at 06:37, Sage Ross ragesoss+wikipedia@gmail.com wrote:
On Sat, Mar 21, 2015 at 10:23 AM, Quim Gil qgil@wikimedia.org wrote:
Crowdfunding is on the rise, and tags in this field are important because once you fund a project about #tag you get recommendations for more #tag projects. Maybe we could partner with Creative Commons and friends to request Kickstarter and the other platforms to include a #freeknowledge tag, or a similar alternative (this example could have also been #public-domain)? Or maybe someone is already working on this?
This is a wonderful idea. There is an occasionally-active hashtag already, #FundFreeCulture, but it would be a lot more useful if it had support from Creative Commons and other organizations and the people asking for funding started using such a tag proactively.
See also the FOSsil Bank updates (run by Chris Sakkas, cc'd, who started that hashtag) which has intermittent posts about free culture crowdfunding campaigns: https://livinglibre1.wordpress.com/category/round-ups/fossil-bank-updates/
-Sage