The document discusses the free culture movement, which promotes openness and sharing in software, formats, and creative works. It began with the free software movement in the 1980s advocating open source software. Open formats were later developed as alternatives to proprietary ones. Creative Commons licenses now allow sharing of creative works freely. OpenStreetMap is highlighted as an example of open collaboration to create open geographic data through volunteered contributions. The movement emphasizes that openness in software is not enough and these ideals should extend to other creative and scientific works.
15. Availability of the code is necessary for
Open Science "scientific communication
relies on evidence that cannot be entirely
included in publications", but "anything
less than the release of source programs
is intolerable for results that depend on
computation".
Ince, D.C., et al. (2010). The case for open
computer programs. Nature 482, 485–488.
http://www.nature.com/nature/journal/v482/n
7386/full/nature10836.html
34. 1. Freely licensed (or
equivalent)
2. Availability of source data
3. Use of a free format
4. No technical restrictions
5. No other restrictions or
limitations
65. IOM staff showing the large OpenStreetMap
posters in the DSWD Operations Center in
Tacloban Airport. Photo by Joe Lowry
http://www.flickr.com/photos/esambale/10937514315/
66. Where to get help
http://wiki.openstreetmap.org/wiki/Philippines
https://lists.openstreetmap.org/listinfo/talk-ph
http://facebook.com/OSMPH
67.
68. Maning Sambale
Maptivist, OSGeo Charter Member,
OSM-PH Volunteer, Environmental Science
for Social Change
emmanuel.sambale@gmail.com
Eugene Alvin Villar
Free Culture Movement slides, 2013
OSM-PH Volunteer
Wikipedia Contributor
69. Satellite image providers: Release
the Philippines satellite imagery
under a public license for
humanitarian mapping
http://www.change.org/petitions/satellite-image-pr
oviders-release-the-philippines-satellite-imagery-u
nder-a-public-license-for-humanitarian-mapping