Yet another group embraces the free exchange of information. This is heroic. The open revolution is unstoppable; more and more people and groups are recognizing the distinction between information and scarce resources. Those who do not join us will be left in the dust.
See also:
- Max Planck Society statement on copyright law and science
- Adam Smith U, Mises Academy, and Educational Utopia
- Jeffrey Tucker, “A Theory of Open”
- Doug French, “The Intellectual Revolution Is in Process“
- Jeffrey Tucker, and “up with iTunes U“
- Kinsella, “Teaching an Online Mises Academy Course”
- Kinsella, “Fifteen Minutes that Changed Libertarian Publishing“
- Gary North, “A Free Week-Long Economics Seminar”
- Kinsella, “Intellectual Freedom and Learning Versus Patent and Copyright” and “How to Slow Economic Progress”
More than 4,000 National Academies Press PDFs Now Available to Download for Free
June 2, 2011 · byBarb Murphy
The National Academies—National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine, and National Research Council—are committed to distributing their reports to as wide an audience as possible. Since 1994 we have offered “Read for Free” options for almost all our titles. In addition, we have been offering free downloads of most of our titles to everyone and of all titles to readers in the developing world. We are now going one step further. Effective June 2nd, PDFs of reports that are currently for sale on the National Academies Press (NAP) Website and PDFs associated with future reports* will be offered free of charge to all Web visitors.
[Mises]
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