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Lessig Blog
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"Lessig Blog
http://lessig.org/blog/
en-us
2009-06-04T08:57:48-08:00
fabulously cool: iFixit's teardown platform
http://lessig.org/blog/2009/06/fabulously_cool_ifixits_teardo.html
This is fabulously cool: iFixit has built a teardown platform . I've used the site many times to take apart Mac's I've needed to fix. But those instructions were iFixit prepared. They've now enabled anyone to build a teardown ("the act or process of disassembling") spec for any product. The site offers the structure and advice for building great teardowns. It then hosts and supports feedback. It is a fantastic example of a "hybrid," as REMIX defines the term -- and all submissions are CC-BY-NC-SA .
creative commons
Lessig
2009-06-04T08:57:48-08:00
On "socialism": round II
http://lessig.org/blog/2009/05/on_socialism_round_ii.html
There's an interesting resistance (see the comments ) to my resistance to Kevin Kelly's description of (what others call) Web 2.0 as "socialism." That resistance (to my resistance) convinces me my point hasn't been made.
Confidence about my "ignorance" about political philosophy notwithstanding (and don't tell my political philosophy tutor from Cambridge where I spent three years studying the stuff), my point is not that it is impossible to understand "socialism" as Kelly describes it. (Obviously, if a missile can be a "peacekeeper," anything can be anything). It is not even that never in the history of "socialism" have people so understood it (there have of course been plenty of voluntary communities that have called themselves "socialist"). Instead, my argument against Kelly was about responsibility in language: How would the words, or label, he used be understood. Not after, as I said, reading "a 3,500 word essay that redefines the term." Rather, how would it be understood by a culture that increasingly has the attention span of 140 "
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