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  1. The P2P Lab is a not-for-profit organization based in Ioannina, Greece. It is dedicated to research and advocacy around peer-to-peer (P2P) dynamics in technology, society and economy. The P2P Lab works for the development and maintenance of a global knowledge commons, encompassing a global community of researchers and activists that advocates ...

  2. Introduction Probably the best resource to monitor Asian developments, is Bytes for All, maintained by Frederick Noronha and team.This list of participants at the Asia Commons conference gives you an idea of who is active in the Commons-related fields in this continent. ...

  3. Maker spaces are opened to develop projects v/s develop people. The reason to open and operate the space was either to develop projects — find the relevant one in order to help them meet the market — or to develop people — empower people to learn new tool, new skills, to enlarge their network and nourrish their ideas.

  4. Bio. "Kojin Karatani was born in 1941 in Amagasaki city, located between Osaka and Kobe. He received his B.A. in economics and M.A. in English literature, both from Tokyo University. Awarded the Gunzo Literary Prize for an essay on Natsume Soseki in 1969, he began working actively as a literary critic, while teaching at Hosei University in Tokyo.

  5. Jan Krikke is a former Tokyo correspondent for the Dutch news agency GPD and the daily Financiële Dagblad, a contributor to IEEE publications, and the former managing editor of Asia 2000, a book publisher in Hong Kong, and a frequent contributor to the Asia Times. Krikke pioneered the study of the origin of axonometry, the Chinese equivalent ...

  6. 2012年7月2日 · Developed by the Freaknet, Netsukuku is a new p2p routing system, which will be utilised to build a worldwide distributed, anonymous and anarchical network, separated from the Internet, without the support of any servers, ISPs or authority controls.

  7. 2023年1月29日 · Description. James Moore: "The end of cheap nature is best comprehended as the exhaustion of the value-relations that have periodically restored the “Four Cheaps”: labor-power, food, energy, and raw materials. Crucially, these value-relations are co-produced by and through humans with the rest of nature."

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