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Coding Freedom
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Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix Introduction - A Tale of Two Worlds 1 PART I - HISTORIES Chapter 1: The Life of a Free Software Hacker 25 Chapter 2: A Tale of Two Legal Regimes 61 PART II - CODES OF VALUE Chapter 3: The Craft and Craftiness of Hacking 93 Chapter 4:Two Ethical Moments in Debian 123 PART III - THE POLITICS OF AVOWAL AND DISAVOWAL Chapter 5: Code Is Speech 161 Conclusion: The Cultural Critique of Intellectual Property Law 185 Epilogue: How to Proliferate Distinctions, Not Destroy Them 207 Notes 211 References 225 Index 249

About the Author

E. Gabriella Coleman is the Wolfe Chair in Scientific and Technological Literacy in the Department of Art History and Communication Studies at McGill University.

Reviews

"Coding Freedom is insightful and fascinating, a superbly observed picture of the motives, divisions and history of the free software and software freedom world."--Cory Doctorow, BoingBoing "Anyone who thinks about programmers, open source, online communities, or the politics of intellectual property should have a copy of Coding Freedom on the shelf. It is an invaluable portrait of how free-software coders work, individually and collectively."--James Grimmelmann, Jotwell "The hacker ethic may be peculiar to outsiders. But it stems from a deep commitment to justice, fairness, and freedom. Anthropologist Gabriella Coleman describes in her phenomenal book Coding Freedom how hacker ethic gets encoded into both technical and political practice."--Danah Boyd, Wired "Though occasionally she uses academic jargon, her book is an intriguing read and connects the dots... Reading this book will help you to understand the conflict, as well as hacker culture."--David Hutchinson, io9.com "[S]triking and important... Coleman has captured a great deal of the essential spirit of the free- and open-software movement... I strongly suggest that you buy a copy of the book."--John Gilbey, Times Higher Education "[I]t is well-written and the analyses really get to the heart of some deeply ethical questions about individual, group and political relationships in voluntary groups which are rarely considered in such detail."--John R. Hudson, Briefing Bradford "This work by Coleman is at once history, ethnography, cultural criticism, and storytelling... Once can read the book as a narrative of the free software and open source movements, or as a sympathetic description of the behavior norms of hackers... Some readers will likely not consider hackers' aesthetic appreciation of good or clever coding as beauty, nor hackers' humor as funny, but these are Coleman's courageous attempts to provide a rounded depiction of this subculture. This book seems likely to be one of the defining works of cultural anthropology."--Choice

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