Commons

Commons Monday: Mongolian Academy of Sciences and M-ICP Agreed to Cooperate for Innovation

On August 27, 2010 The Mongolian Academy of Sciences and M-ICP (The Global Innovation Commons new commons alliance) agreed to cooperate for Innovation. The following is the press release from M-ICP. Learn More about M-ICP>>

In Ulaanbaatar a tripartite meeting was held in the Mongolian Academy of Sciences yesterday. The meeting was attended by Professor B. Enkhtuvshin, President of Mongolian Academy of Sciences (MAS), Mr. Ch. Otgochuluu, Director of Economic Competitiveness Policy and Research Center (ECRC) and Ms. D. Nergui, Founding CEO of M-ICP.

All parties agreed to cooperate in the area of mutual interest for development of Mongolia through innovation promotion and innovation commercialization. During this meeting Professor B. Enkhtuvshin expressed his personal appreciation for M-ICP initiative to create an environment for greater access of Mongolian businesses, government, and communities to global knowledge and technologies, for ensuring increased access of the rest of world for Mongolian heritable innovation and for M-ICP plan in partnership with M-CAM, USA to create innovation financing infrastructure, infrastructure for trade-credit offsets in particular.

Parties agreed to support the government initiative to organize a High level workshop on “Innovation and Technology” in September 2010 and agreed to invite M-CAM leadership to this workshop.

At the end of this meeting it was agreed to sign Memorandum of Understanding on cooperation between MAS and M-ICP.

Mongolian Academy of Sciences has decades of history and is the main science and technology institution of Mongolia with 21 research institutes and centers.

Economic Competitiveness Policy and Research Center was founded in 2010 with the primary goal of producing Mongolia Competitiveness Report jointly with World Competitiveness Center in Switzerland. ECRC is one of Alliances of M-ICP.

Featured Website Friday: The Heritable Innovation Trust

Today we featured the new Heritable Innovation Trust Website!

The Heritable Innovation Trust Program works to document Heritable Knowledge in indigenous communities to encourage economic empowerment and community engagement.

The Trust Protects: Having been finalized in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea, it is not subject to any expiration of copyright under any international convention. All knowledge in the trust is held in a perpetual, inalienable trust which shall benefit the knowledge stewards and their off-spring with out term or expiration.

The Trust Grows: By reading, sharing, observing, modifying, adapting, or using the knowledge in a trust document the reader affirms and agrees to participate in the reciprocal nature of information sharing embodied within the document.

The Trust Provides: The use of any of the information will be beneficially shared with the individuals who first shared the information. Should any commercial use be made, not only shall a share of all proceeds be shared with the Trust Stewards, but all information, designs, modes of distribution, information on sales and marketing are required to be taught to the Trust Stewards and any manufacturing process deployed must be done in partnership with Trust Stewards.

Clarifications Of A Commons Framework

Global Innovation Commons and Heritable Innovation Trust- Clarifications of a Commons Framework
- By Ken Dabkowski.

The following paragraphs clarify the architectures and intentions of the Global Innovation Commons and The Heritable Innovation Trust. Within a commons trust framework, both projects offer an alternative to enclosure (property/proprietary) based systems of engagement and exchange.

The Global Innovation Commons
takes public domain artifacts and shares them under a commons umbrella license agreement. While public domain artifacts are not commons artifacts in the traditional sense, they are a Constitutionally issued industrial compromise which at first robs the commons with time limited enclosure, but upon expiration, actually enhances the national/international commons by making publically available the artifact ‘for the promotion of Progress of Science and useful Arts’.

Transparency into the vast amounts of freely available information in any form liberates us to begin a commons innovation process starting with a larger set of tools. Commons innovation, co-operation and co-creation in terms of the Global Innovation Commons emerge on top of the public domain layer of information and the commons framework is governed by the rules of sharing, participation, openness and replenishment. The governance, in the form of a license, states that, “if you use the information, you must share what you’re doing with everyone else. And finally, if you use any of this information, you must reference the “Global Innovation Commons”. The co-governance and co-production license is not an enclosure or barrier to the commons, rather, it is an agreement to actively participate in and steward the commons resource.

In May’s Kosmos Journal, James Bernard Quilligan wrote that, “Commons have different meanings due to different levels of scale. At community and regional levels, the commons are largely a territorial concept involving the local appropriation, use and benefit or a particular property; at the global level, it’s more of a functional concept involving sovereign resource management rather than questions of use and benefit.” What the Global Innovation Commons does in practice, is to start by taking the artifacts of the old system and make them available publically. These artifacts as enclosure energy in one system, in combination with oversight or neglect (of the inventor/innovator), allows for their true commons liberation in the very areas they overlooked. Grassroots, municipal, or sovereign innovation can now start in these previously marginalized countries; not from ground zero, but on a level or even heightened playing field. Intangible commonly held and managed properties can be managed as sovereign resources which re-balance surpluses and deficits using innovation as the value which tips the scales.

The Heritable Innovation Trust Framework sets forth the following principles and put into practice Mr. Quilligan’s concepts on Commons Trusts, “If the world belongs to no one, as res nullius claims, then we are not owners but trustees. On this basis, humanity would hold the global commons in trust through a new framework of cooperation and agreement based on natural law, customary law and public trust doctrine… (Kosmos)”. In the Heritable Innovation Trust framework, as information is disclosed by a party, the information immediately enters the trust framework which maintains the heritable trusteeship but widens the possibility of engagement with a world operating in an enclosure model. In short:

The Trust Protects: Having been finalized in East New Britain, Papua New Guinea, it is not subject to any expiration of copyright under any international convention. All knowledge in the trust is held in a perpetual, inalienable trust which shall benefit the knowledge stewards and their off-spring with out term or expiration.

The Trust Grows: By reading, sharing, observing, modifying, adapting, or using the knowledge in a trust document the reader affirms and agrees to participate in the reciprocal nature of information sharing embodied within the document.

The Trust Provides
: The use of any of the information will be beneficially shared with the individuals who first shared the information. Should any commercial use be made, not only shall a share of all proceeds be shared with the Trust Stewards, but all information, designs, modes of distribution, information on sales and marketing are required to be taught to the Trust Stewards and any manufacturing process deployed must be done in partnership with Trust Stewards.

The Heritable Innovation Trust allows open access to information and innovation and does so under a stewardship agreement which states that the innovation, available for public use and benefit, has been stewarded for generations and is not available for enclosure, but is available for engagement. This engagement originates with the community and creates a shared communal asset not subject to enclosure rules with the added benefit of having no expiration. The 2010 Trust originated in communities located in Ecuador, Mongolia and Papua New Guinea and is available here: http://portal.heritableinnovationtrust.org/hit2010 (right click “Save Link As” to download as it is a large file).

Both projects encourage participation, connection and criticism. If, as you experience the sites, you feel there is a tool, explanation, or method of engagement which you feel can improve the projects, please send us your feedback, ask a question, or participate in implementation or governance. Also, please comment on the blog and discuss.

Commons Monday: UN Commons Strategy Group Interviewed on ZOOM’D

Today, John Schmidt interviewed Kevin and Jay from the UN Commons Strategy Group on his live internet radio show, ZOOM’D.

To hear more of the interview. Click HERE.

GIC Challenge Update: Mongolian Greenhouses

For the past week M-CAM Inc has been honored to host D. Nergui from Mongolia Innovation Commons Partners (M-ICP). We have spent days discussing banking systems, trade credit offsets, and Global Innovation Commons projects. Yesterday, we had a local Charlottesville glass worker, Bill Hess, come in to show us samples and discuss with us some optionality for the Greenhouse Project. It was a delight to see the different types of glass he has created and discuss with him ways to use glass for filtration and heating.
We also met with Robert Swap, a professor in the Department of Environmental Sciences at the University of Virginia. He discussed with us a program he has helped to create at the University where they bring in international students and create a forum of discussion around tangible solutions to various development projects. Below are pictures from the meeting:

Bill (center) describing to Bob (left) and Nergui (right) about the different types of glass he works with.


Bob describing to Bill and Nergui about The University’s International Development Programs.

Commons Monday: The Drama of the Commons

Written by our previously featured author, Elinor Ostrom, along with the National Research Council, The Committee of the Human Dimensions of Global Change, Thomas Dietz, Nives Dolsak, Paul C. Stern, Susan Stonich, and Elke U. Weber, “The Drama of The Commons” discusses an introduction to the commons.

Their research over the past thirty years has helped to clarify how human motivations, rules governing acess to reserouces, the structure of social organizations, and the resource systems themselves interact to determine whether or not the many dramas of the commons end happily.

The book discusses reviews of leaders in the field, the evidence from several disciplines, and many lines of research and present state-of-the-art assessment. They summarize lessons learned and identify the major challenges facing any system of governance for resource management. They also highlight the major challenges for the next decade: making knowledge development more systematic; understanding institutions dynamically; considering a broader range of resources (such as global and technological commons); and taking into account the effects of social and historical context.


*All information taken from The Drama of The Commons.

G.I.C. Challenege Update: Local Glass Workers Share Ideas

Over the last two weeks, the Heritable Innovation Trust/Global Innovation Commons team had the wonderful opportunity to meet two local glass workers/engineers/artists, Diana Branscome and Bill Hess.

Diana Branscome is a local artisan and an exhibitor at the Charlottesville City Market. At the market and various studios around Charlottesville, Diana displays her amazing glass artistry – plates, bowls and other ornamental decorations most made from melted/reused beverage bottles, samples of which can be viewable at (www.branscomeglass.com). Diana’s process of melting and reshaping glass was very interesting for us as it proved in concept the first components of the first Global Innovation Commons Challenge – i.e. to take a large glass (liquor bottle) resource and re-purpose it into greenhouse windows. Diana’s interest in the project taught us the glass melting basics. Her connection to Mongolia was unknown before we met but we look forward to deepening it through engagement.

Bill Hess is located just outside of Charlottesville in a small town named Afton, VA. Diana recommended that we connect with Bill due to his significant work in the glass and metal engineering field. Bill graciously invited us to his work space to view the many different objects he creates out of recycled bottle glass. Bill’s studio contains table tops, windows, vanities, lamps and various other creations – again, proving in concept that recycled bottle glass could be converted into windows. The pictures in this post are of Bill’s work and include images of his kilns which he uses to heat, melt and shape his work. More about Bill can be found here: (www.ideasonlegs.com) and we look forward to engaging him as the Challenge moves forward.”

Some of Hess’s work:

The utilities which could be used for the G.I.C. Challenge:

Commons Monday: Acquia Drupal Commons

“The web is free and ready-to-use, shouldn’t your software license fees be too?”

Acquia Drupal Commons
provides communities with a break for costly proprietary social software. By providing freedom of assembly, freedom from technology limits, and freedom from software license costs, Drupal Commons takes the guesswork out of building a Drupal based community.

Freedom of Assembly:
Allows your community members to connect with each other and participate in the community.
Freedom from Technology Limits: Allowing people to adapt social communities to fit your communities needs.
Freedom from Software License Costs: Sparing people from spending their budgets on proprietary software license fees.

The site allows you to join groups, create content, keep track of what is happening with your groups, update your profile, and most importantly connect with other users.

Check out more on the Drupal Commons HERE.

Featured Website Friday: The FFII

The FFII is a global network of associations dedicated to information about free and competitive software markets, genuine open standards and patent systems with lesser barriers to competition. The FFII contributions enabled the rejection of the EU software patent directive in July 2005, working closely with the European Parliament and many partners from industry and civil society. CNET awarded the FFII the Outstanding contribution to software development prize for this work. FFII continues to defend your right to a free and competitive software market by working towards genuine open standards, exclusion of software patents and informational freedom.

The FFII is a not-for-profit association registered in twenty European countries, dedicated to the development of information goods for the public benefit, based on copyright, free competition, open standards. More than 850 members, 3,500 companies and 100,000 supporters have entrusted the FFII to act as their voice in public policy questions concerning exclusion rights (intellectual property) in data processing.


*All information was taken from the FFII website.

Biogas, Bioalcohol, Biodiesel

New To The Global Innovation Commons, Biogas, Bioalcohol, and Biodiesel!.

Biogas is a byproduct of the biological breakdown of organic material. The captured gas, which is mostly composed of Methane, Carbon Dioxide and Nitrogen, can be used for a variety of applications. Biogas can be used for heating and can be compressed or upgraded for use in combustion engines or fuel cells. Included in this data set are methods for producing biogas, including anaerobic digesters, fermentation techniques, gasifiers and landfill gas capture systems.

Bioalcohols
are biologically synthesized alcohol fuels, such as ethanol, methanol, butanol and propanol. They are chemically identical to alcohols derived from petroleum and can be used directly in current engines or as fossil fuel additives. Included in this data set are methods for the production of bioalcohols from traditional and non-food biomass, as well as other sources, such as algae, by microbial fermentation, distillation, and dehydration.

Biodiesel and green diesel are fuels derived from renewable sources such as vegetable oil or animal fat. Biodiesel can be used alone in standard diesel engines or can be blended with petroleum based fuel to reduce harmful emissions. Included in this data set are methods for producing renewable diesel fuels from traditional feedstocks as well as the use of other sources, such as algae, by batch, supercritical, ultrasonic, anmicrowave transesterification processes.

Check them out under the Clean Energy Technology Area HERE