I think I chipped in at the time you suggested this – I think “empowering 
people by freeing ideas” is a fantastic strap line.

From my understanding of the theory of change behind much open knowledge work 
one of the key arguments for openness is increasing the possibility and 
probability ideas and knowledge will be accessible to a wider range of people 
allowing new ideas to develop. This seems to speak very clearly to the argument 
often used to advocate for openness in government in relation to stimulating 
innovation.

My penneth worth,

Duncan
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From: okfn-discuss [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Aaron Wolf
Sent: 09 June 2014 17:02
To: Open Knowledge Foundation discussion list
Subject: Re: [okfn-discuss] Next steps on the Open Knowledge Tagline

Truly not just because it was my suggestion… I still think the best of the lot 
is "Empowering people by freeing ideas"
I really don't understand why that has been excluded from the running given 
that it meets 100% of the guidelines, perhaps moreso than any other option. I 
had expected that if anyone didn't like it as is, that variants of it would be 
proposed. The most significant feature of it: the political message, that this 
is about freedom, people, and power. It begs the question of each action for 
the organization "does this work empower the public?" and "will this help free 
ideas?" That's much better than the implications of the current tagline which 
might be "after we open this [Pandora's box?], we will see what changes it 
brings…"

My second choice is NO tagline.
Third: Open knowledge, open data, open minds


--
Aaron Wolf
wolftune.com<http://wolftune.com/>

On Mon, Jun 9, 2014 at 3:37 AM, Rufus Pollock 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

Hi all,


We’ve now had a good amount of time for everyone to contribute ideas re the 
tagline - I've personally contributed quite a few!


We’ve also had a chance to get some advice and input from Johnson Banks who 
have been the professional advisors helping us with the logo, the narrative etc.


First, off it is worth reiterating a few key points:


·  The tagline complements the narrative (the longer paragraph) and our name - 
it will usually be found with our name/logo and e.g. on the front page leads 
into the narrative

·  The tagline aims to be a succinct statement of our core purpose and reason 
for being, the driver of our work. It is not especially supposed to summarize 
who we are in terms of our structure (e.g. we don’t need it to say “we’re a 
community” or “we’re global” etc)

·  Common taglines for well known entities tend to be very short. E.g. 
Greenpeace - tagline is (I believe) “caring for the environment” or Nike’s 
“Just Do It”. Ours could be a bit longer since people are likely less familiar 
with who we are and the kind of area we work in but we still want it to be 
reasonably short

·  The tagline is aimed to be meaningful (if not a fully explanatory since it 
is so short) to people who aren’t already part of the core community

·  We almost certainly want the tagline to work in conjunction with the name, 
so assume it reads "Open Knowledge: [tagline] ". This means taglines which 
incorporate either open or knowledge run the risk of being repetitive e.g. 
imagine tagline was opening knowledge around the world. We’d then have: “Open 
Knowledge: opening knowledge around the world” which doesn’t read so well

·  It would be nice - but not essential - if the tagline allowed for 
customization for specific activities e.g. see how X can change the world can 
have X replaced by different things (such as “open science”)


Based on all of these considerations, reviewing the options on the 
wiki<http://wiki.okfn.org/About_the_Open_Knowledge_brand/tagline_discussion>, 
we have produced a suggested shortlist of:


·  Open Knowledge: see how information can change the world

·  Open Knowledge: see how data can change the world

·  [Open Knowledge:] Open knowledge, open data, open minds (we can possibly 
drop the Open Knowledge: prefix here since we have that as the first two words0

·  [No Tagline] - given the narrative and logo we could not have a designated 
tagline for the time being (and where we need something for e.g. t-shirts or 
stickers we could pull things from the narrative e.g. “creating power for the 
many, not the few”)

Does this seem a reasonable set of options? Are there other options people 
would like to see considered?


If this is a good list, we can move to the next step which would be to select 
the tagline from the shortlist.


Regards,

Rufus

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