> >Well I was speaking about cultural production in a broader sense, >not necessarily related to free culture. > >Because IMHO free culture is like an avant-garde niece to more >conventional cultural production; >in the sense of experimenting with new models etc. > >To me the interesting point is when a crossover can start, when >conventional companies start to also partly use the development and >licensing models of free culture; > >And when free culture initiatives start getting the same amount of >public attention as conventional institutions. > >I also think that would be the situation where the end-user would >really start benifitting?
Sounds like some fantastic reasons to support reducing and removing copyleft software/fonts from the open software and font movement. :) FF **************Great deals on Dell’s most popular laptops – Starting at $479 (http://pr.atwola.com/promoclk/100126575x1220631252x1201390195/aol?redir=http:%2F%2Fad.doubleclick.net%2Fclk%3B213968550%3B35701427%3Bh)
