On Friday 25 Jun 2010 03:03:15 Karsten Wade wrote: > On Thu, Jun 24, 2010 at 04:45:16PM -0700, Jeff Osier-Mixon wrote: > > I did some digging on Scribd. The format they developed is called iPaper > > - it is Flash based, similar to PDF in function, and has an open API. > > You can attach any license to a document, including Creative Commons. > > Think of it as Google Docs meets PDF, but the main goal is > > social-media-style sharing. > > > > The tools don't favor open source, nor do they appear to restrict it in > > any > > > > way. > > The site usage policies apply all sorts of restrictions that are > structured and controlling (and non-freed), which would be another > reservation. > > What I might suggest is that we look around these types of > self-publishing sites for materials that might be useful for teaching > open source participation. If we find something, we can approach the > author about licensing and obtaining sources. >
In addition to that, I should note that Scribd does not allow downloading the documents themselves unless you are a registered user. Moreover, at one point I registered to them and misplaced the password, and the password reminder link did not work no matter how many times I tried. After I contacted the site's admins, they did not respond after one or two E-mails, and I'm still locked out out of the service (at least from my shlo...@iglu.org.il address). Regards, Shlomi Fish -- ----------------------------------------------------------------- Shlomi Fish http://www.shlomifish.org/ The Case for File Swapping - http://shlom.in/file-swap God considered inflicting XSLT as the tenth plague of Egypt, but then decided against it because he thought it would be too evil. Please reply to list if it's a mailing list post - http://shlom.in/reply . _______________________________________________ tos mailing list tos@teachingopensource.org http://teachingopensource.org/mailman/listinfo/tos