Support CC

Commoner Letters

Commoner Letters is a series of letters written by prominent members of the CC community and sent out during our annual fundraising campaign. This year, we're calling these "commoners" by a different name: CC Superheroes, because that's truly what they are. These exceptional CC Superheroes tell us in their own words about their past and present projects that involve CC, what CC means to them, and why they feel the commons is a vital public resource in our digital age.

2010 Superhero Letter Writers:

Subscribe

If you would like to subscribe to the CC Commoner Letter mailing list you need only enter your email address on the CC Commoner Letter signup form.

You will receive a confirmation email, which you must respond to in order to complete your subscription (for protection against unwanted signups). Please note that CC respects your privacy. We will not sell or give away your e-mail address. It will be used solely for communication from Creative Commons.

Unsubscribe

If you are already a subscriber and would like to unsubscribe please use the unsubscribe instructions found in the footer of any CC Commoner Letter email you have received.

History of the Commoner Letter:

Read the letters at our weblog (RSS).

Link to this archive: http://support.creativecommons.org/letters

The Commoner Letter series started off as the "Lessig Letter" series. In conjunction with the 2005 and 2006 annual fundraising campaigns, Creative Commons' CEO at the time, Lawrence Lessig, wrote a series of letters that discussed CC's origins and explored the direction CC was headed.

In 2007, we revamped the letter series in order to have it better reflect our fast-growing international community, and renamed it Commoner Letters. An archive of all Commoner and Lessig Letters can be found below.

2009 Commoner Letters

  1. Mohamed Nanabhay, Head of Online, Al Jazeera English.
  2. Carl Malamud, founder of Public.Resource.Org.
  3. Jay Yoon, CC Korea Project Lead.
  4. Molly Kleinman, Special Assistant to the Dean of Libraries, University of Michigan Library.
  5. Daniel Zaccagnino and Matthew Siegel, co-Founders, Indaba Music.
  6. Stephen Friend, President, CEO, and co-Founder, Sage
  7. Lawrence Lessig, Founder and Board Member, Creative Commons.

2008 Letters

  1. Eben Moglen - Professor of Law and Legal History at Columbia University, and the founder, Director-Counsel and Chairman of Software Freedom Law Center.
  2. Renata Avila - International Lawyer and Creative Commons Guatemala Project Lead.
  3. Jonathan Coulton - Singer and songwriter who licenses all his work under CC licenses.
  4. Richard Bookman - Associate Professor of Molecular & Cellular Pharmacology, Miller School of Medicine at University of Miami.
  5. Jimmy Wales - Founder of Wikipedia.

2007 Letters

  1. Creative Commons @ 5 Years
  2. Evan Prodromou
  3. Cory Doctorow
  4. Beth Kanter
  5. Fred Benenson
  6. Mike Shaver

2006 Letters

  1. (es)
    (it)
    A Report on the Commons
  2. (es)
    (it)
    CC Values
  3. (es)
    CC & Web 2.0
  4. (es)
    CC as a Global Movement
  5. (es)
    CC Labs
  6. (es)
    CC Changes

2005 Letters

  1. Background
    1. (es)
      (de)
      Supporting the Commons
    2. (es)
      (de)
      How it All Began
    3. (es)
      (de)
      Interoperability
    4. (es)
      (de)
      Fair Use
  2. Where we are
    1. (es)
      (de)
      Continuing the Movement
    2. (es)
      (de)
      What is Science Commons?
    3. (es)
      (de)
      iCommons
  3. Where we're going
    1. (es)
      (de)
      Commercial Licensing
    2. (es)
      (de)
      License Compatibility
    3. (es)
      (de)
      Important Freedoms
    4. (es)
      (de)
      CC Tools
    5. (es)
      (de)
      New Projects
    6. (es)
      (de)
      Final Thoughts

Spanish Translations — Thanks to Maria Cristinia Alvite.
German Translations — Thanks to iRights.info.
Catalan Translations — Thanks to Ignasi Labastida i Juan.