Berkman Center for Internet & Society
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The Berkman Center for Internet and Society is a research center at Harvard Law School, which focuses on the legal study of cyberspace. The Center sponsors conferences, visiting lecturers, and residential fellows. Members of the Center do research and write books, articles, weblogs with RSS 2.0 feeds, for which the Center holds the specification, and podcasts, of which the first series took place at the Berkman Center. Its newsletter, "The Filter," is on the Web and available by e-mail, and it hosts a blog community of Harvard faculty, students and Berkman Center affiliates. The Berkman Center is funding the Openlaw project, and is a co-founder of the OpenNet Initiative. Other projects include Global Voices Online.
Fellows have included David Weinberger; Ethan Zuckerman; Dave Winer; Jimmy Wales;[1][2]; Rebecca MacKinnon; John Perry Barlow; Wendy Seltzer; James F. Moore; John Clippinger and Doc Searls.
Faculty have included Charles Nesson, Lawrence Lessig, Jonathan Zittrain, William "Terry" Fisher, John Palfrey, and Yochai Benkler.
- Yale Information Society Project at Yale Law School
- Berkeley Center for Law and Technology at Boalt Hall
- ^ Mitchell, Dan. "Insider Editing at Wikipedia", New York Times, December 24, 2005. Retrieved on 2007-03-26.
- ^ Mehegan, David (February 12, 2006). Bias, sabotage haunt Wikipedia's free world. Business 4. The Boston Globe. Retrieved on 2007-03-26.
- Berkman Center homepage
- The Filter homepage
- Blog community
- H2O Playlists Beta
- JamaicaExpress