This is quite noble of you, and I applaud your faith in the community.
Now we’re getting somewhere : )
Good work.
Nobility (spits)!
Thank you, warmly though… it’s the thought that counts.
I just want others to join in on our game of exquisite corpse here…
Lawrence Lessig one of the co-creators of the Creative Commons license would not be pleased to see someone refer to his creation as communism.
“masses of people who own the means of production work[ing] toward a common goal and share[ing] their products in common, [] contribut[ing] labor without wages and enjoy[ing] the fruits free of charge.” Yet it would be patently “unreasonable” to call the Baptist Church “socialism.”
You have no actual point, do you? What does Communism intrinsically have to do with Socialism, which is what the focus of the article you linked to was concerning? Thanks for stopping by.
Surrealist gesture
I’ve begun to upload some experiments and all the content I’ve posted up so far is released under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 license. More details on the license here: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
SO, this and any future Garage films I create (unless otherwise noted, for one reason or another) will also be released under the above license.
This means you are free to download and remix, make derivative works, alternate edits/versions, or simply incorporate it in any other way into your own work.
I’ve actually read people bemoaning their lack of equipment or ability to go out and make a film quite often in the forums, so I decided to give the option for people to rape and pillage my content as a means to an end.
I think it would be interesting for other people to take this route too, it could ostensibly provide people who desire to take part in the Garage movement, yet don’t have a camera or some way to shoot original films of their own, a way to create some content for Garage.
distorted ghosts (dance for death) from Jonathan Douglas Duran on Vimeo.
images/dissonance from Jonathan Douglas Duran on Vimeo.