Cost of Freedom
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Cost of Freedom
Summary
Cost of Freedom is a literary work[1].
Key Facts
- Cost of Freedom authored Jon Phillips[2].
- Cost of Freedom authored Lawrence Lessig[3].
- Cost of Freedom authored Christian Grothoff[4].
- Cost of Freedom authored Geert Lovink[5].
- Cost of Freedom authored Marc Weidenbaum[6].
- Cost of Freedom authored John Wilbanks[7].
- Cost of Freedom's image is recorded as CostOfFreedom Hi-RES cover.jpg[8].
- Cost of Freedom's instance of is recorded as literary work[9].
- Cost of Freedom's genre is recorded as Book Sprint[10].
- Cost of Freedom's genre is recorded as edited volume[11].
- Cost of Freedom's Commons category is recorded as Cost of Freedom[12].
- Cost of Freedom's language of work or name is recorded as English[13].
- Cost of Freedom's publication date is recorded as +2015-11-00T00:00:00Z[14].
- Cost of Freedom's Open Library ID is recorded as OL24711685W[15].
- Cost of Freedom's Internet Archive ID is recorded as CostOfFreedom[16].
- Cost of Freedom's has edition or translation is recorded as Q132630800[17].
- Cost of Freedom's dedicated to is recorded as Bassel Khartabil[18].
- Cost of Freedom's official website is recorded as http://costoffreedom.cc[19].
- Cost of Freedom's main subject is recorded as Bassel Khartabil[20].
- Cost of Freedom's title is recorded as Cost of Freedom[21].
- Cost of Freedom's subtitle is recorded as A Collective Inquiry[22].
- Cost of Freedom's copyright status is recorded as public domain[23].
- Cost of Freedom's form of creative work is recorded as essay collection[24].
- Cost of Freedom's Goodreads work ID is recorded as 51144053[25].
Body
Works and Contributions
Authored works include Jon Phillips[2], a writer[26], b. 1979[27], of United States[28]; Lawrence Lessig[3], a jurist[29], b. 1961[30], of United States[31], awarded the Webby Lifetime Achievement Award[32], specialised in law[33]; Christian Grothoff[4], a computer scientist[34], b. 1977[35], of Germany[36]; Geert Lovink[5], an essayist[37], b. 1959[38], of Kingdom of the Netherlands[39], specialised in media theory[40]; Marc Weidenbaum[6], an editor[41], b. 1966[42]; and John Wilbanks[7], a researcher[43], b. 2000[44], of United States[45].