Universal Basic Assets: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
(Minor Clarification) |
(Finished the page out) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
=Basics= | |||
*A Framework First Proposed by [[The Institute for the Future]] | |||
*Despite mentioning Open Source Information and Open Source Software, No explicit mention is made of [[Open Hardware]], in the sense of [[The Promise of Open Hardware]] | |||
*As per the following quite, it defines various types of "goods": | |||
**"In the UBA framework and manifesto, we focus on three broad classes of assets: '''Private assets''' include money, land, and housing. '''Public assets''' refer to infrastructure and services like education, health, and public utilities. Lastly, '''open assets''' are a growing category of mostly digital assets that are communally created and open to everyone, from Wikipedia and open education resources to scientific knowledge, artificial intelligence tools, and much more." | |||
*Thus the Universal Basic Assets program proposes entrepreneurial founder-instigated, public-interest enterprises that promote access to universal basic assets of all types. Such enterprises are known as the Open Sector. | |||
=Internal Links= | |||
*[[Redistributive Economy]] | |||
The Universal Basic Assets | =External Links= | ||
*[https://www.iftf.org/projects/uba The IFTF Page on Universal Basic Assets] | |||
Revision as of 18:38, 2 September 2023
Basics
- A Framework First Proposed by The Institute for the Future
- Despite mentioning Open Source Information and Open Source Software, No explicit mention is made of Open Hardware, in the sense of The Promise of Open Hardware
- As per the following quite, it defines various types of "goods":
- "In the UBA framework and manifesto, we focus on three broad classes of assets: Private assets include money, land, and housing. Public assets refer to infrastructure and services like education, health, and public utilities. Lastly, open assets are a growing category of mostly digital assets that are communally created and open to everyone, from Wikipedia and open education resources to scientific knowledge, artificial intelligence tools, and much more."
- Thus the Universal Basic Assets program proposes entrepreneurial founder-instigated, public-interest enterprises that promote access to universal basic assets of all types. Such enterprises are known as the Open Sector.