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Welcome to Berkman Center Google Summer of Code 2010

The Berkman Center was founded to explore cyberspace, share in its study, and help pioneer its development. We represent a network of faculty, students, fellows, entrepreneurs, lawyers, and virtual architects working to identify and engage with the challenges and opportunities of cyberspace.

We investigate the real and possible boundaries in cyberspace between open and closed systems of code, of commerce, of governance, and of education, and the relationship of law to each. We do this through active rather than passive research, believing that the best way to understand cyberspace is to actually build out into it.

Read more about the Berkman Center.

Check out the GSOC overview page.

Apply to work with Berkman.

Idea Pages by Project

The opportunities at Berkman break down into several projects.

Sub-Projects:

  • Application Tracker: The Berkman Center is looking to develop an open source tool to help us manage applications to our employment, fellowship, and internship opportunities. This will serve as an integral part of our internal workflow, while also allowing applicants to better manage and control their application materials and profile. The final tool should be generically useful as a way to manage individuals applying to work / volunteer for a broad range of projects and organizations.
  • AudioImager: Automated video production tool, which turns audio into video with photos.
  • Check-in Check-out Asset Tracker: An asset tracking system to help keep track of information technology resources commonly found in institutions. This includes both physical assets like a computer or camera as well as the non-physical such as software licenses. A check-in and check-out system is key for this project as well as auditing capabilities of inventory.
  • Chilling Effects: Chilling Effects aims to support lawful online activity against the chill of unwarranted legal threats.
  • Cohort: We'd like to continue the work on our tag-based CRM, where the C means "community" more than "customer" or "client".
  • Data Integration DB: Create a database and data integration system that allows for discovery of hidden connections between existing data sets.
  • EmanciPay: A way for customers to choose how much they'll pay for anything -- including the terms and preferences accompanying the payment -- outside of any seller's silo. It should provide a whole new business model for the first categories targeted: public broadcasters and recording artists.
  • ListenLog: A way for individuals to log their own listening activity (to any audio source) for their own purposes, outside any source's (or seller's) silo. The first source to be logged: public radio streams and podcasts.
  • LittleVoice: LittleVoice is an open source community discussion platform originally created to host the online community of StopBadware, a former Berkman Center project that has since spun off from the Center. It is now also used by another Berkman project, Herdict, for that project's discussion community.
  • MediaCloud: MediaCloud is a project that crawls and analyzes on-line media content. It collects, tags, and analyzes the full stream of news stories from a wide variety of traditional and new media sources. It aims to track news content comprehensively and provide free, open, and flexible tools to allow researchers to perform their own analysis.
  • Next Generation Video Player: We're looking to build a next generation video player for our digital media content at the Berkman Center. A video and audio space that takes the leap from just watching or listening, to sharing, interacting with, and navigating our growing, intellectually stimulating library of digital content.
  • Not A Number: The Not-a-Number research platform is a script generation tool to conduct different kinds of empirical data collection and observation online. It allows for researchers and other individuals to dynamically create scripts with reusable question and answer choice objects. It is a flexible, free and open-source web-application currently used by several projects at the Berkman Center.
  • ONI Tester: The Open Network Initiative looks to find a better way to pinpoint filtering and surveillance on the internet.
  • Online Media Legal Network: The Online Media Legal Network (OMLN) is a network of law firms, law school clinics, in-house counsel, and individual lawyers throughout the United States willing to provide pro bono (free) legal assistance to qualifying online journalism ventures and other digital media creators.
  • Public Radio Exchange: Public Radio Exchange is an online marketplace for distribution, review, and licensing of public radio programming. PRX is also a growing social network and community of listeners, producers, and stations collaborating to reshape public radio.
  • Sirikata Puzzle: An open source platform for deploying 3D multi-user online environments
  • Web Crawler: MediaCloud, a Berkman Center project, and StopBadware, a former Berkman Center project that has spun off as an independent organization, have each built systems to crawl websites and save the results into a database.

Berkman Google Summer of Code FAQ

Answers to commonly asked questions. This includes a set of requirements around working hours, who can apply, other commitments you might have for the summer, etc. PLEASE READ!