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Accessibility Excitement in Geneva

Beneblog: Technology Meets Society

The ABC would wrap together efforts such as TIGAR as a sharing portal, capacity building efforts for countries trying to create accessible book services and looking at issues like licensing. So, in the meanwhile, we will need to rely on licenses: permissions agreements. So, the publishers weren’t against all licensing.

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5 Ways For Civil Society To Engage With AI

The NonProfit Times

The question now is — what do we do with all this? Feed LLMs With More Inclusive Data By Publishing Your Organization’s Important Work This last one is a bit different from the first four. AI is now a core part of Microsoft’s suite. At Google, Bard becames Gemini. The answer: Use it.

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Great reads from around the web on May 16th

Amy Sample Ward

To follow more of the things I find online, you can follow @amysampleward on Twitter (which is just a blog and resource feed), or find me on Delicious (for all kinds of bookmarks). "As of May 13, 2011, we are releasing the code for our community software platform, the Zanby Enterprise Group Family System, under a GPLv3 license.

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How to Use Storytelling for Nonprofits to Tug Heartstrings and Raise Funds

Get Fully Funded

And if you can use your Core Number to share what it costs to feed that child lunch, even better! A note about music: Do not use licensed music without permission. In our story, the resolution would be raising enough funds to provide every school child with a nutritional breakfast and lunch. A few I can recommend: Mixkit: [link].

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Can open source software save organizations money?

Zen and the Art of Nonprofit Technology

One question that will inevitably be asked: can free and open source software save organizations money? There are no license fees, but it takes care and feeding. So that means that you are saving money - no cost to acquire, and no long term license or maintenance fees. Confusing, huh?

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Great reads from around the web on April 2nd

Amy Sample Ward

To follow more of the things I find online, you can follow @amysampleward on Twitter (which is just a blog and resource feed), or find me on Delicious (for all kinds of bookmarks). "Dina Rickman posed a question to me this week about the role of a reporter in our current networked age.

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How do you define Creative Commons Attribution?

Beth's Blog: How Nonprofits Can Use Social Media

Earlier this week, I wrote a post called " What happens when you set your content free using Creative Commons Licensing? " I explained why I set my own work free, provided some examples, and pointed to a new tool. The First Giving Blog has a post " Riffing On Creative Commons License ". And how do you respond?

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