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Difference between revisions of "regiving"
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[[The Internet]] has given new impetus to regiving, and allowed much larger networks to be built at no or minimal cost. Several [[regiving network]]s have taken the lead in organizing [[regiving group]]s around the world. Networks and directories have been set up by several organizations, whilst the actual business of regiving is carried out in tens of thousands of local groups, some independent and others affiliated or controlled by a wider network. | [[The Internet]] has given new impetus to regiving, and allowed much larger networks to be built at no or minimal cost. Several [[regiving network]]s have taken the lead in organizing [[regiving group]]s around the world. Networks and directories have been set up by several organizations, whilst the actual business of regiving is carried out in tens of thousands of local groups, some independent and others affiliated or controlled by a wider network. | ||
− | The concept has been referred to as "freecycling" (a contraction of "free recycling") | + | The concept has been referred to as "freesharing", or "freecycling" (a contraction of "free recycling"). [[The Freecycle Network]] claims the latter term to be a violation of their trademark rights (despite having used it generically in the past themselves [http://web.archive.org/web/20040829082149/http://www.freecycle.org/ Internet Archive]). There is ongoing litigation on this point, unsettled as of December, 2006. |
See also: [[gift economy]], [[give-away shop]] | See also: [[gift economy]], [[give-away shop]] |
Revision as of 00:57, 9 October 2007
Regiving is the practice of giving away one's goods to others. It differs from straightforward giving in that goods are not acquired specifically for donation. Typically, goods which are surplus to requirements, which have been replaced or no longer meet the needs of the owner are offered to others for reuse or recycling. Often the motive is explicitly environmental, with regiving fitting in with the reduce, reuse, recycle approach to conserving resources. For others, and especially in its original contexts, the motives are principally charitable.
The Internet has given new impetus to regiving, and allowed much larger networks to be built at no or minimal cost. Several regiving networks have taken the lead in organizing regiving groups around the world. Networks and directories have been set up by several organizations, whilst the actual business of regiving is carried out in tens of thousands of local groups, some independent and others affiliated or controlled by a wider network.
The concept has been referred to as "freesharing", or "freecycling" (a contraction of "free recycling"). The Freecycle Network claims the latter term to be a violation of their trademark rights (despite having used it generically in the past themselves Internet Archive). There is ongoing litigation on this point, unsettled as of December, 2006.
See also: gift economy, give-away shop
Regiving Networks
- Sharing is Giving
- a directory of free recycling and exchange sites
- The Freecycle Network
- Don't Dump That
- formerly known as Freecyclers
- FreeSharing Network
- provides the Free Recycling wiki and directory
- FreeUsables Network
- The Global Free Economy Project
Weblinks
- Altruists International project to promote regiving
- Freesharing's "sites like us" page
- http://freecycling.wordpress.com/ - free recycling blog
This article contains content from Wikipedia. Current versions of the GNU FDL article regiving on WP may contain information useful to the improvement of this article | WP |