Jeremy Wright: Ideas on Open Hardware Revenue Sharing. In: 7B Industries Blog. 7B Industries, 13. Oktober 2022, abgerufen am 16. Oktober 2022 (amerikanisches Englisch).
Laetitia Thomas: Business models for open source hardware. HAL Open Science, Université Grenoble Alpes, 22. November 2019 (archives-ouvertes.fr [abgerufen am 15. September 2022] Université Grenoble Alpes).
Chris Trayner: CRO HeyPhone Communications System Technical Reference Manual. British Cave Research Association (BCRA), Leeds 23. Juni 2002 (org.uk [PDF]).
Maximilian Voigt, Daniel Wessolek: Prototype Fund Hardware: Einblicke & Ausblicke xHain. In: remote Chaos Communication Congress (rC3). Chaos Computer Club (CCC), 30. Dezember 2021, abgerufen am 22. Dezember 2021.
cambridge.org
Rafaella Antoniou, Jérémy Bonvoisin, Pen-Yuan Hsing, Elies Dekoninck, Daniela Defazio: Defining success in open source hardware development projects: a survey of practitioners. In: Design Science. Band8, 2022, ISSN2053-4701, S.e8, doi:10.1017/dsj.2021.30 (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 12. April 2022]).
Rhys Jones, Patrick Haufe, Edward Sells, Pejman Iravani, Vik Olliver: RepRap – the replicating rapid prototyper. In: Robotica. Band29, Nr.1, Januar 2011, ISSN1469-8668, S.177–191, doi:10.1017/S026357471000069X (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 13. Oktober 2022]).
Pietari Matti Veikko Kauttu: Open hardware as an experimental commercialization strategy: challenges and potentialities. In: CERN IdeaSquare Journal of Experimental Innovation. 21. Dezember 2018, S.25–31 Pages, doi:10.23726/CIJ.2018.826 (cern.ch [abgerufen am 7. Februar 2022]).
Maximilian Voigt, Tasso Mulzer: Liability in Open Hardware. Open Hardware Happy Hour (O3H). Prototype Fund Hardware, Berlin / Hamburg 15. Dezember 2022 (cyber4edu.org).
Jérémy Bonvoisin, Robert Mies: Measuring Openness in Open Source Hardware with the Open-o-Meter. In: Procedia CIRP. Band78, 2018, S.388–393, doi:10.1016/j.procir.2018.08.306 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 18. Februar 2022]).
Rafaella Antoniou, Jérémy Bonvoisin, Pen-Yuan Hsing, Elies Dekoninck, Daniela Defazio: Defining success in open source hardware development projects: a survey of practitioners. In: Design Science. Band8, 2022, ISSN2053-4701, S.e8, doi:10.1017/dsj.2021.30 (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 12. April 2022]).
Julian Stirling, Kaspar Bumke, Joel Collins, Vimal Dhokia, Richard Bowman: HardOps: utilising the software development toolchain for hardware design. In: International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing. 7. Februar 2022, ISSN0951-192X, S.1–13, doi:10.1080/0951192X.2022.2028188.
Miljković, Nadica, Trisovic, Ana, Peer, Limor: Towards FAIR Principles for Open Hardware. 23. September 2021, doi:10.5281/ZENODO.5524415 (zenodo.org [abgerufen am 8. Juli 2022]).
Colomb, Julien, Fair4rh_RDA_IG, Miljković, Nadica: FAIR for research hardware. RDA plenary presentation 2022. 2022, S.117580466 Bytes, doi:10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.20103149.V1 (figshare.com [abgerufen am 8. Juli 2022]).
Michel Bauwens, Alekos Pantazis: The ecosystem of commons-based peer production and its transformative dynamics. In: The Sociological Review. Band66, Nr.2, März 2018, ISSN0038-0261, S.302–319, doi:10.1177/0038026118758532.
Peter Troxler: Commons-Based Peer-Production of Physical Goods: Is There Room for a Hybrid Innovation Ecology? In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2010, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.1692617 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 17. Februar 2022]).
Shane Oberloier, Joshua Pearce: General Design Procedure for Free and Open-Source Hardware for Scientific Equipment. In: Designs. Band2, Nr.1, 30. Dezember 2017, ISSN2411-9660, S.2, doi:10.3390/designs2010002 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 4. Mai 2023]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Economic savings for scientific free and open source technology: A review. In: HardwareX. Band8, Oktober 2020, S.e00139, doi:10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00139, PMID 32923748, PMC 7480774 (freier Volltext) – (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 6. Oktober 2020]).
Jens P. Wulfsberg: On the Economic Value of Open Source Hardware – Case Study of an Open Source Magnetic Resonance Imaging Scanner. Band3, Nr.1, 20. Mai 2019, S.2, doi:10.5334/joh.14 (metajnl.com [abgerufen am 30. März 2023]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Emerging Business Models for Open Source Hardware. In: Journal of Open Hardware. Band1, Nr.1, 21. März 2017, ISSN2514-1708, S.2, doi:10.5334/joh.4.
Robin P. G. Tech, Jan-Peter Ferdinand, Martina Dopfer: Open Source Hardware Startups and Their Communities. In: The Decentralized and Networked Future of Value Creation. Springer International Publishing, Cham 2016, ISBN 978-3-319-31684-0, S.129–145, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-31686-4_7.
Robert Mies, Martin Häuer, Mehera Hassan: Introducing readiness scales for effective reuse of open source hardware. In: Procedia CIRP. Band109, 2022, S.635–640, doi:10.1016/j.procir.2022.05.306 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 24. Juni 2022]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Strategic Investment in Open Hardware for National Security. In: Technologies. Band10, Nr.2, 18. April 2022, ISSN2227-7080, S.53, doi:10.3390/technologies10020053 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 14. Juli 2022]).
Stephan Bohn, Hendrik Send, Peter Bihr: Free technologies for the whole world to use – why open source hardware is in the public interest. doi:10.5281/zenodo.4436475 (zenodo.org [abgerufen am 23. Oktober 2023]).
Maximilian Voigt: Open Hardware and Scientific Autonomy in Germany: How Transfer Activities Can Become More Attractive. 2023, doi:10.34669/WI.CP/4.9 (ssoar.info [abgerufen am 12. April 2023]).
Marius Monton, Xavier Salazar: On licenses for [Open] Hardware. In: 2020 XXXV Conference on Design of Circuits and Integrated Systems (DCIS). IEEE, Segovia, Spain 2020, ISBN 978-1-72819-132-4, S.1–6, doi:10.1109/DCIS51330.2020.9268619 (ieee.org [abgerufen am 21. Dezember 2022]).
Luis Felipe R. Muriillo, Pietari Kauttu, Laia Pujol Priego, Andrew Katz, Jonathan Wareham: Open hardware licences. Parallels and Contrasts. Open Science Monitor Case Study. European Commission. Directorate General for Research and Innovation., Elsevier., ESADE., CWTS., Lisbon Council., LU August 2019, doi:10.2777/641658.
Deutsches Institut für Normung DIN (Hrsg.): DIN SPEC 3105-1:2020-07. Open Source Hardware – Teil 1: Anforderungen an die technische Dokumentation; Text Englisch. Beuth-Verlag, Berlin Juli 2020, doi:10.31030/3173063.
Deutsches Institut für Normung DIN (Hrsg.): DIN SPEC 3105-2:2020-07. Open Source Hardware – Teil 2: Community-basierte Bewertung; Text Englisch. Beuth-Verlag, Berlin Juli 2020, doi:10.31030/3173062.
Jack Peplinski, Emilio Velis, Joshua M. Pearce: Towards open source patents: Semi-automated open hardware certification from MediaWiki websites. In: World Patent Information. Band71, 27. Oktober 2022, S.102150, doi:10.1016/j.wpi.2022.102150 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 1. November 2022]).
Johanna Pohl, Anja Höfner, Erik Albers, Friederike Rohde: Design Options for Long-lasting, Efficient and Open Hardware and Software. In: Ökologisches Wirtschaften - Fachzeitschrift. Band36, O1, 11. Februar 2021, ISSN1430-8800, S.20–24, doi:10.14512/OEWO360120 (oekologisches-wirtschaften.de [abgerufen am 1. September 2022]).
Rhys Jones, Patrick Haufe, Edward Sells, Pejman Iravani, Vik Olliver: RepRap – the replicating rapid prototyper. In: Robotica. Band29, Nr.1, Januar 2011, ISSN1469-8668, S.177–191, doi:10.1017/S026357471000069X (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 13. Oktober 2022]).
Ed Sells, Sebastien Bailard, Zach Smith, Adrian Bowyer, Vik Olliver: RepRap: The Replicating Rapid Prototyper: Maximizing Customizability by Breeding the Means of Production. In: Handbook of Research in Mass Customization and Personalization. World Scientific Publishing Company, 2009, ISBN 978-981-4280-25-9, S.568–580, doi:10.1142/9789814280280_0028.
Ariel Calderon, James Griffin, Juan Cristóbal Zagal: BeamMaker: an open hardware high-resolution digital fabricator for the masses. In: Rapid Prototyping Journal. Band20, Nr.3, 1. Januar 2014, ISSN1355-2546, S.245–255, doi:10.1108/RPJ-01-2013-0006.
Alfredo Herrera: The Promises and Challenges of Open Source Hardware. In: IEEE Security and Privacy. Band53, Nr.10, Oktober 2020, ISSN0018-9162, S.104, doi:10.1109/MC.2020.3020208 (ieee.org [abgerufen am 20. Februar 2022]).
Joel T. Collins, Joe Knapper, Julian Stirling, Joram Mduda, Catherine Mkindi: Robotic microscopy for everyone: the OpenFlexure microscope. In: Biomedical Optics Express. Band11, Nr.5, 1. Mai 2020, ISSN2156-7085, S.2447, doi:10.1364/BOE.385729, PMID 32499936, PMC 7249832 (freier Volltext) – (optica.org [abgerufen am 16. Februar 2022]).
Benedict Diederich, René Lachmann, Swen Carlstedt, Barbora Marsikova, Haoran Wang: A versatile and customizable low-cost 3D-printed open standard for microscopic imaging. In: Nature Communications. Band11, Nr.1, 25. November 2020, ISSN2041-1723, S.5979, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19447-9, PMID 33239615, PMC 7688980 (freier Volltext) – (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
David S. Kong, Todd A. Thorsen, Jonathan Babb, Scott T. Wick, Jeremy J. Gam: Open-source, community-driven microfluidics with Metafluidics. In: Nature Biotechnology. Band35, Nr.6, Juni 2017, ISSN1546-1696, S.523–529, doi:10.1038/nbt.3873 (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
Katrina Laganovska, Aleksejs Zolotarjovs, Mercedes Vázquez, Kirsty Mc Donnell, Janis Liepins: Portable low-cost open-source wireless spectrophotometer for fast and reliable measurements. In: HardwareX. Band7, April 2020, S.e00108, doi:10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00108 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 22. März 2022]).
Pietari Matti Veikko Kauttu: Open hardware as an experimental commercialization strategy: challenges and potentialities. In: CERN IdeaSquare Journal of Experimental Innovation. 21. Dezember 2018, S.25–31 Pages, doi:10.23726/CIJ.2018.826 (cern.ch [abgerufen am 7. Februar 2022]).
Laia Pujol Priego, Jonathan Douglas Wareham: Obsessed with Time? White Rabbit At CERN. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3355693 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 7. Februar 2022]).
Christina Priavolou: The Emergence of Open Construction Systems. A Sustainable Paradigm in the Construction Sector? In: Journal of Futures Studies. Band23, Nr.2, Dezember 2018, S.67–84, doi:10.6531/JFS.201812_23(2).0005.
M Shalashov, A Kiseleva: Review of open-source cubesat projects. In: Journal of Physics: Conference Series. Band1925, Nr.1, 1. Mai 2021, ISSN1742-6588, S.012039, doi:10.1088/1742-6596/1925/1/012039.
Artur Scholz, Jer-Nan Juang: Toward open source CubeSat design. In: Acta Astronautica. Band115, Oktober 2015, S.384–392, doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2015.06.005 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 21. September 2022]).
Paris Chrysos, Kevin C. Desouza: A Methodology to Analyze the Structure of Collaborative Technological Innovations: The Case of UPSat. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3516704 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 21. September 2022]).
Royhaan Folarin, Mahmoud Bukar Maina, Abisola Akinbo, Tamramat Iyabo Runsewe-Abiodun, Omobola Ogundahunsi: Bypassing shortages of personal protective equipment in low-income settings using local production and open source tools. In: PLOS Biology. Band20, Nr.5, 20. Mai 2022, ISSN1545-7885, S.e3001658, doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001658 (plos.org [abgerufen am 30. Mai 2022]).
Jérémy Bonvoisin, Robert Mies: Measuring Openness in Open Source Hardware with the Open-o-Meter. In: Procedia CIRP. Band78, 2018, S.388–393, doi:10.1016/j.procir.2018.08.306 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 18. Februar 2022]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Economic savings for scientific free and open source technology: A review. In: HardwareX. Band8, Oktober 2020, S.e00139, doi:10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00139, PMID 32923748, PMC 7480774 (freier Volltext) – (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 6. Oktober 2020]).
Robert Mies, Martin Häuer, Mehera Hassan: Introducing readiness scales for effective reuse of open source hardware. In: Procedia CIRP. Band109, 2022, S.635–640, doi:10.1016/j.procir.2022.05.306 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 24. Juni 2022]).
Jack Peplinski, Emilio Velis, Joshua M. Pearce: Towards open source patents: Semi-automated open hardware certification from MediaWiki websites. In: World Patent Information. Band71, 27. Oktober 2022, S.102150, doi:10.1016/j.wpi.2022.102150 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 1. November 2022]).
Katrina Laganovska, Aleksejs Zolotarjovs, Mercedes Vázquez, Kirsty Mc Donnell, Janis Liepins: Portable low-cost open-source wireless spectrophotometer for fast and reliable measurements. In: HardwareX. Band7, April 2020, S.e00108, doi:10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00108 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 22. März 2022]).
Artur Scholz, Jer-Nan Juang: Toward open source CubeSat design. In: Acta Astronautica. Band115, Oktober 2015, S.384–392, doi:10.1016/j.actaastro.2015.06.005 (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 21. September 2022]).
Andrea Diener: Chaos Communication Congress Bastler, Baustler, Life Hacker.faz.net, 28. Dezember 2013, abgerufen am 9. Juli 2015: „Gehackt werden nicht nur Telefonverbindungen und Computer, sondern auch Strickcomputer und Pflanzen. Auf dem Chaos Communication Congress stellt sich eine Kultur des Selbstentdeckens vor. Funde werden bereitwillig mit allen geteilt.“
figshare.com
Colomb, Julien, Fair4rh_RDA_IG, Miljković, Nadica: FAIR for research hardware. RDA plenary presentation 2022. 2022, S.117580466 Bytes, doi:10.6084/M9.FIGSHARE.20103149.V1 (figshare.com [abgerufen am 8. Juli 2022]).
Criteria auf fsf.org “The seller must use FSF approved terminology for the FSF’s activities and work, in all statements and publications relating to the product. This includes product packaging, and manuals, web pages, marketing materials, and interviews about the product. Specifically, the seller must use the term ‘GNU/Linux’ for any reference to an entire operating system which includes GNU and Linux, not ‘Linux’ or ‘Linux-based system’ or ‘a system with the Linux kernel’ or any other term that mentions ‘Linux’ without ‘GNU’. Likewise, the seller must talk about ‘free software’ more prominently than ‘open source.’”
Maximilian Voigt, Daniel Wessolek: Technik selbst gestalten: Open-Source-Hardware: verstehen, bauen, nutzen und verbessern. In: c't. Band2022, Nr.1, 17. Dezember 2021, ISSN0724-8679, S.58 (heise.de [abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2021]).
Martin Häuer: Technik gut beschreiben: DIN SPEC 3105: Offene Hardware standardisiert dokumentieren. In: c't. Band2022, Nr.1, 17. Dezember 2021, ISSN0724-8679, S.64 (heise.de [abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2021]).
Marius Monton, Xavier Salazar: On licenses for [Open] Hardware. In: 2020 XXXV Conference on Design of Circuits and Integrated Systems (DCIS). IEEE, Segovia, Spain 2020, ISBN 978-1-72819-132-4, S.1–6, doi:10.1109/DCIS51330.2020.9268619 (ieee.org [abgerufen am 21. Dezember 2022]).
Alfredo Herrera: The Promises and Challenges of Open Source Hardware. In: IEEE Security and Privacy. Band53, Nr.10, Oktober 2020, ISSN0018-9162, S.104, doi:10.1109/MC.2020.3020208 (ieee.org [abgerufen am 20. Februar 2022]).
Jiri Svorc, Andrew Katz: Breathe In, Breathe Out: How open hardware licensing can help save the world. In: Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society. Band11, Nr.1, 5. April 2020, ISSN2666-8106, S.49–56 (jolts.world [abgerufen am 21. Dezember 2022]).
kit.edu
itas.kit.edu
Paul Jerchel: "No-Time-Products" through Integrated CAx? User Centricity for Mass Customization by Broad Impact for Additive Manufacturing. In: Re-imagining the futures of 3D printing in society. Scientific symposium and expert scenario workshop. 24. März 2021 (kit.edu).
Arnd Weber, Steffen Reith, Michael Kasper, Dirk Kuhlmann, Jean-Pierre Seifert, Christoph Krauß: Sovereignty in Information Technology. Security, Safety and Fair Market Access by Openness and Control of the Supply Chain. White Paper V1.0. Singapur / Darmstadt / Wiesbaden / Karlsruhe / Berlin März 2018 (englisch, kit.edu [PDF; abgerufen am 8. Februar 2023]).
Phillip Torrone: The Maker's Bill of Rights (PDF). In: Make Magazine. 1. Dezember 2006, abgerufen am 13. Oktober 2022 (amerikanisches Englisch).
mdpi.com
Shane Oberloier, Joshua Pearce: General Design Procedure for Free and Open-Source Hardware for Scientific Equipment. In: Designs. Band2, Nr.1, 30. Dezember 2017, ISSN2411-9660, S.2, doi:10.3390/designs2010002 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 4. Mai 2023]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Strategic Investment in Open Hardware for National Security. In: Technologies. Band10, Nr.2, 18. April 2022, ISSN2227-7080, S.53, doi:10.3390/technologies10020053 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 14. Juli 2022]).
metajnl.com
openhardware.metajnl.com
Jens P. Wulfsberg: On the Economic Value of Open Source Hardware – Case Study of an Open Source Magnetic Resonance Imaging Scanner. Band3, Nr.1, 20. Mai 2019, S.2, doi:10.5334/joh.14 (metajnl.com [abgerufen am 30. März 2023]).
Benedict Diederich, René Lachmann, Swen Carlstedt, Barbora Marsikova, Haoran Wang: A versatile and customizable low-cost 3D-printed open standard for microscopic imaging. In: Nature Communications. Band11, Nr.1, 25. November 2020, ISSN2041-1723, S.5979, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19447-9, PMID 33239615, PMC 7688980 (freier Volltext) – (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
David S. Kong, Todd A. Thorsen, Jonathan Babb, Scott T. Wick, Jeremy J. Gam: Open-source, community-driven microfluidics with Metafluidics. In: Nature Biotechnology. Band35, Nr.6, Juni 2017, ISSN1546-1696, S.523–529, doi:10.1038/nbt.3873 (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
Open Source Hardware. In: The New Production Institute. Abgerufen am 23. November 2022 (deutsch).
nih.gov
ncbi.nlm.nih.gov
Joshua M. Pearce: Economic savings for scientific free and open source technology: A review. In: HardwareX. Band8, Oktober 2020, S.e00139, doi:10.1016/j.ohx.2020.e00139, PMID 32923748, PMC 7480774 (freier Volltext) – (elsevier.com [abgerufen am 6. Oktober 2020]).
Joel T. Collins, Joe Knapper, Julian Stirling, Joram Mduda, Catherine Mkindi: Robotic microscopy for everyone: the OpenFlexure microscope. In: Biomedical Optics Express. Band11, Nr.5, 1. Mai 2020, ISSN2156-7085, S.2447, doi:10.1364/BOE.385729, PMID 32499936, PMC 7249832 (freier Volltext) – (optica.org [abgerufen am 16. Februar 2022]).
Benedict Diederich, René Lachmann, Swen Carlstedt, Barbora Marsikova, Haoran Wang: A versatile and customizable low-cost 3D-printed open standard for microscopic imaging. In: Nature Communications. Band11, Nr.1, 25. November 2020, ISSN2041-1723, S.5979, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19447-9, PMID 33239615, PMC 7688980 (freier Volltext) – (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
Distributed Manufacturing of Open Hardware. A Report of the Open Hardware Distribution & Documentation Working Group. Engelberg Center on Innovation Law & Policy, NYU School of Law, New York University, New York City November 2021, S.28 (nyu.edu [PDF]).
Johanna Pohl, Anja Höfner, Erik Albers, Friederike Rohde: Design Options for Long-lasting, Efficient and Open Hardware and Software. In: Ökologisches Wirtschaften - Fachzeitschrift. Band36, O1, 11. Februar 2021, ISSN1430-8800, S.20–24, doi:10.14512/OEWO360120 (oekologisches-wirtschaften.de [abgerufen am 1. September 2022]).
oho.wiki
de.oho.wiki
Open-o-Meter. Über das Open-o-meter. In: Open Hardware Observatory (OHO). Search engine for sustainable open hardware projects. 2020, abgerufen am 18. Februar 2022.
ohwr.org
CERN Open Hardware Licence. In: Open Hardware Repository. CERN, 5. Juli 2012, abgerufen am 15. Dezember 2018 (englisch).
Lars Zimmermann, Robert Mies: HOW TO Open Source Hardware ? In: Open Circularity. Abgerufen am 18. Februar 2022 (deutsch).
openhardware.science
Julieta Arancio, Jenny Molloy: Open Hardware is ready to help Technology Transfer Offices maximise the Impact of Academic Research. Policy Paper. Gathering for Open Science Hardware (GOSH), S.12 (openhardware.science).
Open make interview team Javier Serrano Amanda Diez Fernandez: Interview: White rabbit. 20. Oktober 2022, abgerufen am 21. Oktober 2022 (amerikanisches Englisch).
opennext.eu
Show me the damn money! Revenue model catalogue for open source hardware. V 0.13. Danish Design Center, 28. Januar 2022 (opennext.eu [PDF]).
openscienceshop.org
Manufacturers Directory. In: Open Science Shop. 27. Juni 2024, abgerufen am 11. April 2025 (englisch).
FAQ oshwa.org; “What license should I use? In general, there are two broad classes of open-source licenses: copyleft and permissive. Copyleft licenses (also referred to as “share-alike” or “viral”) are those which require derivative works to be released under the same license as the original; common copyleft licenses include the GNU General Public License (GPL) and the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike license. Other copyleft licenses have been specifically designed for hardware; they include the CERN Open Hardware License (OHL) and the TAPR Open Hardware License (OHL). Permissive licenses are those which allow for proprietary (closed) derivatives; they include the FreeBSD license, the MIT license, and the Creative Commons Attribution license. Licenses that prevent commercial use are not compatible with open-source; see this question for more.”
Plastic Scanner. 10. Dezember 2020, abgerufen am 8. Juni 2022 (amerikanisches Englisch).
plos.org
journals.plos.org
Royhaan Folarin, Mahmoud Bukar Maina, Abisola Akinbo, Tamramat Iyabo Runsewe-Abiodun, Omobola Ogundahunsi: Bypassing shortages of personal protective equipment in low-income settings using local production and open source tools. In: PLOS Biology. Band20, Nr.5, 20. Mai 2022, ISSN1545-7885, S.e3001658, doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001658 (plos.org [abgerufen am 30. Mai 2022]).
projectcarola.org
Carola. Mobile Open Source Mask Microfactory. In: Project Carola. CADUS e. V., Open Source Ecology Germany e. V., r0g_agency for open culture & critical transformation gGmbH, abgerufen am 6. Oktober 2020.
Julieta Cecilia Arancio: Opening Up the Tools for Doing Science. The Case of the Global Open Science Hardware Movement. In: International Journal of Engineering, Social Justice and Peace. Band8, Nr.2, 18. Oktober 2021, ISSN1927-9434, S.1–27 (queensu.ca).
Freedom and privacy/security issues. Replicant, 2016; abgerufen am 22. Februar 2016. “The freedom to use the hardware, for any purpose. The freedom to study how the hardware works, and change it so it works as you wish. Access to the hardware design source is a precondition for this. The freedom to redistribute copies of the hardware and its design so you can help your neighbor. The freedom to distribute copies of your modified versions to others. By doing this you can give the whole community a chance to benefit from your changes. Access to the hardware design source is a precondition for this.”
Maximilian Voigt: Open Hardware and Scientific Autonomy in Germany: How Transfer Activities Can Become More Attractive. 2023, doi:10.34669/WI.CP/4.9 (ssoar.info [abgerufen am 12. April 2023]).
ssrn.com
Peter Troxler: Commons-Based Peer-Production of Physical Goods: Is There Room for a Hybrid Innovation Ecology? In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2010, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.1692617 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 17. Februar 2022]).
Laia Pujol Priego, Jonathan Douglas Wareham: Obsessed with Time? White Rabbit At CERN. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3355693 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 7. Februar 2022]).
Paris Chrysos, Kevin C. Desouza: A Methodology to Analyze the Structure of Collaborative Technological Innovations: The Case of UPSat. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3516704 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 21. September 2022]).
Edy Ferreira: Open Hardware Business Models. In: Open Source Business Resource. April 2008, 2008, ISSN1913-6102 (timreview.ca [abgerufen am 22. Dezember 2021]).
Mathijs Stroober: Precious Plastic Creating awareness for plastic recycling in Bangladesh. TU Delft Industrial Design Engineering, Delft 15. Dezember 2017 (tudelft.nl [abgerufen am 8. Juni 2022]).
Jerry de Vos: Plastic Identification Anywhere. Development of open-source tools to simplify plastic sorting. TU Delft, 25. Februar 2021 (englisch, tudelft.nl).
uca.ac.uk
research.uca.ac.uk
Wouter Spekkink, Malte Rödl, Martin Charter: Global Survey of Precious Plastic Projects. A Summary of Findings. Erasmus University Rotterdam, University of Manchester, University for the Creative Arts, Rotterdam / Manchester / Farnham Juli 2020, S.34ff. (uca.ac.uk [PDF]).
Richard Stallman: Free Hardware (Memento vom 19. September 2004 im Internet Archive) linuxtoday.com, 22. Juni 1999. “I see no social imperative for free hardware designs like the imperative for free software.”
Rafaella Antoniou, Jérémy Bonvoisin, Pen-Yuan Hsing, Elies Dekoninck, Daniela Defazio: Defining success in open source hardware development projects: a survey of practitioners. In: Design Science. Band8, 2022, ISSN2053-4701, S.e8, doi:10.1017/dsj.2021.30 (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 12. April 2022]).
Julian Stirling, Kaspar Bumke, Joel Collins, Vimal Dhokia, Richard Bowman: HardOps: utilising the software development toolchain for hardware design. In: International Journal of Computer Integrated Manufacturing. 7. Februar 2022, ISSN0951-192X, S.1–13, doi:10.1080/0951192X.2022.2028188.
Michel Bauwens, Alekos Pantazis: The ecosystem of commons-based peer production and its transformative dynamics. In: The Sociological Review. Band66, Nr.2, März 2018, ISSN0038-0261, S.302–319, doi:10.1177/0038026118758532.
Peter Troxler: Commons-Based Peer-Production of Physical Goods: Is There Room for a Hybrid Innovation Ecology? In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2010, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.1692617 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 17. Februar 2022]).
Shane Oberloier, Joshua Pearce: General Design Procedure for Free and Open-Source Hardware for Scientific Equipment. In: Designs. Band2, Nr.1, 30. Dezember 2017, ISSN2411-9660, S.2, doi:10.3390/designs2010002 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 4. Mai 2023]).
Maximilian Voigt, Daniel Wessolek: Technik selbst gestalten: Open-Source-Hardware: verstehen, bauen, nutzen und verbessern. In: c't. Band2022, Nr.1, 17. Dezember 2021, ISSN0724-8679, S.58 (heise.de [abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2021]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Emerging Business Models for Open Source Hardware. In: Journal of Open Hardware. Band1, Nr.1, 21. März 2017, ISSN2514-1708, S.2, doi:10.5334/joh.4.
Edy Ferreira: Open Hardware Business Models. In: Open Source Business Resource. April 2008, 2008, ISSN1913-6102 (timreview.ca [abgerufen am 22. Dezember 2021]).
Joshua M. Pearce: Strategic Investment in Open Hardware for National Security. In: Technologies. Band10, Nr.2, 18. April 2022, ISSN2227-7080, S.53, doi:10.3390/technologies10020053 (mdpi.com [abgerufen am 14. Juli 2022]).
Mario Leupold: Technologietransfer im Web 2.0. Wie das Wissen heute in die Welt kommen kann. In: Wissenschaftsmanagement. Zeitschrift für Innovation. Band16, Nr.1. Lemmens Medien, Januar 2010, ISSN0947-9546, S.24f.
Jiri Svorc, Andrew Katz: Breathe In, Breathe Out: How open hardware licensing can help save the world. In: Journal of Open Law, Technology & Society. Band11, Nr.1, 5. April 2020, ISSN2666-8106, S.49–56 (jolts.world [abgerufen am 21. Dezember 2022]).
Martin Häuer: Technik gut beschreiben: DIN SPEC 3105: Offene Hardware standardisiert dokumentieren. In: c't. Band2022, Nr.1, 17. Dezember 2021, ISSN0724-8679, S.64 (heise.de [abgerufen am 25. Dezember 2021]).
Johanna Pohl, Anja Höfner, Erik Albers, Friederike Rohde: Design Options for Long-lasting, Efficient and Open Hardware and Software. In: Ökologisches Wirtschaften - Fachzeitschrift. Band36, O1, 11. Februar 2021, ISSN1430-8800, S.20–24, doi:10.14512/OEWO360120 (oekologisches-wirtschaften.de [abgerufen am 1. September 2022]).
Rhys Jones, Patrick Haufe, Edward Sells, Pejman Iravani, Vik Olliver: RepRap – the replicating rapid prototyper. In: Robotica. Band29, Nr.1, Januar 2011, ISSN1469-8668, S.177–191, doi:10.1017/S026357471000069X (cambridge.org [abgerufen am 13. Oktober 2022]).
Ariel Calderon, James Griffin, Juan Cristóbal Zagal: BeamMaker: an open hardware high-resolution digital fabricator for the masses. In: Rapid Prototyping Journal. Band20, Nr.3, 1. Januar 2014, ISSN1355-2546, S.245–255, doi:10.1108/RPJ-01-2013-0006.
Alfredo Herrera: The Promises and Challenges of Open Source Hardware. In: IEEE Security and Privacy. Band53, Nr.10, Oktober 2020, ISSN0018-9162, S.104, doi:10.1109/MC.2020.3020208 (ieee.org [abgerufen am 20. Februar 2022]).
Joel T. Collins, Joe Knapper, Julian Stirling, Joram Mduda, Catherine Mkindi: Robotic microscopy for everyone: the OpenFlexure microscope. In: Biomedical Optics Express. Band11, Nr.5, 1. Mai 2020, ISSN2156-7085, S.2447, doi:10.1364/BOE.385729, PMID 32499936, PMC 7249832 (freier Volltext) – (optica.org [abgerufen am 16. Februar 2022]).
Benedict Diederich, René Lachmann, Swen Carlstedt, Barbora Marsikova, Haoran Wang: A versatile and customizable low-cost 3D-printed open standard for microscopic imaging. In: Nature Communications. Band11, Nr.1, 25. November 2020, ISSN2041-1723, S.5979, doi:10.1038/s41467-020-19447-9, PMID 33239615, PMC 7688980 (freier Volltext) – (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
David S. Kong, Todd A. Thorsen, Jonathan Babb, Scott T. Wick, Jeremy J. Gam: Open-source, community-driven microfluidics with Metafluidics. In: Nature Biotechnology. Band35, Nr.6, Juni 2017, ISSN1546-1696, S.523–529, doi:10.1038/nbt.3873 (nature.com [abgerufen am 4. November 2022]).
Julieta Cecilia Arancio: Opening Up the Tools for Doing Science. The Case of the Global Open Science Hardware Movement. In: International Journal of Engineering, Social Justice and Peace. Band8, Nr.2, 18. Oktober 2021, ISSN1927-9434, S.1–27 (queensu.ca).
Laia Pujol Priego, Jonathan Douglas Wareham: Obsessed with Time? White Rabbit At CERN. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3355693 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 7. Februar 2022]).
M Shalashov, A Kiseleva: Review of open-source cubesat projects. In: Journal of Physics: Conference Series. Band1925, Nr.1, 1. Mai 2021, ISSN1742-6588, S.012039, doi:10.1088/1742-6596/1925/1/012039.
Paris Chrysos, Kevin C. Desouza: A Methodology to Analyze the Structure of Collaborative Technological Innovations: The Case of UPSat. In: SSRN Electronic Journal. 2019, ISSN1556-5068, doi:10.2139/ssrn.3516704 (ssrn.com [abgerufen am 21. September 2022]).
Royhaan Folarin, Mahmoud Bukar Maina, Abisola Akinbo, Tamramat Iyabo Runsewe-Abiodun, Omobola Ogundahunsi: Bypassing shortages of personal protective equipment in low-income settings using local production and open source tools. In: PLOS Biology. Band20, Nr.5, 20. Mai 2022, ISSN1545-7885, S.e3001658, doi:10.1371/journal.pbio.3001658 (plos.org [abgerufen am 30. Mai 2022]).
zenodo.org
Miljković, Nadica, Trisovic, Ana, Peer, Limor: Towards FAIR Principles for Open Hardware. 23. September 2021, doi:10.5281/ZENODO.5524415 (zenodo.org [abgerufen am 8. Juli 2022]).
Stephan Bohn, Hendrik Send, Peter Bihr: Free technologies for the whole world to use – why open source hardware is in the public interest. doi:10.5281/zenodo.4436475 (zenodo.org [abgerufen am 23. Oktober 2023]).