The Center for the Public Domain was a charitable foundation created in 1999 by Bob Young as the Red Hat Center for Open Source.[1][2][3] Until 2002, it provided free online legal resources, sponsored public domain spaces on the Internet, and campaigned for copyright reforms.[4][5][6]
^ abChristina Dyrness (March 16, 2002). "Public Domain Center Closing". Raleigh, NC: The News and Observer. p. D6. The Center for the Public Domain, founded in 1999 as the Red Hat Center for Open Source when the Linux company's stock was still on the rise, has called it quits with an e-mail message to friends of the center stating: "Our job here is done."
^Sally Richards (2002). Futurenet: The Past, Present, and Future of the Internet as Told by Its Creators and Visionaries. John Wiley and Sons. pp. 99–100, 215. ISBN978-0471433248.