A movement committed to removing restrictive barriers to information and technology. In keeping with the early internet principles of transparency and knowledge-sharing, open access is practiced in multiple ways: through forms of open licensing (such as Creative Commons), collaborative software and web development, remixing and glitching, decentralized computing networks, and peer-to-peer networking (see Museo Aero Solar, HARVEST, Dames Making Games workshop in Take Care, Circuit 3). Open access is a parallel ethos in academic and cultural spheres aimed at supporting the free output and circulation of knowledge by eradicating technical, financial, and legal barriers (see SDUK).