Remixability is the capacity of cultural, artistic or digital materials to be easily accessed, copied, modified and recombined into new works. It describes both a technical affordance (file formats, APIs, open licenses, editable source files) and a social practice (sharing, collaborative reworking, attribution norms). Key elements:

  • Openness: permissive licensing or permission to reuse (e.g., Creative Commons).
  • Modularity: content broken into reusable parts that can be recombined.
  • Interoperability: formats and standards that allow edits and mixing.
  • Traceability and credit: mechanisms for attribution/versioning (e.g., metadata, version control).
  • Community norms: practices that support reuse, transformation, and derivative creativity.

Remixability matters because it supports innovation, participatory culture, and new aesthetic forms while raising legal and ethical questions about authorship and originality. (See Lawrence Lessig, Remix: Making Art and Commerce Thrive in the Hybrid Economy, 2008; Claire Bishop, “Digital Art and the Remix,” periodic discussions in media studies.)

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