Collections
Baen Free Library: There are probably about 100 books published by Baen Books here. All DRM free. Authors include David Drake, Eric Flint, David Weber, and Larry Niven.
Baen CDs: These were distributed with select books and contain ebooks that aren't in the Free Library. You can view the CDs online or download them as ISO images. I think the complete Honor Harrington series is available in this CD.
Fictionwise: You'll find short stories and some audio books here. The selection changes periodically, and there's usually no DRM. Create an account to get the free stories. You don't need to give a credit card.
Maria Lectrix: For those who prefer audiobooks, Maria Lectrix has a nice selection.
Sci-Fi.com's Sci Fiction Archives: Sadly, no new stories will be published, but there are plenty of good reads in the archives by authors like Alfred Bester and Robert Silverberg.
Infinite Matrix: stories and columns from William Gibson, Howard Waldrop and others.
Author Sites
Rifters Trilogy by Peter Watts: There are only two of the three novels that have been published up right now released under a Creative Commons license. As Kirkus Reviews puts it, Watts writes "Utterly repellent ... horrific porn".
Accelerando by Charles Stross
Cory Doctorow's books: Someone Comes to Town, Someone Leaves Town and others.
Public Domain
Project Gutenberg: Public domain books from Burroughs to Wells. Enter "science fiction" in the subject box.
Meta
James Patrick Kelly has a nice writeup on DRM and ebooks up on the Asimov's website, and he's not afraid to put his money where his mouth is. Check his site out for some free reads. He includes some nice links to CC-licensed work:
If you curious about the quality of Creative Commons works, here are just a few websites to check out. Common Content <http://www.commoncontent.org> should probably be your first stop; it’s a general catalog of works licensed under Creative Commons. Openphoto.net <http://openphoto.net> features hundreds of stock photos while MIT OpenCourseWare <http://ocw.mit.edu/index.html> offers seven hundred courses from thirty-three academic disciplines and all five of MIT’s schools and the Prelinger Archives <http://www.prelinger.com> is a collection of "ephemeral" (advertising, educational, industrial, and amateur) films.
Am I missing a site? Post your favorites below.
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