A Personal Blog
Steven Weber on Open Source Business
Toddy @ A Penny For has posted a great entry on Steven Weber’s thoughts on Open Source. I see no point in editing what he’s written, so I’ll quote it so you can enjoy the quality, as well as the multiple references:
Steven Weber is a professor of political science at the University of California – Berkley.
He is doing some interesting research on the implications of Open Source philosophies. I found a short note he wrote on the subject. It deals with the effects Open Source could have on business decisions. You can downloaded it in its entirety from here. This is his opening paragraph:
Open source is a production process, a way of making things. It is a production process built around an unconventional understanding of property rights. It is also a production process that taps into a broad range of human motivations and emotions, beyond the straightforward calculations of salary for labor. And it is a production process that relies on a different set of organizational structures to coordinate behavior than did the last stage of the industrial economy. None of these characteristics is entirely new, unique to the open source movement, or confined to the Internet. But together they are generic ingredients of a way of making things that has potentially broad consequences for ecomonics and politics.
Later in the piece, Weber discusses Open Source as a viable business alternative for the creation of knowledge.
Weber is releasing a book called “The Success of Open Source” in May 2004. You can download the first chapter from the Berkley BRIE site.
Brad DeLong got an early copy of the book and had these comments back in February.
I think these concepts are huge. It changes the rules of engagement for business. Not everything is going to become Open Source, but possibilities are very interesting.
I’m getting more and more excited about the mainstreaming of the Open Source concept. Heck, maybe I’ll even write a novel on it ;-)
| Print article | This entry was posted by Jeremy Wright on December 3, 2003 at 10:01 am, and is filed under Business. Follow any responses to this post through RSS 2.0. Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site. |
Comments are closed.