Free and Open Source Software: Difference between revisions

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= Class Twitter Conversation =
= Class Twitter Conversation =


We'd like to ask everybody in the class to register for a Twitter account and use the hashtags service to follow and twitter to #iif.
In addition to the listserv, which will doubtlessly allow us to communicate our thoughts between classes and develop our discussion, we propose to use [http://twitter.com Twitter] to create a simultaneous mode of discussion designed to be informal and strongly conversational. Because Twitter limits entries to 140 characters, the service should naturally lend itself to such discussion.


Class members should feel free to twitter their thoughts and questions while we read, tagging their posts with #iif. The idea is that our twitter discussion, which may accompany any listserv activity, will be more conversational, given the strict twitter character limit.
In order to tie our tweets together, we can use the [http://twitter.com/hashtags @hashtags] system. Documentation [http://twitter.pbwiki.com/Hashtags 1] [http://thepaisano.wordpress.com/2008/04/04/twitter-hashtags-and-groups/ 2]. We propose to use the #iif tag. Students may read the hashtag using the [http://hashtags.org/tag/iif hashtags.org] system or at the [http://search.twitter.com/search?q=%23iif Twitter search page]. However we recommend that students follow the #iif hashtag using the RSS feed available at [http://hashtags.org/tag/iif hashtags.org]. The RSS feed from [http://search.twitter.com search.twitter.com] unfortunately drop the username originating the tweet. Students are encouraged to investigate other Twitter client applications and RSS readers in order to make it exceptionally easy to read the #iif tweets and to post updates.
 
http://thepaisano.wordpress.com/2008/04/04/twitter-hashtags-and-groups/
 
http://hashtags.org/
 
(n.b. [[User:dulles]] will clear this all up with more details soon)

Revision as of 18:17, 21 January 2009

Topic Owners: dulles,Ayelet

Back to syllabus.

Precis

Free and Open Source Software (F/OSS) appears to not obey the usual rules of market based economies. Many of those who contribute to the codebase of large F/OSS projects, for example, are unpaid amateurs working in their free time. Startlingly, others are paid to do it. We propose that F/OSS is best understood using the mechanics of gift economies rather than market economies. These are economies which value reputation over profit, where value is had in the giving, not in the taking, and where the wealthiest are those who have given away the most. Yet capitalism surrounds F/OSS. Linux distributors such as RedHat operate in the market economy even though their products are free, depending on a services based business model.

In our class we will try to track the economies and motivations that motivate the F/OSS movement, from an insider and an outsider perspective. We will focus of three questions regarding the economies of F/OSS:

  1. Motivations: Why contribute to F/OSS as a hobbyist, without payment? Alternately, why contribute to F/OSS as a corporation, without claiming IP?
  2. Capitalism: Where and how does F/OSS meet the bottom-line?
  3. The Law: Given what we know about F/OSS incentives both in the market and gift economies, how does the American IP regime encourage and discourage F/OSS, and what tweaks would help promote F/OSS?


Although the creative potential of the intellectual commons isn't limited to software, the Internet and computer technology generally enable commons-based creativity in ways never before possible. With F/OSS as an arguable successful specimen of commons-based development ("with enough eyes, all bugs are shallow"), how might the model fail or succeed for artistic creation generally?

Fundemental Question

How is F/OSS created, and how should law be reformed to promote and secure F/OSS?

Guest Wish-list

Readings

Class Twitter Conversation

In addition to the listserv, which will doubtlessly allow us to communicate our thoughts between classes and develop our discussion, we propose to use Twitter to create a simultaneous mode of discussion designed to be informal and strongly conversational. Because Twitter limits entries to 140 characters, the service should naturally lend itself to such discussion.

In order to tie our tweets together, we can use the @hashtags system. Documentation 1 2. We propose to use the #iif tag. Students may read the hashtag using the hashtags.org system or at the Twitter search page. However we recommend that students follow the #iif hashtag using the RSS feed available at hashtags.org. The RSS feed from search.twitter.com unfortunately drop the username originating the tweet. Students are encouraged to investigate other Twitter client applications and RSS readers in order to make it exceptionally easy to read the #iif tweets and to post updates.