Free and Open Source Software: Difference between revisions

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m (some format fixing, minor edit to gift economy reading potentials)
(Major rewrite, but only from Dulles's POV)
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'''Topic Owners:  [[dulles]]''','''[[Ayelet]]'''
'''Topic Owners:  [[User:dulles|dulles]]''','''[[User:Ayelet|Ayelet]]'''


 
Back to [[syllabus]]
 
back to [[syllabus]]


=Precis=
=Precis=
=Guest wish list=
=Guest wish list=
* [http://mako.cc| Mako]
* [http://mako.c Mako]
* [http://web.mit.edu/evhippel/www/index.html Eric von Hippel]
* [http://web.mit.edu/evhippel/www/index.html Eric von Hippel]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Hyde Lewis Hyde]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lewis_Hyde Lewis Hyde]
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* PJ/Groklaw
* PJ/Groklaw


=readings=
=Readings=
 


* An extract of [http://freeasinspeechandbeer.com/drupal/ free, as in speech and beer] by Darren Wershler-Henry?
* An extract of [http://freeasinspeechandbeer.com/drupal/ free, as in speech and beer] by Darren Wershler-Henry?
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* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cathedral_and_the_Bazaar The Cathedral and the Bazaar]
* [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Cathedral_and_the_Bazaar The Cathedral and the Bazaar]


=basic questions=
=Introduction=
 
There are a number of different motivations and interests surrounding the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_and_open_source_software F/OSS]. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Richard_Stallman Richard Stallman] assets that [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_software software (libre)] is important, and that this value is paramount. Meanwhile, companies like [http://www.redhat.com/ RedHat] appear to be trying desperately hard to turn a profit on a free (gratis) product with a [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Professional_open-source new business model]. When somebody says, "I use free software", do they mean software libre or software gratis, and why? Clearly, a discussion of the F/OSS movement absolutely must explore the division between "free as in speech" and "free as in beer".


* Copyright and open software – free as in beer v. free as in speech
The libre/gratis distinction seems to relate to a sort of war between [http://www.free-culture.cc/ Free Culture] and [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Permission_culture Permission Culture], which might be recast as a clash between the drive of economic development and the drive of cultural development. Of course, the law still respects copyright and patents, so Free Culture is a long way from a meaningful victory. But software libre has managed to turn the tools of copyright upon themselves with the invention of the [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyleft copyleft] licensing system. Given the usefulness of such licenses, and their [http://creativecommons.org/ availability], maybe the law of copyrights doesn't need to adjust at all in order to account for free culture.
* economy v. culture
* inside and outside – insiders motivation v. legal regime
* gift v. reputation


* How can a dispersed, multilingual collection of coders working for free assemble something as complicated as a web browser, let alone an entire operating system? Open-source projects are famously free-wheeling, but different organizational models and tools have sprung up to solve these obstacles.
Maybe casting the division as one between economics and culture is just a divisive technique. Perhaps theories of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gift_economy gift economies] can help us come to understand software libre as attempting to create a separate software economy?


What are the forces that drive hackers to contribute to open source projects? What, if anything, can we learn from applying theories of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gift_economy gift economies] to open source projects? Should we read Lewis Hyde's [http://southerncrossreview.org/4/schwartz.html The Gift]? (n.b. i may be motivated by my own desire to read the book -- [[dulles]])
=Essential Question=


* Strategies and indemnities (e.g. SCO v. IBM)
Given the philosophical and economic drives that support the F/OSS movement, to what extent does the law properly account for each? Is the "free as in speech" / "free as in beer" distinction with us forever? Will there always be some deep seated friction between the two, based in a culture war? To help us think about these exceptionally broad questions, we propose to discuss the libre/gratis dichotomy along with several others, and encourage students to question the usefulness, even the existence of these dichotomies.
* Questioning the foundations of the free software movement (i.e. the "four freedoms")[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Free_software#cite_ref-bull6_3-0]
how much does access to the source code really matter anymore? Are there alternative theories (e.g. "generativity") that better capture the values at stake? Affero License? (Eben Moglen?)
* The organization/groups/cooperation questions: how do free software projects organize and govern themselves, and what broader lessons might be learned from it?  (e.g. debian, IETF)


=Misc=
=Dichotomy?=


:'''Key will be to crystallize to a particular issue or question. That could be done by selecting one or two academic works in progress by a leading and/or provocative scholar, or it might be done by talking to Eric Raymond about his biggest worries and about the evolution of the Open Source Initiative. A lot of his work has to do with keeping a political coalition together, and he might have some good stories and problems to bring to us. If you're game, maybe reach out to him? [[User:JZ|JZ]] 16:49, 15 December 2008 (UTC)
* Free as in Beer v. Free as in Speech
* Copyright v. Copyleft
* Copyleft v. Free Culture - is there a difference?
* The Economic Drive v. The Cultural Drive
* Gifts v. Reputations - why contribute to F/OSS? ([[User:Ayelet|Ayelet]] - can you elaborate?)
* Insiders v. Outsiders - are there deep disconnects between the business, software, and legal worlds that make common ground hard to find?

Revision as of 20:13, 19 December 2008

Topic Owners: dulles,Ayelet

Back to syllabus

Precis

Guest wish list

Readings

Introduction

There are a number of different motivations and interests surrounding the F/OSS. Richard Stallman assets that software (libre) is important, and that this value is paramount. Meanwhile, companies like RedHat appear to be trying desperately hard to turn a profit on a free (gratis) product with a new business model. When somebody says, "I use free software", do they mean software libre or software gratis, and why? Clearly, a discussion of the F/OSS movement absolutely must explore the division between "free as in speech" and "free as in beer".

The libre/gratis distinction seems to relate to a sort of war between Free Culture and Permission Culture, which might be recast as a clash between the drive of economic development and the drive of cultural development. Of course, the law still respects copyright and patents, so Free Culture is a long way from a meaningful victory. But software libre has managed to turn the tools of copyright upon themselves with the invention of the copyleft licensing system. Given the usefulness of such licenses, and their availability, maybe the law of copyrights doesn't need to adjust at all in order to account for free culture.

Maybe casting the division as one between economics and culture is just a divisive technique. Perhaps theories of gift economies can help us come to understand software libre as attempting to create a separate software economy?

Essential Question

Given the philosophical and economic drives that support the F/OSS movement, to what extent does the law properly account for each? Is the "free as in speech" / "free as in beer" distinction with us forever? Will there always be some deep seated friction between the two, based in a culture war? To help us think about these exceptionally broad questions, we propose to discuss the libre/gratis dichotomy along with several others, and encourage students to question the usefulness, even the existence of these dichotomies.

Dichotomy?

  • Free as in Beer v. Free as in Speech
  • Copyright v. Copyleft
  • Copyleft v. Free Culture - is there a difference?
  • The Economic Drive v. The Cultural Drive
  • Gifts v. Reputations - why contribute to F/OSS? (Ayelet - can you elaborate?)
  • Insiders v. Outsiders - are there deep disconnects between the business, software, and legal worlds that make common ground hard to find?