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200 years of collaborative ownership: from open source steam engines to Wikipedia and Free Software ● Wikimania ● Harvard Law School, Boston, ● August 4, 2006 ● Rishab Aiyer Ghosh (rishab@dxm.org) ● © 2006
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc2 Collaboration in history – James Watt, Lean's Reporter and the Cornish Pumping Engine
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc3 James Watt –?–?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc4 James Watt – James Watt's improved steam engine... was the key innovation that brought forth the Industrial Revolution.... it gave us the modern world. A key feature of it was that it brought the engine out of the remote coal fields into factories where many mechanics, engineers, and even tinkerers were exposed to its virtues and limitations. It was a platform for generations of inventive men to improve. – --Wikipedia
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc5 James Watt – Lobbied for an Act of Parliament to extend his patent's lifetime to thirty-one years – Drove the inventor of a superior engine to bankruptcy (Hornblower) – Blocked innovation in steam engines – and steam engine sales – throughout the life-time of his patent – When his patent ended, Cornwall – one of the biggest markets – boycotted his company, in protest at his former aggressive monopoly... sounds familiar?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc6 James Watt – “Duty” or efficiency of steam engines Nuvolari, A, 2005. “Open source software development: Some historical perspectives”. First Monday, 10:10
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc7 1811 Lean's Reporter ● Monthly journal published by Cornish miners – the main user-developers of steam engines ● Published the full specifications of each improved engine, so they could be copied ● Improvements, performance skyrocketed ● New inventors (Trevithick, Woolf...) avoided patents, releasing specifications publicly
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc8 185 years later... ● Software published by user-developers of major innovative websites (Hotwired etc) ● Publish full specifications – source code – of each improved version ● Improvements, performance – and market share – skyrockets ● Many new inventors avoid patenting (proprietary copyrighting), releasing source code as free software
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc9 Web server market share Source: Netcraft Web Server Survey, May 2005 - www.netcraft.com
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc10 195 years later... ● And IBM, Sun, etc release free software ● (Sadly, some never learn, ● and monopolistic practices still exist)
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc11 Altruism or self-interest?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc12 Altruism or self-interest?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc13 A Hobbesian view?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc14 A Hobbesian view?
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc15 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Barter
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc16 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Barter
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc17 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Barter < Profit >
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc18 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Purchase $1$1 $2$2
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc19 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Purchase $1$1 $2$2 < $ 2 Profit $ 1 < Profit > $ 2 Profit $ 1 > Profit
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc20 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Cooking-pot (easier to draw a cloud)
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc21 Value-flow and cooking pots ● Cooking-pot (easier to draw a cloud) < Profit
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc22 Value-flow and cooking pots – With knowledge goods, everyone gets a copy of the whole pot 1010 0101
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc23 What a network looks like Linux kernel v1.0. 1994. 158 authors. Nodes are 30 modules. Arcs represent common authors, code dependencies, or both
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc24 What a network looks like Linux kernel v2.5.25. 2002. 2263 authors. Nodes are 169 modules. Arcs represent common authors, code dependencies, or both
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc25 What a network looks like Locations of Debian GNU/Linux leaders/maintainers
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc26 Yes, there is structure there Apache web server, 2004. Circles are modules, coloured by type. Cluster tree shows developers' self-organisation into groups.
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc27 Value – without prices ● Example: Debian 2.2 GNU/Linux (2001) ● Source lines of code: 55,201,526 (of which the Linux kernel forms under 6%) ● If Debian was written in a software company: ● Estimated effort: 14,005 person years ● Estimated schedule: 6.04 years (team of 2,318!) ● Development cost: US$ 1,891,990,000
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc28 Value – without market prices ● Debian 2005: – 104 001 person-years – (range: 85 977 to 188 988 person-years) – US$ 14 billion ● Non-Debian (eclipse, netbeans, etc) – 3 685 person-years – US$ 500 million
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc29 Innovation through networks ● Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS): Product innovation: ● Scripting languages (Perl, Python...) ● Dynamic webservers (Apache) ● Application development (Zope, Plone) ● Multimedia (VideoLAN) ● Clustered computing (Beowulf)
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc30 Innovation through networks ● Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS): Process innovation: ● Massively distributed development ● User-driven development ● Rapid prototyping ● Quantifiable improvements
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc31 Innovation through networks ● Free/Libre/Open Source Software (FLOSS) provides main competing product in: – Web servers (#1 in market share) – Server operating systems (#2) – Network file systems (#2) – Office productivity software (#2) – Web browsers (#2)
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc32 Open source businesses ● Quality ● Business environment ● Different strategies ● Most large vendors support FLOSS
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc33 Still, a network, not firms FLOSS source code shares by author type
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc34 Self-organisation: lead by doing Share of developers Share of code
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc35 Leaders are not enough! Image © 2006Ongky, reproduced under the Creative Commons by-nc-nd 2.0 license
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc36 Leaders are not enough! Image © 2006Ongky, reproduced under the Creative Commons by-nc-nd 2.0 license Without the “long tail” of the bottom 80% of contributors, the leaders create an incomplete, imperfect product, a broken, 3-legged chair
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc37 The concept is old...
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc38 This scale is new...
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(c) 2006 Rishab Aiyer Ghosh - Licensed under Creative Commons cc-nd-nc39 Thank you – Rishab Aiyer Ghosh – (rishab@dxm.org) – UNU-MERIT – FLOSS Project – www.flossworld.org
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