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Home economics

How Misunderstood is Open Source Economics?

by Dana Blankenhorn
June 30, 2006
in economics, intellectual property, Internet, law, open source, politics
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The_wealth_of_networks
It’s so misunderstood that allies can’t recognize one another.

Take Simon Phipps. He’s presently the head of open source at Sun. He was at London this week for a conference. What he believes he said was a clear endorsement of open source economics, as described in the recent book by Yale lawyer Yochai Benkler called The Wealth of Networks.

What was written by ZDNet, for whom I blog, was something entirely different. People need to stop thinking of it as "free" and instead think of it as
"connected capitalism", is how Colin Barker put it. So in my own ZDNet blog, I went with it and called Phipps’ words "a scarecrow argument," a calculated stupidity.

Now here’s where it gets interesting. Simon wrote me personally, and explained not only what he meant, not only where I went wrong, but where I might go to see a story which told things differently. He also led me to his own page, at Webmink.Net, which is a great collection of links to news stories and other material showing that, well, I got it wrong.  Within a few hours of getting his note, I had a new post up.

But Simon wasn’t finished with me:

Simonphipps06
What’s interesting to me is I delivered a rabidly pro-F/OSS speech,
clearly explaining a number of concepts and providing illustrations to help
people’s insight grow, and the ZD UK guy missed it all, preferring to miscast
partial quotes. Not the first time ZD UK has done this actually.  I have
given this particular talk many, many times in the last 12 months, including at
ApacheCon, CeBIT (to a room full of journalists), LinuxForum, the highly
pro-Free-software Malaga Free Software conference and at EuroOSCON. I also gave
exactly the same talk, to great applause, at GUADEC yesterday. 
When I delivered the talk at the Hampshire British Computer Society AGM
last week, one attendee wrote "I attended your talk in Hampshire yesterday and I
have to thank u for a very accessible talk aimed at all levels", so I don’t
think I can really be that obscure or hard to understand. I’ll continue to give
it in exactly the same way – next appearance is LUGRadio Live in the UK, where
the audience would tear me to bits if ZD UK is right. Not that they are – read
through my essays
and decide
for yourself.
This is the first time anyone has chosen to construe it as "controversial"
the way it has been this week (obviously I make it edgy, what’s the point in a
dull keynote?) or spin it as some kind of "attack" on F/OSS ideals. I can only
assume that the instinct to criticise Sun is still stronger than the willingness
to look behind the reportage and that I still have a way to go with helping
recognise Sun for what it is, one of the most important proponents of and
contributors to free and open source software.

Note the modesty. Phipps is gracious in not attacking me. What he does instead is criticize himself, saying "I still have a long way to go."

The larger point is this. Open Source Economics is a brand new thing. Just as open source politics is.

But it must grow up very fast. The crisis that requires this Myth to lead us out of the darkness, the crisis that requires these Values to be translated into values, is already upon us. The advocates open source ideals don’t have the kind of time that Goldwater Republicans had, to refine those ideas, and to slowly build a political movement on their behalf.

We need to change the world in Internet Time.

Tags: Internet economicsopen sourceopen source economicsSimon PhippsSun MicrosystemsThe Wealth of NetworksYochai Benkler
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Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn

Dana Blankenhorn began his career as a financial journalist in 1978, began covering technology in 1982, and the Internet in 1985. He started one of the first Internet daily newsletters, the Interactive Age Daily, in 1994. He recently retired from InvestorPlace and lives in Atlanta, GA, preparing for his next great adventure. He's a graduate of Rice University (1977) and Northwestern's Medill School of Journalism (MSJ 1978). He's a native of Massapequa, NY.

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