Title
|
Author
|
Year
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Motivation and Sorting in Open Source Software Innovation
This paper explores the motivations of programmers who contribute to open source software.
|
Mark Schankerman, Sharon Belenzon |
2008 |
The Access to Knowledge Mobilization and the New Politics of Intellectual Property Law
This paper looks at how international efforts towards “access to knowledge” might change intellectual property policy.
|
Amy Kapczynski |
2008 |
Pragmatism Not Ideology: IBM’s Love Affair with Open Source Software
This paper examines the historical evidence as to why a large commercial firm supported open source software.
|
Martin Campbell-Kelly, Daniel D. Garcia-Swartz |
2008 |
The Ignorance of Crowds
This article analyzes the strengths and weaknesses of group production through the open source model of programming.
|
Nicholas G. Carr |
2007 |
General Public Licensing and the Intensity of Aggregate Software Development
This paper compares innovation when firms use open source or traditional software.
|
Maggie X. Chen, Keith Maskus |
2007 |
Commercialization of Open Source Software, The: Do Property Rights Still Matter?
This paper looks at whether open source software makes intellectual property obsolete.
|
Ronald J. Mann |
2006 |
IT Vendor Motivations by Open Source Software Clusters
This paper looks at the interests of contributors to open source software contributors.
|
Marco Iansiti, Gregory L. Richards |
2006 |
Technology Neutrality and Government Policy: A Pointless Debate on Open Source Software (OSS)
This paper asks whether India should support open source software (OSS).
|
Bibek Debroy |
2006 |
Open Source Software: The New Intellectual Property Paradigm
This paper reviews how open source software development works.
|
Suzanne Scotchmer, Stephen M. Maurer |
2006 |
Dynamics of Open Source Contributors, The
This paper looks at why open source software programmers may work without pay.
|
Josh Lerner, Parag Pathak, Jean Tirole |
2006 |