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Since its emergence in the mid-1980s through the protagonism of
free software and open source movements, the concept of freely
shareable technology has steadily established itself in the
following decades to enter the 21st century as a leading industrial
paradigm. From the original ambit of software technology, the
principles of collaborative construction of publicly accessible
knowledge grounding the open source paradigm have been extended to
embrace any intellectual artifact made available under
non-exclusive rights of utilization, development, and distribution.
It is noteworthy, however, that whilst on one hand it is not
difficult to enumerate advantages of the use of open source
products by individuals and organizations—whether related to cost
reduction, socio-technological inclusion, governance of technology
development, security and privacy transparency, among others—on
the other hand, it is not as immediate to identify their motivation
to develop open source technology. While there may surely be
initiatives driven by either ethical grounds, personal avocation,
or public policies, those reasons alone do not explain the lasting
success of many large community-driven projects, nor why large
commercial enterprises massively invest in open source development.
Business Models and Strategies for Open Source Projects
investigates the rationales and the strategy underlying companies'
decisions to produce and release open source products as well as
which business models have succeeded. Covering topics such as
embedded systems, open source ecosystems, and software companies,
this premier reference source is a valuable resource for
entrepreneurs, business leaders and managers, students and
educators of higher education, librarians, software developers,
researchers, and academicians.
Since its emergence in the mid-1980s through the protagonism of
free software and open source movements, the concept of freely
shareable technology has steadily established itself in the
following decades to enter the 21st century as a leading industrial
paradigm. From the original ambit of software technology, the
principles of collaborative construction of publicly accessible
knowledge grounding the open source paradigm have been extended to
embrace any intellectual artifact made available under
non-exclusive rights of utilization, development, and distribution.
It is noteworthy, however, that whilst on one hand it is not
difficult to enumerate advantages of the use of open source
products by individuals and organizations—whether related to cost
reduction, socio-technological inclusion, governance of technology
development, security and privacy transparency, among others—on
the other hand, it is not as immediate to identify their motivation
to develop open source technology. While there may surely be
initiatives driven by either ethical grounds, personal avocation,
or public policies, those reasons alone do not explain the lasting
success of many large community-driven projects, nor why large
commercial enterprises massively invest in open source development.
Business Models and Strategies for Open Source Projects
investigates the rationales and the strategy underlying companies'
decisions to produce and release open source products as well as
which business models have succeeded. Covering topics such as
embedded systems, open source ecosystems, and software companies,
this premier reference source is a valuable resource for
entrepreneurs, business leaders and managers, students and
educators of higher education, librarians, software developers,
researchers, and academicians.
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