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Why Open Source Software Can Succeed
Andrea Bonaccorsi Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna - Laboratory of Economics and Management (L.E.M.) Cristina Rossi Politecnico di Milano 2002 LEM Working Paper No. 2002/15 Abstract: The paper discusses three key economic problems raised by the emergence and diffusion of Open source software: motivation, coordination, and diffusion under a dominant standard. First, the movement took off through the activity of a software development community that deliberately did not follow profit motivations. Second, a hierarchical coordination emerged without the support of an organization with proprietary rights. Third, Linux and other open source systems diffused in an environment dominated by established proprietary standards, which benefited from significant increasing returns. The paper shows that recent developments in the theory of critical mass in the diffusion of technologies with network externality may help to explain these phenomena.
Keywords: Open Source, Diffusion, Network Externality JEL Classifications: L86, O31 Working Paper SeriesDate posted: February 26, 2003 ; Last revised: February 26, 2003Suggested CitationContact Information
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