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What kind of commons is free software?,
, Proceedings of the 6th Open Knowledge Conference (OKCon 2011), 06/2011, Berlin, Germany, (2011)
This paper tries to shed light into an ongoing discussion regarding free software and commons theory: is free software an open access or a managed commons? While the freedoms granted by free software licenses suggest that it is open access, empirical studies of free software communities also suggest that they are far from anarchical, and that collaboration in those communities follows certain patterns, principles and norms - which obviously suggests that they are managed, rather than open access.
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Toward an understanding of the motivation Open Source Software developers,
, Proceedings of the 25th International Conference on Software Engineering, Washington, DC, USA, p.419–429, (2003)
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The institutions of open source software: Examining the Debian community☆,
, Information Economics and Policy, 12/2008, Volume 20, Issue 4, p.333 - 344, (2008)
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Open Source firms: from community to business,
, OSS2005: Open Source Systems , p.362-363, (2005)
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The challenges of creating open source education software: the Gild experience,
, OSS2005: Open Source Systems , p.338-340, (2005)
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Evolution of Open Source Communities,
, OSS2006: Open Source Systems (IFIP 2.13), p.21 - 32, (2006)
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The Impact of Ideology on Effectiveness in Open Source Software Development Teams,
, MIS Quarterly, 2006, Volume 30, Number 2, p.291-314, (2006)
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Social network structures in open source software development teams,
, Journal of Database Management, Apr-Jun, Volume 18, Number 2, p.25-40, (2007)
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