[Dernek] 7 yeni makale

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From: Görkem Çetin (gorkem@gorkemcetin.com)
Date: Wed 31 Aug 2005 - 10:04:40 EEST


Merhaba

Opensource.mit.edu'ye 7 yeni makale daha geldi, bilginize.

En alttaki makale (açık yazılım gelişimine tekno-feminist bakış
açısı) ilginç duruyor.

İyi çalışmalar
Görkem



-------- Original Message --------
Subject: [F/OSS-Community] 7 New Papers on opensource.mit.edu|freesoftware.mit.edu
Date: Tue, 30 Aug 2005 23:50:26 -0400
From: Karim R. Lakhani <lakhani@MIT.EDU>
Reply-To: lakhani@MIT.EDU
Organization: MIT Sloan School of Management | BCG
To: community <community@opensource.mit.edu>


Hello Community,

Hope every one is enjoying the last few days of summer (or winter :)). 
Please find enclosed the new additions to our community website.  Many 
thanks to the authors for their submissions!

Talk to you all soon!


Karim


Paper 1
Author:
Andres Guadamuz-Gonzalez

Title:
Viral Contracts or Unenforceable Documents? Contractual Validity of 
Copyleft Licenses
http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/guadamuz.pdf

Abstract:
This paper asks the question of whether copyleft free software licences 
constitute valid legal contracts, in particular with regards to the fact 
that it may create obligations through a distribution chain. There is 
increasing interest about the non-proprietary licence model expressed in 
popular documents such as the General Public Licence (GPL), but not 
enough work has been done in asking perhaps the most important question 
of all: are these contracts enforceable? Is there really a viral 
transmission of obligations? To do this the GPL licence will be analysed 
to try to determine whether or not the terms included are contractually 
valid.

Paper 2
Author
Luthiger Stoll, Benno

Title:
Fun and Software Development
https://www.foss.ethz.ch/people/lbenno/BLuthiger_Fun_SoftwareDevel_OSS2005.pdf

Abstract
This study gathered 1330 answers about fun and software development from 
open source developers as well as 114 answers from programmers working 
in commercial software projects. The analysis of these data proves that 
fun plays an important role when software developers decide to get 
engaged in an open source project. Moreover, the comparison of the 
answers gives evidence for the hypothesis that programming in an open 
source project is significantly more fun compared to the same activity 
under commercial conditions. The reasons for this fact are that open 
source projects are able to attract software developers with a credible 
project vision and t


Paper 3
Authors
Stefano Comino, Fabio M. Manenti, Marialaura Parisi

Title:
>From Planning to Mature: on the Determinants of Open Source Take Off
http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/Comino_Manenti_Parisi.pdf


ABSTRACT
In this paper we use data from SourceForge.net, the largest open source 
projects repository, to estimate the main determinants of the progress 
in the development of a stable and mature code of a software. We find 
that the less restrictive the licensing terms the larger the likelihood 
of reaching an advanced development status and that this effect is even 
stronger for newer projects. We also find that projects geared towards 
system administrators appear to be the more successful ones. The 
determinants of projects' development stage change with the age of the 
project in many dimensions, i.e. licensing terms, software audience and 
contents, thus supporting the common perception of opens source as a 
very dynamic phenomenon. The data seem to suggest that open source is 
evolving towards more commercial applications.


Paper 4
Author
Chance, Tom

Title:
The Hacker Ethic and Meaningful Work
http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/chance.pdf

Abstract
This paper begins with the following proposition: given that we spend a 
large proportion of our time working, a just society will provide or 
encourage meaningful work. Hackers have created and broadened spaces 
where working life can unfold freely, so a proper analysis of the Hacker 
Ethic ought to be of concern both to philosophers interested in 
meaningful work, and to academics researching hackers and the free 
software community. I proceed by first developing an understanding of 
the Hacker Ethic that highlights a central concern of my essay, that of 
orientations that I characterise as self-indulgent and social placing 
conflicting obligations upon individuals. Using Marx's conception of 
alienated as a basis, I go on to show how the Hacker Ethic can to an 
extent overcome these conflicts by developing a more rounded 
understanding of the ethic. Finally I raise some concerns for the 
underdeveloped field of the philosophy of hacking and free software that 
are particularly pertinent to the paper.


Paper 5
Author
Krzysztof Klincewicz

Title:
Innovativeness of open source software projects
http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/klincewicz.pdf

Abstract:
The paper addresses an ongoing debate about the innovativeness of open 
source projects and  critically evaluates the innovative potential of 
500 most active projects registered by SourceForge.net. The analysis is 
based on a proposed framework, distinguishing between radical 
inventions, technology / platform modifications, and marketing 
innovations. Research findings include relatively low levels of 
technical newness in the studies sample, alongside high interest of 
developers and users in the innovative projects. The article discusses 
the underlying mechanisms, restricting innovativeness of 
community-driven open source efforts, and postulates the establishment 
of an institution of &#8220;idea brokers&#8221;, playing roles 
corresponding to venture capitalists in the commercial software domain.


Paper 6

Author:
Yuwei Lin

Title:
A Techno-Feminist Perspective on the Free/Libre Open Source Software 
Development
http://opensource.mit.edu/papers/lin5.pdf

Compressed abstract:
This paper tries to analyse the FLOSS development from a 
"techno-feminist" perspective (Wajcman 2004). Staying away from a 
reductionism that simplifies the gender issue in the FLOSS community to 
the level of a fight between men and women, the issues I attempt to 
address include not only the inequality that women face in computing, 
but also other inequalities that other users face mainly emerging from 
the power relationships between expert and lay (namely, developer and 
user) in software design. Instead of splitting women and men in the 
FLOSS development, this analysis helps motivate both men and women to 
work together, reduce the gender gap, and improve the disadvantaged 
statuses of women and a wider users community in the FLOSS development.


-- 
Karim R. Lakhani
MIT Sloan | The Boston Consulting Group
Mobile: +1 (617) 851-1224
http://spoudaiospaizen.net
http://web.mit.edu/lakhani/www | http://opensource.mit.edu
My *new* book: http://tinyurl.com/cjxj6

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