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July 9th, 2008

More open source contributions from bureaucracies, please

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 11:01 am

Categories: Development, General, Government, business models, management

Tags: Bureaucracy, Open Source, Dana Blankenhorn

Bureaucracy video game, box art, circa 1987Our own Big Money Matt notes today that a trickle of open source contributions from Google has lately become a flood.

He’s very happy about that. I am too.

Serial entrepreneur Jeff Bussgang, writing for Business Week, speculates that a desire for recognition may spur many contributions, and that’s a good motivator.  

Fact is, however, the question of motivation for contributing to open source has never been systematically explored, and that’s a shame.

With more-and-more organizations using open source, exploring motivation becomes more important. It could help us tease out more contributions, benefitting everyone.

The most common theories for contributions, in addition to pride, are altruism and greed. Either people are selfless, or they know their contributions can build a good business, such as the one that Matt works at.

The problem with these motives is they are, on the whole, individual. Most people live in bureaucracies. People inside bureaucracies, bound by a bureaucracy’s rules, may be unable to act on individual motivations.

(The late, great Douglas Adams wrote the original script for the 1987 game Bureaucracy, whose cover art is above. Sad to think that if he were my age he’d have been dead for four years.)

Whether bureaucracies are public or private, however, they are still composed of people, people motivated to expand their reach and power.

So how does open source harness that? What might move a bureaucracy to open its vaults and let its open source work roam free?

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist for 30 years, a tech freelancer since 1983. You can follow Dana on Twitter. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 3 Talkback(s)
Companies collaborate on open source already.
Much of the work on Linux, for instance, comes from companies which adapt the product to their business plans... uh... make it more effective.

Without open source, companies would have to produ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Anton Philidor Posted on: 07/09/08 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
Another motivator  Yagotta B. Kidding | 07/09/08
That's a great motivator  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 07/09/08
Companies collaborate on open source already.  Anton Philidor | 07/09/08

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