Wednesday, March 22, 2006

Open-source business | Open, but not as usual | Economist.com

Open-source business Open, but not as usual Economist.com: "The “open-source” process of creating things is quickly becoming a threat—and an opportunity—to businesses of all kinds. Though the term at first described a model of software development (where the underlying programming code is open to inspection, modification and redistribution), the approach has moved far beyond its origins. From legal research to biotechnology, open-business practices have emerged as a mainstream way for collaboration to happen online. New business models are being built around commercialising open-source wares, by bundling them in other products or services. Though these might not contain any software “source code”, the “open-source” label can now apply more broadly to all sorts of endeavour that amalgamate the contributions of private individuals to create something that, in effect, becomes freely available to all."

Timely open source reality check from The Economist (I would have blogged this article last week, but it was for subscribers only then; now it's "freely available to all...")

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