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Journal ArticleDOI

Commons-based Peer Production and Virtue

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TLDR
In this paper, the authors suggest that the emergence of peer production offers an opportunity for more people to engage in practices that permit them to exhibit and experience virtuous behavior, and that a society that provides opportunities for virtuous behavior is one that is more conducive to virtuous individuals.
Abstract
COMMONS-BASED peer production is a socio-economic system of production that is emerging in the digitally networked environment. Facilitated by the technical infrastructure of the Internet, the hallmark of this socio-technical system is collaboration among large groups of individuals, sometimes in the order of tens or even hundreds of thousands, who cooperate effectively to provide information, knowledge or cultural goods without relying on either market pricing or managerial hierarchies to coordinate their common enterprise. While there are many practical reasons to try to understand a novel system of production that has produced some of the finest software, the fastest supercomputer and some of the best web-based directories and news sites, here we focus on the ethical, rather than the functional dimension. What does it mean in ethical terms that many individuals can find themselves cooperating productively with strangers and acquaintances on a scope never before seen? How might it affect, or at least enable, human action and affection, and how would these effects or possibilities affect our capacities to be virtuous human beings? We suggest that the emergence of peer production offers an opportunity for more people to engage in practices that permit them to exhibit and experience virtuous behavior. We posit: (a) that a society that provides opportunities for virtuous behavior is one that is more conducive to virtuous individuals; and (b) that the practice of effective virtuous behavior may lead to more people adopting virtues as their own, or as attributes of what they see as their self-definition. The central thesis of this paper is that socio-technical systems of commons-based peer production offer not only a remarkable medium of production for various The Journal of Political Philosophy: Volume 14, Number 4, 2006, pp. 394–419

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Journal ArticleDOI

How Good is Volunteered Geographical Information? A Comparative Study of OpenStreetMap and Ordnance Survey Datasets:

TL;DR: Analysis of the quality of OpenStreetMap information focuses on London and England, since OSM started in London in August 2004 and therefore the study of these geographies provides the best understanding of the achievements and difficulties of VGI.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Reader-to-Leader Framework: Motivating Technology-Mediated Social Participation

TL;DR: In this article, the Reader-to-Leader Framework is proposed to understand what motivates technology-mediated social participation and improve user interface design and social support for companies, government agencies, and non-governmental organizations.

How Many Volunteers Does It Take To Map An Area Well

TL;DR: This paper describes three studies that were carried out to evaluate the hypothesis that as the number of contributors increases so does the quality of the data, showing that this rule indeed applies in the case of positional accuracy.
Journal ArticleDOI

How Many Volunteers Does it Take to Map an Area Well? The Validity of Linus’ Law to Volunteered Geographic Information

TL;DR: In this article, it is suggested that the data hold an intrinsic quality assurance measure through the analysis of the number of contributors who have worked on a given spatial unit, which is known as "Linus' Law" within the open source community.
Journal ArticleDOI

Prosumption: Evolution, revolution, or eternal return of the same?

TL;DR: Prosumption, the interrelated process of production and consumption, is increasingly obvious everywhere, but especially on the internet where people “prosume,” for example, Facebook pages, Wikipedia entries, and Amazon.com orders as mentioned in this paper.
References
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Book

Understanding Media: The Extensions of Man

TL;DR: Lapham as discussed by the authors re-evaluated McLuhan's work in the light of the technological as well as the political and social changes that have occurred in the last part of this century.
Journal ArticleDOI

Some Simple Economics of Open Source

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make a preliminary exploration of the economics of open source software and highlight the extent to which labor economics, especially the literature on "career concerns" and industrial organization theory can explain many of these projects' features.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Simple Economics of Open Source

TL;DR: The extent to which labor economics, especially the literature on career concerns,' can explain many of these projects' features is highlighted, and aspects of the future of open source development process remain somewhat difficult to predict with off-the-shelf economic models.
Journal ArticleDOI

Coase's Penguin, or, Linux and The Nature of the Firm

Yochai Benkler
- 01 Dec 2002 - 
TL;DR: Ackerman and Nissenbaum as mentioned in this paper argue that peer production is better than traditional markets and firms for two reasons: first, it is better at identifying and assigning human capital to information and cultural production processes, and second, no one "owns" the software in the traditional sense of being able to command how it is used or developed.
Book

Peer-to-Peer: Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies

Andy Oram
TL;DR: Key peer-to-peer pioneers take us beyond the headlines and hype and show how the technology is changing the way the authors communicate and exchange information.