Content area

Abstract

Free software, unlike proprietary software under exclusive copyright control, exemplifies a form of productive and innovative activity that is based upon mutual sharing of technological knowledge. Free software engineers, who get connected through various software-development projects, voluntarily contribute their time and skills to produce computer programs which, they insist, should be free for anyone to use, modify, and distribute. This paper argues that Thorstein Veblen's socio-economic theory - in particular his conceptions of capital, technological knowledge and institutional change - offers a fruitful framework to analyze the emergence of free software as an economic and social phenomenon. From the Veblenian perspective, the free software movement argues that the technological knowledge in the software industry should freely be available to society as a part of its common stock of knowledge. In other words, they are against the use of copyright law as a predatory strategy by software corporations, while the current technological conditions in the software industry allow for an institutional arrangement of production and innovation based on cooperative habits of thought. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

10000008
Title
Free Software, Business Capital, and Institutional Change: A Veblenian Analysis of the Software Industry
Publication title
Volume
46
Issue
4
Pages
831-858
Number of pages
28
Publication year
2012
Publication date
Dec 2012
Publisher
Taylor & Francis Ltd.
Place of publication
Abingdon
Country of publication
United Kingdom
ISSN
00213624
e-ISSN
1946326X
CODEN
JECIAR
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
Document type
Feature
Document feature
References
ProQuest document ID
1268715279
Document URL
https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/free-software-business-capital-institutional/docview/1268715279/se-2?accountid=208611
Copyright
Copyright M. E. Sharpe Inc. Dec 2012
Last updated
2025-11-10
Database
ProQuest One Academic