Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.

Collective-action problems arise in a variety of situations. Open-source software is a recent and important example. Copyright restrictions on open-source projects stipulate that any user may modify the software so long as any resulting innovation is freely available to all. In economic parlance, th...

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Main Authors: Myatt, D, Wallace, C
Formato: Journal article
Idioma:English
Publicado em: 2002
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author Myatt, D
Wallace, C
author_facet Myatt, D
Wallace, C
author_sort Myatt, D
collection OXFORD
description Collective-action problems arise in a variety of situations. Open-source software is a recent and important example. Copyright restrictions on open-source projects stipulate that any user may modify the software so long as any resulting innovation is freely available to all. In economic parlance, the innovation is a public good. The economic theory of public-good provision raises a number of important questions. Who contributes to such a project, and who free rides? How might a social planner exploit the interdependence of project components to encourage contributions? Under what conditions will such actions result in successful provision? Using a simple game-theoretic framework and recent results from the study of equilibrium selection, we attempt to answer these questions. Under reasonable assumptions of asymmetry and less than complete information, the most efficient providers will contribute. Contributions can be elicited by "integrating" the provision process when providers are sufficiently optimistic about the success of the project. Otherwise, the social planner may be better off "separating" the components so that individual contributions are independent of each other. The analysis yields recommendations for the leaders of open-source projects and other similar collective-action problems.
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spelling oxford-uuid:46ee2c9a-e00a-4470-af9f-ec2c0c2b89a82022-03-26T15:16:55ZEquilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.Journal articlehttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_dcae04bcuuid:46ee2c9a-e00a-4470-af9f-ec2c0c2b89a8EnglishDepartment of Economics - ePrints2002Myatt, DWallace, CCollective-action problems arise in a variety of situations. Open-source software is a recent and important example. Copyright restrictions on open-source projects stipulate that any user may modify the software so long as any resulting innovation is freely available to all. In economic parlance, the innovation is a public good. The economic theory of public-good provision raises a number of important questions. Who contributes to such a project, and who free rides? How might a social planner exploit the interdependence of project components to encourage contributions? Under what conditions will such actions result in successful provision? Using a simple game-theoretic framework and recent results from the study of equilibrium selection, we attempt to answer these questions. Under reasonable assumptions of asymmetry and less than complete information, the most efficient providers will contribute. Contributions can be elicited by "integrating" the provision process when providers are sufficiently optimistic about the success of the project. Otherwise, the social planner may be better off "separating" the components so that individual contributions are independent of each other. The analysis yields recommendations for the leaders of open-source projects and other similar collective-action problems.
spellingShingle Myatt, D
Wallace, C
Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title_full Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title_fullStr Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title_full_unstemmed Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title_short Equilibrium Selection and Public-Good Provision: The Development of Open-Source Software.
title_sort equilibrium selection and public good provision the development of open source software
work_keys_str_mv AT myattd equilibriumselectionandpublicgoodprovisionthedevelopmentofopensourcesoftware
AT wallacec equilibriumselectionandpublicgoodprovisionthedevelopmentofopensourcesoftware