Inhalt des Dokuments
Seminar: Open Source and IP in the Digital Society (6 ECTS) - WS 2018/2019
Event
| Type | Period | Day/Time | Room |
---|---|---|---|---|
7351 L
51 | Lecture | 15/10/18 - 11/02/19 | Mondays, 12 - 2 pm | MAR
2.068 |
7351 L
51 | Workshop | 15/10/18 - 11/02/19 | Mondays, 2 - 4 pm | MAR
2.068 |
Content
Welcome, students, and thank you for your interest in this course!
First things first:
To register for the course, please send an email to Brigitte Essoun (brigitte.essoun@tu-berlin.de), stating your name, matriculation number, course of studies and your university. Once registered, you will receive the key to sign up for the ISIS course.
Please note that there are only 30 seats available for this course. Registration is on a first come first serve basis!
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The Open Source movement has shaken up the IT industries and is now sprawling all over the industries producing information goods, and beyond. Successful Open Source projects have defined formal and informal industry standards like the Linux operating system or the Eclipse development environment. They continue to develop into ecosystems of communities like the Apache or Mozilla foundation, and successfully compete with the software industry on many levels.
We are going to learn about Open Source as a peer production
model for information goods, and how the traditional understanding of
Intellectual Property relates to it. Analyzing the motivation of
contributors who take part in such a project and the dynamics of Open
Source communities are an important part of that.
With the products of Open Source communities being available
for free, there is a question of how they fit into the strategies of
for-profit companies. To understand this, it is necessary to look at
market structures and the appropriate competitive or cooperative
behavior of actors. Because basic technologies like operating systems
or web servers encourage otherwise competing companies to cooperate,
industry-driven foundations are created, of which the Linux Foundation
and the Qt Project will be used as examples.
Finally, Open Source causes effects at a wider scope
producing a huge body of common knowledge that introduces new issues
like archiving and public access to information. These effects relate
back to current controversial topics like the term of copyright
protection. Even though there are no definite answers to these
questions, it is possible to structure and weigh arguments to develop
an understanding of the long-term effects the Open Source movement
will have on society.
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