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In 2003, Ruben van Wendel de Joode, Hans de Bruijn, and Michel van Eeten published a paper entitled Protecting the Virtual Commons: Self-organizing Open Source Communities and Innovative Intellectual Property Regimes. The introduction of the paper begins by establishing that the open source and free software virtual communities of the internet are unique virtual communities; unlike others, they have been popular for a long time and have had significant economic impact. Further, the introduction contrasts open source and free software development to proprietary computer software development.

The paper was then published as a book titled Protecting the Virtual Commons : Self-Organizing Open Source and Free Software Communities and Innovative Intellectual Property Regimes.

The book is in print, as it was issued in London by Cambridge University press in 2003 with ISBN 90-6704-159-9.

List of chapters[]

The following is a list of the book's chapters.

  1. "Describing Open Source and Free Software Communities"
  2. "Interpreting Open Source and Free Software Communities"
  3. "The Commons Under Pressure: Business Processes and IPR"
  4. "Mechanisms to Protect the Commons"
  5. "Living Apart Together: Hybrid Business Strategies on the Edge of the Commons"
  6. "Analysis and Conclusion"

References[]

  • Protecting the Virtual Commons: Self-organizing Open Source Communities and Innovative Intellectual Property Regimes, draft version 1.1, by Ruben van Wendel de Joode, Hans de Bruijn, and Michel van Eeten

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