Category:Peerproperty: Difference between revisions

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''3) '''peer property''': the institutional and legal framework they choose to guard against the private appropriation of this common work; this usually takes the form of non-exclusionary forms of universal common property"''
''3) '''peer property''': the institutional and legal framework they choose to guard against the private appropriation of this common work; this usually takes the form of non-exclusionary forms of universal common property"''
See our entry on [[Peer Property]], a form of the [[Common]] and creating a [[Commons]]




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#Marjorie Kelly: [http://www.strategy-business.com/press/article/09105?gko=106fd-1876-27599815 Not Just For Profit]: Emerging alternatives to the shareholder-centric model could help companies avoid ethical mishaps and contribute more to the world at large. Explores three new-style corporate designs: 1. stakeholder-owned companies; 2. mission-controlled companies; and 3. public-private hybrids.  
#Marjorie Kelly: [http://www.strategy-business.com/press/article/09105?gko=106fd-1876-27599815 Not Just For Profit]: Emerging alternatives to the shareholder-centric model could help companies avoid ethical mishaps and contribute more to the world at large. Explores three new-style corporate designs: 1. stakeholder-owned companies; 2. mission-controlled companies; and 3. public-private hybrids.  
#[[Copyleft and the Theory of Property]]. Mikhaïl Xifaras (French)
#[[Copyleft and the Theory of Property]]. Mikhaïl Xifaras (French)
#It is very important to distinguish the [http://nuvatsia.terevaden.net/podpress_trac/web/345/0/four-stages-of-freedom.pdf four different degrees of freedom]], culminating in [[Triple-Free Software]] and peer production. An insight from Tere Vaden.
#The [[Property Taskforce]] is a good resource to learn about [[Property]] regimes
#The [http://www.greglondon.com/libre/ Libre Labyrinth]] of Greg London, guides you through the maze of free and non-free licenses





Revision as of 10:07, 24 May 2010

Own Nothing, Have Everything

- original Napster slogan


"Peer production, peer governance, peer property",

Excerpt of Article by Michel Bauwens - link : http://www.re-public.gr/en/?p=87


Introduction

"Peer to peer social processes are bottom-up processes whereby agents in a distributed network can freely engage in common pursuits, without external coercion. It is important to realize that distributed systems differ from decentralized systems, essentially because in the latter, the hubs are obligatory, while in the former, they are the result of voluntary choices. Distributed networks do have constraints, internal coercion, that are the conditions for the group to operate, and they may be embedded in the technical infrastructure, the social norms, or legal rules.


P2P social processes more precisely engender:


1) peer production: wherever a group of peers decided to engage in the production of a common resource


2) peer governance: the means they choose to govern themselves while they engage in such pursuit


3) peer property: the institutional and legal framework they choose to guard against the private appropriation of this common work; this usually takes the form of non-exclusionary forms of universal common property"


See our entry on Peer Property, a form of the Common and creating a Commons


Typology

= a clear distinction is to be made between resources owned in common (common property) and resources for which no property rights have been defined (open access).

G.G. Stevenson compares these three forms in terms of group limitation and extraction limitation. [1]


3 Property Institutions:


Open Access Property:

- Limited: members only, unlimited extraction - Unlimited: open to anyone, unlimited extraction

Common Property: members only, extraction limited by rules

Private Property: one, extraction limited by individual decision


Introductory Articles

See also:

  1. Kevin Kelly: In a dematerialized economy, sharing is better than owning
  2. Dmytri Kleiner: The Modular Company, Open Capital, Venture Communism: How are they related
  3. Marjorie Kelly: Not Just For Profit: Emerging alternatives to the shareholder-centric model could help companies avoid ethical mishaps and contribute more to the world at large. Explores three new-style corporate designs: 1. stakeholder-owned companies; 2. mission-controlled companies; and 3. public-private hybrids.
  4. Copyleft and the Theory of Property. Mikhaïl Xifaras (French)
  5. It is very important to distinguish the four different degrees of freedom], culminating in Triple-Free Software and peer production. An insight from Tere Vaden.
  6. The Property Taskforce is a good resource to learn about Property regimes
  7. The Libre Labyrinth] of Greg London, guides you through the maze of free and non-free licenses


Special topic: property and conflict in free culture communities:

  1. Play Struggle, excerpts of the book Hacking Capitalism by Johan Soderbergh.
  2. Klang, Mathias, "Avatar: From Deity to Corporate Property - A Philosophical Inquiry into Digital Property in Online Games
  3. Contrasting Proprietary and Free/Open Source Game Development, Alessandro Rossi & Marco Zamarian
  4. Moore, Christopher. 2005. "Commonising The Enclosure: Online Games And Reforming Intellectual Property Regimes." Australian Journal of Emerging Technologies and Society 3(2): examine the potential for computer game studies to contribute to an understanding of an alternative intellectual property regime known as the commons
  5. Who Owns the Mods? by Yong Ming Kow and Bonnie Nardi. First Monday, Volume 15, Number 5 - 3 May 2010 [3]

Citations

1.

The difference between open access and defined property rights (private or common property), by contrast, is the difference between an unregulated and a regulated condition. The difference is fundamental.

- Achim Lerch [4]


2.


"For Stevenson, a “private property, common property, open access trichotomy” ultimately exists. He compares these three forms in terms of group limitation and extraction limitation. Characteristic of the common property form is that both the group and the extent of resource use are limited by the individual members."

- [5]

Source: STEVENSON, G.G: Common Property Economics. A General Theory and Land Use Applications. Cambridge. Cambridge University Press.1991, p.58

Subcategories

This category has the following 2 subcategories, out of 2 total.

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S

Pages in category "Peerproperty"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 837 total.

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