Category:Business: Difference between revisions

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- Tim Bray, Sun Microsystems [http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/mar2007/id20070302_219704_page_3.htm]
- Tim Bray, Sun Microsystems [http://www.businessweek.com/innovate/content/mar2007/id20070302_219704_page_3.htm]


=Introduction=


'''This section collates material related to peer production, P2P Business developments, and P2P Economics issues.'''
'''This section collates material related to peer production, P2P Business developments, and P2P Economics issues.'''
Recommended reading:
#[[Markets are inefficient for non-rival goods]]. Josh Farley


=Citations=
=Citations=
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#[[Common Rights vs Collective Rights]] is an essay by Dan Sullivan in which he also explains the difference between [[Common Property]] and collective property.
#[[Common Rights vs Collective Rights]] is an essay by Dan Sullivan in which he also explains the difference between [[Common Property]] and collective property.


=Key Internal Articles=
=Key Internal Entries=


Check the following priority entries:
Check the following priority entries:

Revision as of 14:07, 15 August 2007

Working together as equals. Profiting from each others success. These two ideas represent a surprisingly radical redefinition of work.

- Bernie DeKoven [1]


"we genuinely believe that radical sharing is a win-win for everyone. Expanding markets create new opportunities."

- Tim Bray, Sun Microsystems [2]


Introduction

This section collates material related to peer production, P2P Business developments, and P2P Economics issues.

Recommended reading:

  1. Markets are inefficient for non-rival goods. Josh Farley

Citations

Competing 'on top' of the Commons

David Bollier:

"One of the best ways to stimulate competition, innovation and lower prices is for participants in a market to honor the commons (a shared pool of resources, a minimal set of safety or performance standards) and then to compete "on top" of the commons. Instead of being able to reap easy profits from monopoly control over something everyone needs -- say, a computer operating system like Windows -- a company must work harder to "add value" in more specialized ways." (http://onthecommons.org/node/1196)

The Sharing Economy should be distinguished from the Monetary Economy

"... the quest for self-determination and meaningful and memorable experiences ultimately will hinge on people's understanding that they are not merely consuming a product, but that they are actually participating in a meaningful social process not guided by an extrinsic logic (profit), something that rather has intrinsic, or 'sovereign' value. I don't believe that these two can be fused into one

- Eric Kluitenberg, iDC archive [3]


Key External Articles

  1. Ten Principles for an Ethical Blogger Approach For Marketers
  2. Which tools to use for collaboration in business? - recommended overview table.
  3. The Open Business Guide
  4. Common Rights vs Collective Rights is an essay by Dan Sullivan in which he also explains the difference between Common Property and collective property.

Key Internal Entries

Check the following priority entries:

  1. Business Models: Open Business; Open Music Business Models; Open Film Business Models; Free Software Business Models; Open Source Business Models
  2. The new partnership economy: Crowdsourcing ; Crowdfunding ; Co-Creation ; Direct Economy
  3. Infrastructure projects: Peer to Peer Exchanges ; P2P Exchange Infrastructure Projects
  4. What kind of capitalism? : Affective Capitalism ; Cognitive Capitalism ; Mental Capitalism ; Netarchical Capitalism ; P2P Capitalism
  5. What kind of economy? : Attention Economy ;Economics of Attention; Conversation Economy ; Markets as Conversations ; Ethical Economy ; Intention Economy ; Process Economy
  6. The new consumers: Mass Amateurization ; Pro-Am Revolution  ; Consumer-Generated Media ; Customer-Controlled Networks ; Customer-build network infrastructures ; Customer-centric Brands ; Production without Manufacturer; User-Capitalized Networks ; User-Generated Ecosystem ; User-centered Innovation ; User-created Advertizing ; User-driven Advertizing
  7. New competitive practices: Asymmetric Competition; Edge Competencies ; Open Innovation ; Diffuse Innovation ; Lead Users ; Revenue Sharing ; Rewards for Contributions
  8. Networked markets: Affinity Investing  ; Affinity Markets ; Recognition Markets ; Social Commerce
  9. Expanding P2P in the physical economy? Desktop Manufacturing ; Multiple-Purpose Production Technology ; Open Design ; Open Hardware ; Rapid Manufacturing ; Rapid Prototyping ; Rapid Tooling
  10. Open models: Open Business ; Open Capital ; Open Company Models
  11. Commons models: Circulation of the Common; Commons; Economics of Sharing
  12. Key analytical concepts: GPL Society ; Germ Form Theory ; General Intellect ; Immaterial Labour ; Precariat ; Precarious Labour ; Precarity
  13. Alternatives: Markets without Capitalism ; Natural Capitalism ; Steady State Economy

Key Tags

P2P-Advertising; Crowdsourcing; Desktop Manufacturing; Distributed Capitalism; Innovation; Netarchical Capitalism; Open Source Commercialization; P2P Banking; P2P Business Developments; P2P Capitalism; P2P Economics; P2P Exchanges; P2P Management Developments; P2P-Money; P2P-Production; P2P-Property; Revenue Sharing; Social Commerce


Related Issues of P2P News


External Sources

Selected Wikipedia entries


Selected Podcasts

The P2P Business Encyclopedia

Subcategories

This category has only the following subcategory.

U

Pages in category "Business"

The following 200 pages are in this category, out of 1,920 total.

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A

C

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