Category:Peerproperty: Difference between revisions

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=Introductory Articles=
=Introductory Articles=
* Introduction to Private and [[Common Property]]: Achim Lerch, The [[Tragedy of the Tragedy of the Commons]]. [http://www.boell.org/downloads/Lerch_Tragedy.pdf]
See also:


#Kevin Kelly: [[In a dematerialized economy, sharing is better than owning]]
#Kevin Kelly: [[In a dematerialized economy, sharing is better than owning]]

Revision as of 05:17, 10 January 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


"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"


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.

Subcategories

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Pages in category "Peerproperty"

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