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This is genius. The idea of smart, live banner-widgets (I would suggest adding live badges also) is totally awesome! I love this method for automatically creating a central database of resources (people, web sites, etc ... ). This is exactly the kind of thing we need to help overcome the fragmentation of effort and visibility across a broad spectrum of social movements. - Poor Richard.
P2P as Intersubjective Process:
Definition
In this essay, the author will define “peer to peer” in
relational terms, i.e. as any system which allows
agents to freely and permissionlessly interact with
each other. Peer pro
duction is then any process
whereby people can freely aggregate around the
creation of common value. The interpretations
below are from the author only, but are based on a
continuous dialogue with the research community
through the P2P Foundation ecology o
f resources.
The R
elational
G
rammar of
P
eer
P
roduction
Helpful in analysing the type of relationality that
emerges in p2p systems is the Relational Typology
developed by the anthropologist Alan Page Fiske
1
.
Below, I will attempt to match the four
relational
logics as described by Fiske, with my own observ
a-
tions.
Paraphrasing and shortening a longer quote from
Fiske, here are the four modes of intersubjectivity
that he recognizes, and which he claims, in his book
'Structures of Social Life',
2
are pr
esent in all cultures
and at all times (though some may appear later
than others in the development of social forms):
1
Fiske, Alan P.: Human Sociality.
2
Fiske
, Alan P: Structures of Social Life.
Communal Sharing (CS) is a relationship in
which people treat some dyad or group as
equivalent and undifferentiated with respect
to the so
cial domain in question. (Example:
people using a commons.)
In Authority Ranking (AR) people have
asymmetric positions in a linear hierarchy in
which subordinates defer, respect, and
(perhaps) obey, while superiors take
precedence and take pastoral respons
ibility
for subordinates. (Example: military
hierarchies.)
In Equality Matching (EM) relationships
people keep track of the balance or
difference among participants and know
what would be required to restore balance.
(Example: turn
-
taking.)
Market Pricing
relationships are oriented to
socially meaningful ratios or rates such as
prices, wages, interest, rents, tithes, or
cost
-
benefit analyses (Example: property
that can be bought, sold, or treated as
investment capital).
3
Though Fiske does not make such inf
erence himself,
it is possible to posit a historical succession of
modes of dominance. In such a hypothesis, it could
be argued that early tribal society starts with a
dominance of Communal Shareholding, augmented
with Equally Matching as soon as tribal so
ciety
becomes more complex, the subject of the well
-
known work of Marcel Mauss on the gift economy
4
.
With the birth of class society comes the dominance
of Authority Ranking, while Market Pricing becomes
the dominant modality only under capitalism. The
P2P
Foundation's main hypothesis is that there is a
social evolution towards Communal Shareholding
but this is outside of the scope of this paper.
It is important to state that all the different intersu
b-
jective modalties co
-
exist at any given time, but that
t
hey are generally influenced by the dominant
mode. An interesting take on the co
-
existence of
various modalities under capitalism is the work of
the neo
-
institutional school.
5
The crucial debate is
3
Fiske,
Alan
P: Human sociality.
4
Mauss
, M: The Gift: forms and functions of exchange in
archaic societies.
5
For example, Colin Crouch writes:
“ ... a firm embedded in
community within a market economy is not engaged in a
subsistence economy, but reaches out through its community
IRIE
International Review of Information Ethics
Vol.
15 (09/2011)
Michel Bauwens:
Understanding Peer to Peer as a Relational Dynamics
43
whether Communal Shareholding, now existing
within the bro
ader institutional framework of the
capitalist economy, can only be subsumed to the
dominance of Market Pricing, or whether it can
become an autonomous and eventually even a
dominant mode, which can eventually subsume
Market Pricing at some future point in
time.
My own views on the possible subsumption of
Market Pricing under a regime of Communal Shar
e-
holding are expressed in the founding essay of the
P2P Foundation.
6
A critical perspective on the incorporation of Co
m-
munal Shareholding under capitalism is o
ffered in
the work of Christian Fuchs.
For example, Fuchs writes that:
"
Wikinomics
shows how mass collaboration and
digital gifts can be subsumed under capitalist
logic. The difference between my own approach
and the authors’ is that the latter welcomes this
development, whereas I consider it from a neo
-
Marxist perspective as the extens
ion and intens
i-
fication of alienation and exploitation , yet I re
c-
ognize that, at the same time, it bears certain
potentials for alternative developments.”
7
This complex debate about the 'immanent' (within
the system) vs. transcendent (beyond the system)
aspects of Communal Shareholding and commons
-
based peer production provides a crucial context for
any hypothesis about the present and future i
m-
portance of Communal Shareholding within the
relational mix. One of the aims of the first part of
the essay is t
o allow the readers to make a more
informed judgment about this issue by looking in
some more detail into the relational mix.
The Ethics
A
ssociated with P2P
8
Each of the above intersubjective dynamics has its
own relational ethics. In Communal Shareholdin
g,
to a marke
t.“
Crouch, Colin:
Capi
talist Diversity and Change:
Recombinant Governance and Institutional Entrepreneurs.
121
6
Bauwens, Michel: The Political Economy of Peer Production.
7
Fuchs, Christian: Wikinomics. See in particular his concept of
the Gift Commodity Internet Economy, at
http://p2pfoundation.net/Gift_Commodity_Internet_Economy
,
retrieved July 25, 2011.
8
Himanen, P. The Hacker Ethic and the Spirit of the Info
r-
mation Age.
the individual is both receiving and gifting with a
community and he/she is judged by the level of
contributions to the common project, as well as
assistance to the maintenance and social reprodu
c-
tion of the project as a whole. In Authority Ranking,
a k
ey value is obedience and respect for authority as
the 'giver' of benefits, on which the individual is
dependent and the individual must ideally be seen
as showing loyalty. Market Pricing favours 'neutral'
human relationships, but nevertheless, values both
personal and impersonal trustworthiness. The key
value of Equality Matching is the capacity for rec
i-
procity.
Is it possible to posit any ethical hierarchy of prefe
r-
ence in these different modalities
a question also
asked by Benkler and Nissenbaum
9
and by
Julian
Fox
10
? Among the more popular answers to this
question are the ‘Emergent, Cyclical, Levels of
Existence’ point of view of Clare W. Graves
11
, and its
popularisation in the system of Spiral Dynamics
12
.
Such a hierarchical and preferential ordering of
di
fferent ethical modalities would be consistent from
an increasing flow of literature interpreting the
history of nature and human civilisation as one
marked by increased levels of cooperation (Bar
-
Yam
13
; Stewart
14
) as well as with those proposing a
neurologi
cal (Olson
15
; de Waal
16
) or cultural
-
evolutionary basis (Henrich
17
).
Here is the argument and hypothesis that we use to
justify the preferential attention to peer to peer
dynamics:
Authority Ranking is a win
-
lose exchange,
since the lower in the hierarchy, th
e less
you receive in the interaction with someone
higher up. Inequality is the highest in the
AR mode. However, it is assumed to operate
9
Benkler, Yochai. and Niss
enbaum, Helen: Commons
-
based
Peer Production and Virtue.
10
Fox, Julian: Virtue.
11
General documentation at
http://www.clarewgraves.com/
;
retrieved July 25, 2011
12
General documentation at
http://www.clarewgraves.com/
;
Retrieved July 25, 2011
13
Bar
-
Yam, Y. Complexity Rising.
14
Stewart, John.: The Future Evolution of Consciousness.
15
Olson, Gary: We Empathize, Therefore We Are.
16
de Waal. The Age of Empathy.
17
Henrich, Natalie and Joseph: Why Humans Cooperate.
IRIE
International Review of Information Ethics
Vol.
15 (09/2011)
Michel Bauwens:
Understanding Peer to Peer
as a Relational Dynamics
44
for the greater good, as hierarchy is
spiritually justified.
18
In the Market Pricing Mode, there is at least
in theory
a win
-
win model, since the
exchange is presumed to be one of equal
value. However, individuals engaged in MP
do not take into account the wider
community, exchanges are impersonal, and
at least under capitalism, are assumed to be
motivated by self
-
interest
In the Equality Matching mode, there is a
stronger reciprocity, as well as generally
speaking a motivation that takes into
account the wider community, in the
context of a culture based on widespread
reciprocity. Self
-
interest is not culturally
assumed.
Furthermore, it is based on an
ethic of giving, actually a competition of
givers, in which prestige is obtained through
the gift.
In the Communal Shareholding mode, the
individual gives to a whole, and indirectly
receives from the whole; independently of
t
he motivation of the individual, which may
be
selfish, the 'commons' itself makes this a
win
-
win
-
win mode of reciprocity, since the
commons is assumed to be of universal
benefit (the third win) in a direct way. It
could be argued that giving without the
ex
pectation of a clear and direct return, is
ethically superior to the three other
modalities. CS, as expressed in the
emerging digital commons based on peer
production, is a mode that aligns individual
and collective purpose towards mutual
alignment. See th
e contribution on the latter
by Atlee
19
and Zubizaretta
20
.
I conclude from the above that while there may not
be a universally agreed way to hierarchize the ethics
of the various modes, there is an argument that can
be made for the free engagement around com
mon
value, to be of a high ethical value, and that the CS
18
A good explanation of such spiritual justifications is provided
by the 'primordial debt' theories, summarized at
http://p2pfoundation.net/
Primordial_Debt_Theory
. The e
x-
cerpts are from the draft manuscript of a forthcoming book
by David Graeber: Debt, The First 5,000 Years.
19
Atlee, Tom: Strategic synergy between individual and
collective.
20
Zubizarreta, Rosa: Primary vs
Secondary Individual
-
Group
Mentality.
mode is therefore worthy to be at least considered
as a preferable variant of human action.
P2P as P
rimarily
D
efined by
Communal Shareholding
What dynamic is at play in peer production?
Nick Dyer
-
Whiteford's definition of the cycle of
accumulation in peer production
21
is useful here (he
calls it the Circulation of the Common by analogy
with the Circulation of Capital). He distinguishes an
input phase necessitating freely given contributions
through
open and free raw material; participatory
governance which is the result of free association;
and a commons
-
oriented output which guarantees
the continuation of the process by constituting open
and free raw material to be used in next iterations.
The domin
ant process active in peer production is
undoubtedly what Fiske describes as Communal
Shareholding. Indeed, many of the licenses used by
the production of open knowledge, free software,
and shared design (i.e. the three main forms of peer
production), such
as the GNU General Public L
i-
cense, ensure that anybody who respects the l
i-
cense can contribute knowledge, code and design to
the common project. On the input side, an individual
that contributes to such a common project, does not
exchange with a particula
r other person, does not
work in a command and control hierarchy, but adds
his/her contribution to the whole. Because of the
obligations imposed by the sharing license, once the
code is released, it can be used freely by other
users, even those who did not
contribute to the
project. This would certainly be the case in projects
that are entirely run by volunteer contributors.
However, in reality, the situation is a bit more
complicated.
Let's look on the input side.
Contributors may be paid employees of a
co
rporation, in an Authority Ranking (AR)
relationship with their corporate hierarchy,
who may be giving them directives
concerning their contributions
Contributors may be freelancers, who have
sold their work, and are therefore in a
Market Pricing (MP) rela
tionship with their
clients.
21
Dyer
-
Witheford Nick: The Circulation of the Common.
IRIE
International Review of Information Ethics
Vol.
15 (09/2011)
Michel Bauwens:
Understanding Peer to Peer as a Relational Dynamics
45
Some contributors may have an obligation
to other participants in the community, and
see their contribution in a Equality Matching
(EM) context towards them. Indeed, within
the core group of contributors, i.e. the
people who kn
ow each other and who judge
each other partially through their
contributions, interpersonal relations market
by Equality Matching dynamics are
important. For example, within the P2P
Foundation's own experience of building a
knowledge commons, the fact of a
ssisting
people often creates some type of ethical
obligation to return the favour by some
other contribution.
The essential freedom to contribute may be
tempered by AR dynamics; for example, in
Linux, maintainers control the acceptance of
patches to the o
fficial version of Linux; in
Debian, there is a process of socialization
into the community, led by the more
experienced developers already active in the
community.
However, this hybridity does not in fact violate the
core logic of Communal Shareholding, a
s the license
does ensure that the contributions by both waged
employees and freelancers are still added to the
common code base and are available for general
usage. Similarly neither the AR nor the EM aspects
of the hybrid participatory peer governance pr
o-
cesses undoe the constituted commons.
On the output side, it is true that corporations can
sell the software itself (which in theory, could also
be freely copied, but perhaps without all the added
services and guarantees added by open source
companies). C
ompanies generally sell services that
enhance the common code base, and further insure
its workability in the enterprise. More often, the
associated corporations sell goods and services on
top of the commons. The greatest dangers to the
commons would be th
e enclosure and privatisation
of commonly produced material. However, such
total enclosure would also kill future value creation
by the commons.
There is real tension here between the rules and
norms of the community, motivated by a defense of
the common p
roduction, and the desire of corpor
a-
tions to enclose and capture value. However, in the
context of free software, full enclosures and privat
i-
sation's of previous code commons are quite rare;
rather, corporations create added layers of privately
produced an
d protected software, which may in
time make simple usage of the 'pure' commons
version of the code base problematic. But such
moves are always contested and fought by free
software communities.
Despite these contradictions and tensions, from the
point of
view of the common resource and its parti
c-
ipants, it can be said that all contributions, even by
people in an AR relationship within their emplo
y-
ment, are seen as voluntary and freely shared, as
enforced by the license rules. I could say that the
commoner
s 'are agnostic' on how precisely common
code has been added.
In conclusion, I would argue that the core value
creation takes place in the commons, i.e. by adding
to the common knowledge/code/design base, but
that both use and exchange value can be enhance
d
(but also 'exploited') by market
-
oriented products
and services.

Revision as of 17:03, 5 June 2013

P2P as Intersubjective Process: Definition In this essay, the author will define “peer to peer” in relational terms, i.e. as any system which allows agents to freely and permissionlessly interact with each other. Peer pro duction is then any process whereby people can freely aggregate around the creation of common value. The interpretations below are from the author only, but are based on a continuous dialogue with the research community through the P2P Foundation ecology o f resources. The R elational G rammar of P eer P roduction Helpful in analysing the type of relationality that emerges in p2p systems is the Relational Typology developed by the anthropologist Alan Page Fiske 1 . Below, I will attempt to match the four relational logics as described by Fiske, with my own observ a- tions. Paraphrasing and shortening a longer quote from Fiske, here are the four modes of intersubjectivity that he recognizes, and which he claims, in his book 'Structures of Social Life', 2 are pr esent in all cultures and at all times (though some may appear later than others in the development of social forms): 1 Fiske, Alan P.: Human Sociality. 2 Fiske , Alan P: Structures of Social Life.  Communal Sharing (CS) is a relationship in which people treat some dyad or group as equivalent and undifferentiated with respect to the so cial domain in question. (Example: people using a commons.)  In Authority Ranking (AR) people have asymmetric positions in a linear hierarchy in which subordinates defer, respect, and (perhaps) obey, while superiors take precedence and take pastoral respons ibility for subordinates. (Example: military hierarchies.)  In Equality Matching (EM) relationships people keep track of the balance or difference among participants and know what would be required to restore balance. (Example: turn - taking.)  Market Pricing relationships are oriented to socially meaningful ratios or rates such as prices, wages, interest, rents, tithes, or cost - benefit analyses (Example: property that can be bought, sold, or treated as investment capital). 3 Though Fiske does not make such inf erence himself, it is possible to posit a historical succession of modes of dominance. In such a hypothesis, it could be argued that early tribal society starts with a dominance of Communal Shareholding, augmented with Equally Matching as soon as tribal so ciety becomes more complex, the subject of the well - known work of Marcel Mauss on the gift economy 4 . With the birth of class society comes the dominance of Authority Ranking, while Market Pricing becomes the dominant modality only under capitalism. The P2P Foundation's main hypothesis is that there is a social evolution towards Communal Shareholding but this is outside of the scope of this paper. It is important to state that all the different intersu b- jective modalties co - exist at any given time, but that t hey are generally influenced by the dominant mode. An interesting take on the co - existence of various modalities under capitalism is the work of the neo - institutional school. 5 The crucial debate is 3 Fiske, Alan P: Human sociality. 4 Mauss , M: The Gift: forms and functions of exchange in archaic societies. 5 For example, Colin Crouch writes: “ ... a firm embedded in community within a market economy is not engaged in a subsistence economy, but reaches out through its community IRIE International Review of Information Ethics Vol. 15 (09/2011) Michel Bauwens: Understanding Peer to Peer as a Relational Dynamics 43 whether Communal Shareholding, now existing within the bro ader institutional framework of the capitalist economy, can only be subsumed to the dominance of Market Pricing, or whether it can become an autonomous and eventually even a dominant mode, which can eventually subsume Market Pricing at some future point in time. My own views on the possible subsumption of Market Pricing under a regime of Communal Shar e- holding are expressed in the founding essay of the P2P Foundation. 6 A critical perspective on the incorporation of Co m- munal Shareholding under capitalism is o ffered in the work of Christian Fuchs. For example, Fuchs writes that: " Wikinomics shows how mass collaboration and digital gifts can be subsumed under capitalist logic. The difference between my own approach and the authors’ is that the latter welcomes this development, whereas I consider it from a neo - Marxist perspective as the extens ion and intens i- fication of alienation and exploitation , yet I re c- ognize that, at the same time, it bears certain potentials for alternative developments.” 7 This complex debate about the 'immanent' (within the system) vs. transcendent (beyond the system) aspects of Communal Shareholding and commons - based peer production provides a crucial context for any hypothesis about the present and future i m- portance of Communal Shareholding within the relational mix. One of the aims of the first part of the essay is t o allow the readers to make a more informed judgment about this issue by looking in some more detail into the relational mix. The Ethics A ssociated with P2P 8 Each of the above intersubjective dynamics has its own relational ethics. In Communal Shareholdin g, to a marke t.“ Crouch, Colin: Capi talist Diversity and Change: Recombinant Governance and Institutional Entrepreneurs. 121 6 Bauwens, Michel: The Political Economy of Peer Production. 7 Fuchs, Christian: Wikinomics. See in particular his concept of the Gift Commodity Internet Economy, at http://p2pfoundation.net/Gift_Commodity_Internet_Economy , retrieved July 25, 2011. 8 Himanen, P. The Hacker Ethic and the Spirit of the Info r- mation Age. the individual is both receiving and gifting with a community and he/she is judged by the level of contributions to the common project, as well as assistance to the maintenance and social reprodu c- tion of the project as a whole. In Authority Ranking, a k ey value is obedience and respect for authority as the 'giver' of benefits, on which the individual is dependent and the individual must ideally be seen as showing loyalty. Market Pricing favours 'neutral' human relationships, but nevertheless, values both personal and impersonal trustworthiness. The key value of Equality Matching is the capacity for rec i- procity. Is it possible to posit any ethical hierarchy of prefe r- ence in these different modalities — a question also asked by Benkler and Nissenbaum 9 and by Julian Fox 10 ? Among the more popular answers to this question are the ‘Emergent, Cyclical, Levels of Existence’ point of view of Clare W. Graves 11 , and its popularisation in the system of Spiral Dynamics 12 . Such a hierarchical and preferential ordering of di fferent ethical modalities would be consistent from an increasing flow of literature interpreting the history of nature and human civilisation as one marked by increased levels of cooperation (Bar - Yam 13

Stewart

14 ) as well as with those proposing a neurologi cal (Olson 15

de Waal

16 ) or cultural - evolutionary basis (Henrich 17 ). Here is the argument and hypothesis that we use to justify the preferential attention to peer to peer dynamics:  Authority Ranking is a win - lose exchange, since the lower in the hierarchy, th e less you receive in the interaction with someone higher up. Inequality is the highest in the AR mode. However, it is assumed to operate 9 Benkler, Yochai. and Niss enbaum, Helen: Commons - based Peer Production and Virtue. 10 Fox, Julian: Virtue. 11 General documentation at http://www.clarewgraves.com/

retrieved July 25, 2011 12 General documentation at http://www.clarewgraves.com/

Retrieved July 25, 2011 13 Bar - Yam, Y. Complexity Rising. 14 Stewart, John.: The Future Evolution of Consciousness. 15 Olson, Gary: We Empathize, Therefore We Are. 16 de Waal. The Age of Empathy. 17 Henrich, Natalie and Joseph: Why Humans Cooperate. IRIE International Review of Information Ethics Vol. 15 (09/2011) Michel Bauwens: Understanding Peer to Peer as a Relational Dynamics 44 for the greater good, as hierarchy is spiritually justified. 18  In the Market Pricing Mode, there is at least in theory a win - win model, since the exchange is presumed to be one of equal value. However, individuals engaged in MP do not take into account the wider community, exchanges are impersonal, and at least under capitalism, are assumed to be motivated by self - interest  In the Equality Matching mode, there is a stronger reciprocity, as well as generally speaking a motivation that takes into account the wider community, in the context of a culture based on widespread reciprocity. Self - interest is not culturally assumed. Furthermore, it is based on an ethic of giving, actually a competition of givers, in which prestige is obtained through the gift.  In the Communal Shareholding mode, the individual gives to a whole, and indirectly receives from the whole; independently of t he motivation of the individual, which may be selfish, the 'commons' itself makes this a win - win - win mode of reciprocity, since the commons is assumed to be of universal benefit (the third win) in a direct way. It could be argued that giving without the ex pectation of a clear and direct return, is ethically superior to the three other modalities. CS, as expressed in the emerging digital commons based on peer production, is a mode that aligns individual and collective purpose towards mutual alignment. See th e contribution on the latter by Atlee 19 and Zubizaretta 20 . I conclude from the above that while there may not be a universally agreed way to hierarchize the ethics of the various modes, there is an argument that can be made for the free engagement around com mon value, to be of a high ethical value, and that the CS 18 A good explanation of such spiritual justifications is provided by the 'primordial debt' theories, summarized at http://p2pfoundation.net/ Primordial_Debt_Theory . The e x- cerpts are from the draft manuscript of a forthcoming book by David Graeber: Debt, The First 5,000 Years. 19 Atlee, Tom: Strategic synergy between individual and collective. 20 Zubizarreta, Rosa: Primary vs Secondary Individual - Group Mentality. mode is therefore worthy to be at least considered as a preferable variant of human action. P2P as P rimarily D efined by Communal Shareholding What dynamic is at play in peer production? Nick Dyer - Whiteford's definition of the cycle of accumulation in peer production 21 is useful here (he calls it the Circulation of the Common by analogy with the Circulation of Capital). He distinguishes an input phase necessitating freely given contributions through open and free raw material; participatory governance which is the result of free association; and a commons - oriented output which guarantees the continuation of the process by constituting open and free raw material to be used in next iterations. The domin ant process active in peer production is undoubtedly what Fiske describes as Communal Shareholding. Indeed, many of the licenses used by the production of open knowledge, free software, and shared design (i.e. the three main forms of peer production), such as the GNU General Public L i- cense, ensure that anybody who respects the l i- cense can contribute knowledge, code and design to the common project. On the input side, an individual that contributes to such a common project, does not exchange with a particula r other person, does not work in a command and control hierarchy, but adds his/her contribution to the whole. Because of the obligations imposed by the sharing license, once the code is released, it can be used freely by other users, even those who did not contribute to the project. This would certainly be the case in projects that are entirely run by volunteer contributors. However, in reality, the situation is a bit more complicated. Let's look on the input side.  Contributors may be paid employees of a co rporation, in an Authority Ranking (AR) relationship with their corporate hierarchy, who may be giving them directives concerning their contributions  Contributors may be freelancers, who have sold their work, and are therefore in a Market Pricing (MP) rela tionship with their clients. 21 Dyer - Witheford Nick: The Circulation of the Common. IRIE International Review of Information Ethics Vol. 15 (09/2011) Michel Bauwens: Understanding Peer to Peer as a Relational Dynamics 45  Some contributors may have an obligation to other participants in the community, and see their contribution in a Equality Matching (EM) context towards them. Indeed, within the core group of contributors, i.e. the people who kn ow each other and who judge each other partially through their contributions, interpersonal relations market by Equality Matching dynamics are important. For example, within the P2P Foundation's own experience of building a knowledge commons, the fact of a ssisting people often creates some type of ethical obligation to return the favour by some other contribution.  The essential freedom to contribute may be tempered by AR dynamics; for example, in Linux, maintainers control the acceptance of patches to the o fficial version of Linux; in Debian, there is a process of socialization into the community, led by the more experienced developers already active in the community. However, this hybridity does not in fact violate the core logic of Communal Shareholding, a s the license does ensure that the contributions by both waged employees and freelancers are still added to the common code base and are available for general usage. Similarly neither the AR nor the EM aspects of the hybrid participatory peer governance pr o- cesses undoe the constituted commons. On the output side, it is true that corporations can sell the software itself (which in theory, could also be freely copied, but perhaps without all the added services and guarantees added by open source companies). C ompanies generally sell services that enhance the common code base, and further insure its workability in the enterprise. More often, the associated corporations sell goods and services on top of the commons. The greatest dangers to the commons would be th e enclosure and privatisation of commonly produced material. However, such total enclosure would also kill future value creation by the commons. There is real tension here between the rules and norms of the community, motivated by a defense of the common p roduction, and the desire of corpor a- tions to enclose and capture value. However, in the context of free software, full enclosures and privat i- sation's of previous code commons are quite rare; rather, corporations create added layers of privately produced an d protected software, which may in time make simple usage of the 'pure' commons version of the code base problematic. But such moves are always contested and fought by free software communities. Despite these contradictions and tensions, from the point of view of the common resource and its parti c- ipants, it can be said that all contributions, even by people in an AR relationship within their emplo y- ment, are seen as voluntary and freely shared, as enforced by the license rules. I could say that the commoner s 'are agnostic' on how precisely common code has been added. In conclusion, I would argue that the core value creation takes place in the commons, i.e. by adding to the common knowledge/code/design base, but that both use and exchange value can be enhance d (but also 'exploited') by market - oriented products and services.