From Exchange to Contributions

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Book: Christian Siefkes. From Exchange to Contributions: Generalizing Peer Production into the Physical World. 2007

URL = http://www.peerconomy.org/text/peer-economy.pdf


Introduction

From the author:


The big text I was working on for the last nine months is ready. It is about the question of the potential of peer production -- the way free software is produced. We know that this new mode of production is of great importance when it is about free software -- success stories like

GNU/Linux, Apache or Wikipedia speak for themselfs. However, is this mode of production only relevant for information goods? Or is there a potential for more, maybe a revolution of the entire societal production?

The results of my considerations are now published having the title "From Exchange to Contributions: Generalizing Peer Production into the Physical World". Initially It was intended to be a long article, but due to the complexity of the topic it became a book!

The entire text of the book can be downloaded as PDF (125 pages) <http://www.peerconomy.org/text/peer-economy.pdf>

A smaller 2-up version (2 Pages on one page, 62 pages) is also available <http://www.peerconomy.org/text/peer-economy.2-a4.pdf>

The text can be modified and copied following the condition of the Creative Commons NonCommercial-ShareAlike-Licence.

A paperback print shall be released in some days an will cost 9 Euro --

recommendable for all, who want to do their eyes, their printer, or simply me a favour:-)

Since then I will be happy about feedback, critics, and inspired debates. If my book leads to a reflection, that a post-capitalist economy is no longer utopian as it seems to be, then its ends are achieved.


Summary

A new mode of production has emerged in the areas of software and content production. This mode, which is based on sharing and cooperation, has spawned whole mature operating systems such as GNU/Linux as well as innumerable other free software applications; giant knowledge bases such as the Wikipedia; a large free culture movement; and a new, wholly decentralized medium for spreading, analyzing and discussing news and knowledge, the so-called blogosphere.

So far, this new mode of production--peer production--has been limited to certain niches of production, such as information goods.

This book discusses whether this limitation is necessary or whether the potential of peer production extends farther. In other words:

Is a society possible in which peer production is the primary mode of production? If so, how could such a society be organized?

Is a society possible where production is driven by demand and not by profit? Where there is no need to sell anything and hence no unemployment? Where competition is more a game than a struggle for survival? Where there is no distinction between people with capital and those without? A society where it would be silly to keep your ideas and knowledge secret instead of sharing them; and where scarcity is no longer a precondition of economic success, but a problem to be worked around?

It is, and this book describes how.