Text version of key Oekonux concepts
Free Software: The most mature P2P economy
Author: Stefan Merten (Project Oekonux)
Oekonux key concepts
Characteristics of Free Software
* The actual product is gratis
* Source code is available
* Four basic rights for the users
o Software may be used for any purpose
o The sources may be studied and changed
o The software may be distributed arbitrarily
o Changed versions may be distributed arbitrarily
* Licenses embed these rights in the law system
Conclusion
Free in the sense of freedom
Mode of production
* Without money
* Effort is taken on a voluntary basis
o Necessity of concrete solutions to problems
o Selbstentfaltung of the developers
* Manifold self-organized in small, independent groups
* International in the Internet
Conclusion
Often a high quality results
Selbstentfaltung
* More than self-realization
o Do what you like but not as an atomized individual
* Selbstentfaltung is "autonomy-in-interdependence"
o Dependency is not reduction but extension of own possibilities
* Selbstentfaltung ends up in higher quality
o Because desire for quality is expression of Selbstentfaltung
* Possible only without alienation
Conclusion
In general Selbstentfaltung is a desirable goal
Germ form and five-step
* Germ form is something structural new existing in the old
* Germ forms develop in a five-step
o Formation of the germ form
o Crisis of the old form
o Germ form becomes an important dimension of development in the old form
o Germ form becomes dominant
o Restructuring of the over all process
Conclusion
Free Software is in third step Signs of maturity
Free Software history
* Early 1980's: Richard M. Stallmann coins "Free Software"
o Ideological background
o GNU General Public License
* Early 1990's: Linus Torvalds starts Linux
o "Bazaar" model opened up the development
o Pragmatism
* Late 1990's: Eric S. Raymond coins "Open Source"
o Marketing campaign
o Free Software gained public visibility
Conclusion
Took 30 years to really take off
Free Software as an economy
* Wikipedia (2007-10-03):
An economy is the system of human activities related to the production, distribution, exchange, and consumption of goods and services of a country or other area.
o "System": (Network of) Free Software projects
o "Human activities": Made by humans
o "Production": Based on a production process
o "Distribution": Through the Internet
o "Exchange": Not exchange but a flow of goods
o "Consumption": By consumers as well as producers
o "Goods and services": Software and support
o "Country or other area": Global
Conclusion
Free Software certainly is an economy
Success in the old form
* Free Software is superior to proprietary software
o Otherwise industry would not use it
o Important: Quality - not ideological reasons
* Wide and still rising distribution
o Final frontier: the desktop
* Similar to upcoming capitalism
Conclusion
Success in the old form is key for maturity
Beyond old relationships
* Beyond commodities
o Absence of scarcity
* Beyond gifts
o No social relationships between producers and consumers
* Beyond classical public goods
o Not state based
* Beyond labor
o Replaced by Selbstentfaltung
Conclusion
Establishing new relationships is key for sustainability
Beyond old ownership
* Inclusive ownership model
o Traditional ownership: Right to exclude
* Beyond exchange
o You may take without giving
* Beyond alienation
o Product is oriented in use value
o Selbstentfaltung is the anti-thesis of alienation
Conclusion
Establishing new notion of ownership changed history
At several forefronts
* Social relationships
o Maintainership
o Loose binding of people
o Orientation on projects instead of organization
o Openness
* Technical development
* Globalization
* Mode of production based on Selbstentfaltung
Conclusion
Sublating the old happens at the forefronts of development
Free in the sense of Free Software
* Freedom is result of the process
o Results are Free because of the process
o I.e. unlimited externally
* Freedom is pre-condition of the process
o The process doesn't work without Freedom
o I.e. unlimited internally
* One's Freedom enables the Freedom of others
Conclusion
Those positive feedback cycles create sustainability