This paper develops an inductive theory of the open source software innovation process by focusing on the creation of Freenet, a project aimed at developing a decentralized and anonymous peer-to-peer electronic file sharing network. We are particularly interested in the strategies and processes by which new people join the existing community of software developers and how they initially contribute code. Analyzing date from multiple sources on the Freenet software development process, we generate the constructs of "joining script", "specialization", "contribution barriers", and "feature gifts", and propose relationships among these. Implications for theory and research are discussed.
%0 Journal Article
%1 Von-Krogh:2003
%A Krogh, G Von
%A Spaeth, S
%A Lakhani, KR
%D 2003
%J SSRN eLibrary
%K OpenInnovation OpenSource
%T Community, Joining, and Specialization in Open Source Software Innovation: A Case Study
%X This paper develops an inductive theory of the open source software innovation process by focusing on the creation of Freenet, a project aimed at developing a decentralized and anonymous peer-to-peer electronic file sharing network. We are particularly interested in the strategies and processes by which new people join the existing community of software developers and how they initially contribute code. Analyzing date from multiple sources on the Freenet software development process, we generate the constructs of "joining script", "specialization", "contribution barriers", and "feature gifts", and propose relationships among these. Implications for theory and research are discussed.
@article{Von-Krogh:2003,
abstract = {This paper develops an inductive theory of the open source software innovation process by focusing on the creation of Freenet, a project aimed at developing a decentralized and anonymous peer-to-peer electronic file sharing network. We are particularly interested in the strategies and processes by which new people join the existing community of software developers and how they initially contribute code. Analyzing date from multiple sources on the Freenet software development process, we generate the constructs of "joining script", "specialization", "contribution barriers", and "feature gifts", and propose relationships among these. Implications for theory and research are discussed.},
added-at = {2008-07-09T19:14:09.000+0200},
author = {Krogh, G Von and Spaeth, S and Lakhani, KR},
biburl = {https://www.bibsonomy.org/bibtex/21bc1a79857eeb2b8c4f8fd4184ee88db/torstenschuenemann},
date-added = {2008-07-08 19:28:32 +0200},
date-modified = {2008-07-08 19:28:32 +0200},
id = {37},
interhash = {7cde5745ceb112f5b2c9d8d331ac3af1},
intrahash = {1bc1a79857eeb2b8c4f8fd4184ee88db},
journal = {SSRN eLibrary},
journal1 = {SSRN eLibrary},
keywords = {OpenInnovation OpenSource},
l3 = {papers://4FFA6A6B-1A96-4388-956B-475C0631ECF6/Paper/p37},
m3 = {10.2139/ssrn.387500},
timestamp = {2008-07-09T19:14:10.000+0200},
title = {Community, Joining, and Specialization in Open Source Software Innovation: A Case Study},
ty = {JOUR},
year = 2003
}