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| Volume 14, Number 1, March 2009 |
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Consumption and Production of Digital Public Goods - Modeling the Impact of Different Success Metrics in Open Source Software Development
Nicholas P. RADTKE and Marco A. JANSSEN
This paper appears in: The International Journal of INTELLIGENT CONTROL AND SYSTEMS
Publication Date: March 2009
Volume: 14, Number: 1
On page(s): 77- 86
Abstract
With the Internet has come the phenomenon of
people volunteering to work on digital public goods such as open
source software and online encyclopedia articles. Presumably, the
success of individual public goods has an effect on attracting
volunteers. However, the definition of success is ill-defined. This
paper explores the impact of different success metrics on a simple
public goods model. The findings show that the different success
metrics considered do have an impact on the behavior of the
model, with the largest differences being between consumeroriented
and producer-oriented metrics. This indicates that many
proposed success metrics may be mapped into one of these two
categories and within a category, all success metrics measure the
same phenomenon.We argue that the characteristics of produceroriented
metrics more closely match real world phenomena,
indicating that public goods are driven by producer, and not
consumer, interests.
Index Terms
Digital public goods, success metrics, FLOSS, open source software, Wikipedia
Back to Volume 14, Number 1, March 2009
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