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Nanotechnology and the Commons: Implications of Open Source Abundance in Millennial Quasi-Commons

Bruns, Bryan Randolph. 2000. "Nanotechnology and the Commons: Implications of Open Source Abundance in Millennial Quasi-Commons." Presented at "Constituting the Commons: Crafting Sustainable Commons in the New Millennium," the Eighth Conference of the International Association for the Study of Common Property, Bloomington, Indiana, USA, May 31-June 4, 2000.

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Abstract


"Considering the implications of nanotechnology helps explore the prospects for common property institutions. Open source approaches to developing computer software create new commons in shared intellectual property. Applying open source principles to the development of nanotechnology and biotechnology might accelerate the growth of freely available knowledge. Increasing resource reuse and abundance may shift the balance between private benefits and broader interests in ways that favor the creation of commons. Users of shared spaces that are formally public or private property already assert increasing roles in governance, constituting quasi-commons. Longer lifetimes may encourage the crafting of new commons on a millennial time scale. Nanotechnology opens interesting opportunities for constituting new commons."

Document Type:Conference Paper
Keywords:IASCP
common pool resources--theory
biotechnology
information technology
patents
intellectual property rights
research--experimental
innovation
Internet
anticommons
open source
ID Code:1051

 

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