Author List: Fitzgerald, Brian;
MIS Quarterly, 2006, Volume 30, Issue 3, Page 587-598.
A frequent characterization of open source software is the somewhat outdated, mythical one of a collective of supremely talented software hackers freely volunteering their services to produce uniformly high-quality software. I contend that the open source software phenomenon has metamorphosed into a more mainstream and commercially viable form, which I label as OSS 2.0. I illustrate this transformation using a framework of process and product factors, and discuss how the bazaar metaphor, which up to now has been associated with the open source development process, has actually shifted to become a metaphor better suited to the OSS 2.0 product delivery and support process. Overall the OSS 2.0 phenomenon is significantly different from its free software antecedent. Its emergence accentuates the fundamental alteration of the basic ground rules in the software landscape, signifying the end of the proprietary-driven model that has prevailed for the past 20 years or so. Thus, a clear understanding of the characteristics of the emergent OSS 2.0 phenomenon is required to address key challenges for research and practice.
Keywords: Free software; IS development; Open source software
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#273 0.422 source open software oss development developers projects developer proprietary community success openness impact paper project associated activity phenomenon peripheral variety
#111 0.148 e-government collective sociomaterial material institutions actors practice particular organizational routines practices relations mindfulness different analysis ways draw agencies drawing ideas
#191 0.093 model models process analysis paper management support used environment decision provides based develop use using help literature mathematical presented formulation
#279 0.074 field work changes new years time change major period year end use past early century half traditional areas established strong
#22 0.057 software vendors vendor saas patch cloud release model vulnerabilities time patching overall quality delivery software-as-a-service high need security vulnerability actually
#212 0.053 business digital strategy value transformation economy technologies paper creation digitization strategies environment focus net-enabled services processes insights challenges key response