Author List: Stewart, Katherine J.; Ammeter, Anthony P.; Maruping, Likoebe M.;
Information Systems Research, 2006, Volume 17, Issue 2, Page 126-144.
What differentiates successful from unsuccessful open source software projects? This paper develops and tests a model of the impacts of license restrictiveness and organizational sponsorship on two indicators of success: user interest in, and development activity on, open source software development projects. Using data gathered from Freshmeat.net and project home pages, the main conclusions derived from the analysis are that (1) license restrictiveness and organizational sponsorship interact to influence user perceptions of the likely utility of open source software in such a way that users are most attracted to projects that are sponsored by nonmarket organizations and that employ nonrestrictive licenses, and (2) licensing and sponsorship address complementary developer motivations such that the influence of licensing on development activity depends on what kind of organizational sponsor a project has. Theoretical and practical implications are discussed, and the paper outlines several avenues for future research.
Keywords: open source; software development; software licensing; success
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#273 0.439 source open software oss development developers projects developer proprietary community success openness impact paper project associated activity phenomenon peripheral variety
#190 0.217 new licensing license open comparison type affiliation perpetual prior address peer question greater compared explore competing crowdsourcing provide choice place
#108 0.193 model research data results study using theoretical influence findings theory support implications test collected tested based empirical empirically context paper
#1 0.053 organizational organizations effectiveness factors managers model associated context characteristics variables paper relationships level attention environmental technological based maturity organization's relationship