It is widely recognized that software affects fundamental societal concerns, such as privacy. Software does not just appear, but is produced within a variety of societal institutions. This article analyzes how societal institutions shape the development of software and its resulting implications for society. Specifically, we consider how institutional rules are evident in the different structures, motivations, and influences of four societal institutions. We begin by discussing universities and continue on to firms, consortia, and the open source movement. Once we understand how all of these factors operate, we can offer predictions on the resulting attributes of software. In the final section, we show how these institutional factors explai...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the possibility for firms to consider institutional...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
The design of communication technologies is not autonomous, but is shaped by conflicting social grou...
International audienceNowadays, software has a ubiquitous presence in everyday life and this phenome...
Modern, Western post-industrial societies and our complex technological systems are subject to risks...
International audienceNowadays, software has a ubiquitous presence in everyday life and this phenome...
Abstract: For students of innovation, the tension between private and public within university scien...
Abstract-Software is viewed as an artifact which interacts with cultures of societies in which it fu...
The organization of information production is undergoing a deep transformation. Alongside corporatio...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
Thesis: Ph. D. in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS), Massachusetts ...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
The design of communication technologies is not autonomous, but is shaped by conflicting social grou...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the possibility for firms to consider institutional...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
The design of communication technologies is not autonomous, but is shaped by conflicting social grou...
International audienceNowadays, software has a ubiquitous presence in everyday life and this phenome...
Modern, Western post-industrial societies and our complex technological systems are subject to risks...
International audienceNowadays, software has a ubiquitous presence in everyday life and this phenome...
Abstract: For students of innovation, the tension between private and public within university scien...
Abstract-Software is viewed as an artifact which interacts with cultures of societies in which it fu...
The organization of information production is undergoing a deep transformation. Alongside corporatio...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
Thesis: Ph. D. in History, Anthropology, and Science, Technology and Society (HASTS), Massachusetts ...
This Article identifies a profound, ongoing shift in the modern administrative state: from the regul...
The design of communication technologies is not autonomous, but is shaped by conflicting social grou...
Purpose: The purpose of this paper is to analyse the possibility for firms to consider institutional...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...
Six years ago, Lawrence Lessig had two insights. First, code regulates. Computer software (“code”) c...