This paper studies the role of intrinsic motivation, reputation and reciprocity in driving open source software innovation. We exploit the observed pattern of contributions – the ‘revealed preference’ of developers – to infer the underlying incentives. Using detailed information on code contributions and project membership, we classify developers into distinct groups and study how contributions from each developer type vary by license (contract) type and other project characteristics. The central empirical finding is that developers strongly sort by license type, project size and corporate sponsorship. This evidence confirms the importance of heterogeneous motivations, specifically a key role for motivated agents and reputation, but less fo...
A review of the basic theory of optimal open-source software contributions points to three key facto...
This paper is about Open-Source Software projects and individual contributors. We aim to show the as...
Considering intrinsic valuation of software developers as the main motive for participating in open ...
This paper studies the role of intrinsic motivation, reputation, and reciprocity in driving open sou...
The motivational drivers of open source software developers have been researched by various investig...
We provide a rationale for open source project participation by studying the decision problems of th...
Altruistic individuals, selfish firms? The structure of motivation in Open Source software by Andrea...
This paper studies how business models can be designed to tap effectively into open innovation labor...
The success of open source software (OSS) projects depends on sustained contributions by developers ...
Open source is growing outside the boundaries of hackers, amateurs and software development, creatin...
Understanding what motivates participation is a central theme in the research on open source softwar...
In open source software development, users rather than paid developers engage in innovation and deve...
The literature on Open Source phenomenon has revealed the crucial role played by both intrinsic and...
Studies into open source software (OSS) development projects have hitherto focused on the question o...
Considering intrinsic valuation of software developers as the main motive for participating in open ...
A review of the basic theory of optimal open-source software contributions points to three key facto...
This paper is about Open-Source Software projects and individual contributors. We aim to show the as...
Considering intrinsic valuation of software developers as the main motive for participating in open ...
This paper studies the role of intrinsic motivation, reputation, and reciprocity in driving open sou...
The motivational drivers of open source software developers have been researched by various investig...
We provide a rationale for open source project participation by studying the decision problems of th...
Altruistic individuals, selfish firms? The structure of motivation in Open Source software by Andrea...
This paper studies how business models can be designed to tap effectively into open innovation labor...
The success of open source software (OSS) projects depends on sustained contributions by developers ...
Open source is growing outside the boundaries of hackers, amateurs and software development, creatin...
Understanding what motivates participation is a central theme in the research on open source softwar...
In open source software development, users rather than paid developers engage in innovation and deve...
The literature on Open Source phenomenon has revealed the crucial role played by both intrinsic and...
Studies into open source software (OSS) development projects have hitherto focused on the question o...
Considering intrinsic valuation of software developers as the main motive for participating in open ...
A review of the basic theory of optimal open-source software contributions points to three key facto...
This paper is about Open-Source Software projects and individual contributors. We aim to show the as...
Considering intrinsic valuation of software developers as the main motive for participating in open ...