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E-raamat: Corporate Capitalism's Use of Openness: Profit for Free?

  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Dynamics of Virtual Work
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2020
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030282196
  • Formaat - EPUB+DRM
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  • Formaat: EPUB+DRM
  • Sari: Dynamics of Virtual Work
  • Ilmumisaeg: 28-Feb-2020
  • Kirjastus: Springer Nature Switzerland AG
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9783030282196

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Matching the rigour of the analysis with an extraordinary pedagogical capacity, the authors unveil all the arcana of the openness capitalism model and digital labour. Essential for scholars and students across the social and economic sciences. (Carlo Vercellone, Université de Paris 8, France)

This vital book is an objective and detailed assessment of the private capture of common value, concluding with an in-depth survey of what commons-friendly public authorities could do to defend the new 'common-wealth'. (Michel Bauwens, Founder of the P2P Foundation, The Netherlands)



An outstanding analysis of how digital capital uses openness as principle of capital accumulation and exploitation.  A must-read for everyone who wants to understand what the internet and digital media are all about. (Christian Fuchs, University of Westminster, UK)







This book tackles the concept of openness (as in open source software, open access andfree culture), from a critical political economy perspective to consider its encroachment by capitalist corporations, but also how it advances radical alternatives to cognitive capitalism.





Drawing on four case studies, Corporate Capitalisms Use of Openness will add to discussion on open source software, open access content platforms, open access publishing, and open university courses. These otherwise disparate cases share two fundamental features: informational capitalist corporations base their successful business models on unpaid productive activities, play, attention, knowledge and labour, and do so crucially by resorting to ideological uses of concepts such as openness, communities and sharing.





The authors present potential solutions and alternative regulations to counter these exploitative and alienating business models, and to foster digital knowledge commons, ranging from co-ops and commons-based peer production to state agencies' platforms. Their research and findings will appeal to students, academics and activists around the world in fields such as sociology, economy, media and communication, library and information science, political sciences and technology studies.
1 Introduction
1(28)
1.1 Early Promises and Expectations
1(3)
1.2 Ideological Distortions Under Capitalism: Californian Ideology Turning into Openness Ideology
4(3)
1.3 Profit from Openness Versus Profit from Enclosures Models
7(2)
1.4 What's Wrong with Profit from Openness?
9(7)
1.5
Chapter Outline
16(5)
References
21(8)
2 Profiting from Openness: A Critique of a New Business Model
29(80)
2.1 From Profits from Enclosures to Profits from Openness: Business Models in Cognitive Capitalism
29(9)
2.2 Open and Free
38(10)
2.3 Ideologies and Ideology Analysis
48(3)
2.4 Labor, Work and Profits
51(16)
2.5 Commons and Peer Production
67(14)
2.6 Platforms, Social Actors and Flows in the Profit from Openness Model
81(14)
References
95(14)
3 Profiting from Free and Open Source Software
109(40)
3.1 Techno-legal Foundations for Hybrid Business Models Built on Linux Distributions
113(8)
3.2 Businesses Built on Free and Open Source Code in General, and Red Hat in Particular
121(3)
3.3 Case Description: Red Hat's Business Model
124(1)
3.4 Red Hat's Products and Prices
125(4)
3.5 Schema of Flows and Actors
129(2)
3.6 Regulations
131(3)
3.7 Role and Enactment of Ideology
134(5)
3.8 Conclusions
139(1)
References
140(9)
4 Profiting from Open Access Publishing
149(50)
4.1 Introduction
149(16)
4.2 Scientific Publishers' OA Business Models in General and Elsevier's in Particular
165(13)
4.3 Scheme of Flows and Actors
178(1)
4.4 Regulations
179(2)
4.5 Role and Enactment of Openness Ideology
181(4)
4.6 Conclusions
185(2)
References
187(12)
5 Profiting from Open Audiovisual Content
199(42)
5.1 Audiovisual Content Platforms and YouTube
199(10)
5.2 Scheme of Flows and Actors
209(3)
5.3 Regulations
212(6)
5.4 Profits and Exploitation
218(5)
5.5 Role and Enactment of Openness Ideology
223(10)
5.6 Conclusions
233(3)
References
236(5)
6 Profiting from Massive Open Online Courses
241(32)
6.1 MOOCs in General and Coursera in Particular
241(8)
6.2 Scheme of Flows and Actors
249(3)
6.3 Regulations
252(8)
6.4 Profits and Exploitation
260(4)
6.5 Role and Enactment of Openness Ideology
264(5)
6.6 Conclusions
269(2)
References
271(2)
7 Conclusions and Policies
273(44)
7.1 Summary of Insights from Case Studies
274(5)
7.2 Policy Discussion Section
279(38)
References 317(6)
Index 323
Arwid Lund is Assistant Professor in Library and Information Science at the Department of Cultural Sciences at Linnaeus University, Sweden. 





Mariano Zukerfeld is Associate Professor at Buenos Aires University, Researcher at National Scientific and Technical Council of Argentina (CONICET) and Head of Technology, Capitalism and Society team (e-TCS) at the Science, Technology and Society Centre, Maimónides University, Argentina.