Getting Rich Off Those Who Work For Free

opensource.thumbnail.gifThe Time Magazine has an extremely relevant article for todays user driven, social, free and open world: is there a new form of exploitation looming? Should those who drive sites like flickr, digg or make an OS project work not have some ownership it…Openbusiness discussed this earlier here. And here is an excerpt of the Time Magazine article:

It might seem very odd to look to a long-dead Russian anarchist for business advice. But Peter Kropotkin’s big idea–that there are important human motivations beyond what he called “reckless individualism”–is very relevant these days. That’s because one of the most interesting questions in business has become how much work people will do for free.

Kropotkin was an aristocrat who, after being imprisoned for his insurrectionist activities, escaped and fled to England in 1876. He also drew the first good topographic maps of Siberia and wrote a memoir of his revolutionary days that has become a minor classic. More to the point, he proposed in his 1902 book, Mutual Aid: A Factor of Evolution, that the survival of animal species and much of human progress depended on the tendency to help others.

That I even know of Kropotkin comes courtesy of the Wikipedia entry for the “gift economy,” the current term of art for this altruistic approach. Wikipedia is, of course, a prime example of the gift economy at work. Argue about its inaccuracies all you want, but the volunteer-authored online encyclopedia is on its way to becoming (if it isn’t already) the world’s dominant reference resource.

Open-source, volunteer-created computer software like the Linux operating system and the Firefox Web browser have also established themselves as significant and lasting economic realities. That’s not true yet in the worlds of science, news and entertainment: we’re still figuring out what the role of volunteers will be, but that it will be much bigger than in the past seems obvious.

Comments

Responses are currently closed, but you can trackback from your own site.

3 Responses to “Getting Rich Off Those Who Work For Free”

Add yours

  1. [...] Open Business.cc blog reports about a Time Magazine article titled “Getting Rich Off Those Who Work For Free”. [...]

  2. [...] Open Business.cc blog reports about a Time Magazine article titled “Getting Rich Off Those Who Work For Free”. [...]

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License.