Free software and copyright enforcement: A tool for global copyright policy?

Knowledge, Technology & Policy 18 (4):101-112 (2006)
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Abstract

One of the paradoxes of the free software ideology is its reliance on the legal institutions it was created to object to. One could argue that Free Software Foundation is using copyright to enforce their free software licenses as aggressively as the Business Software Alliance is enforcing its clients’ copyrights. We will show that the reality is more complex and that there is a significant difference: the free software community uses primarily non-legal enforcement methods and trusts on social norms. We argue that free software could be used as a tool to make copyright more accepted in the less developed world because of its positive connection with copyright and community based approach. We explain why strong copyright is also in the interest of free software developers. The article concludes by suggesting that World Intellectual Property Organization should include free software into its development agenda.

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The cathedral and the bazaar.Eric Raymond - 1999 - Knowledge, Technology & Policy 12 (3):23-49.

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