Skip to content.

SIGOSSEE / JOIN

Sections
Note: This site's content is accessible to all versions of every browser. However, this browser may not support basic Web standards, preventing the display of our site's design details. We support the mission of the Web Standards Project in the campaign encouraging users to upgrade their browsers.


Blog Entry [details and replies]

Open-Source in Education - Links and Resources :: Links and resources collected by ossite members Weblog 88 entries 29-December-2008 22 authors
show or hide details for this item Wide Open - Open source methods and their future potential Blog Entry 0 replies9 resources 24-April-2005 Graham Attwell
Kind:
Blog Entry
Created:
24-April-2005 11:50:39
Last Updated:
24-April-2005 11:50:45
Author:
Graham Attwell
Status:
visible

Authors/Editors:
Geoff Mulgan, Omar Salem, Tom Steinberg
Publication Type:
Book
Publication Date:
2005
ISBN:
1841801429
Cost:
£10.00
Categories:
Citizenship, Innovation, Organisational change, Technology & Science

Download (pdf) the full report, or order a copy.

The rise of the Internet has made it possible for knowledge to be created and shared in ways that emphasise its character as a common good, rather than as something to be owned.

In the world of open source programming, the computer software is distributed under licence, allowing users to change or share the software’s source code – the human readable version of a computer programme.

This open and collaborative approach to creating knowledge has produced remarkable results, such as the Linux operating system and the web-based encyclopaedia Wikipedia. In defiance of the conventional wisdom of modern business, open source methods have led the main underlying innovations around the Internet.

Other fields have much to learn from open source methods – because they bring principles and working methods which can help to produce better knowledge, goods or services, or make them available on more widely beneficial terms.

From the formulation of public policy to more open forms of academic peer review, setting up mutual support groups for people facing similar health problems to collaborative forms of social innovation, the principles of open source promise to radically alter the we approach complex social problems.

The future potential of these methods is such that they will soon become commonplace in our lives. Just as it is now impossible to think about getting things done without considering the role of the Internet, so will it soon be impossible to think about how to solve a large social problem without considering the role of open methods.

Geoff Mulgan is Director of the Young Foundation and former Head of Policy in the Prime Minister's Office. Tom Steinberg is Director of mySociety and is currently a fellow at the Young Foundation. Omar Salem is a student at Oxford University and an intern at the Young Foundation.

Comments please

Please Log in

Username

Password

Title
Lead-in
Body Text ( HTML tags are allowed )
Preview your comment