Profile_bird

Hey there! YochaiBenkler is using Twitter.

Twitter is a free service that lets you keep in touch with people through the exchange of quick, frequent answers to one simple question: What's happening? Join today to start receiving YochaiBenkler's tweets.

Already using Twitter
from your phone? Click here.

YochaiBenkler

  1. thesis that property and markets are the roots of all growth and productivity.
  2. the conceptual nuance required to acknowledge its importance ran against the grain of the increasingly dominant
  3. Despite the continued importance of nonproprietary production in information as a practical matter,
  4. that can be captured and that drive innovation, without need for proprietary strategies of appropriation.
  5. is in most industries not based on proprietary claims of exclusion, but on improved efficiencies and customer relations
  6. Perhaps most surprisingly, even industrial research and development, while market oriented,
  7. Political and theological discourses are thoroughly based in nonmarket forms and motivations.
  8. social-psychological motivations rather than market appropriation.
  9. The arts and sciences are replete with voluntarism and actions oriented primarily toward
  10. infused with nonproprietary motivations, social relations, and organizational forms.
  11. The education system, from kindergarten to doctoral programs, is thoroughly
  12. First, the baseline conception that proprietary strategies are dominant in our information production system is overstated.
  13. This book began with four economic observations.
  14. to enforce these conceptions as practiced reality, even when they need not be.
  15. Our institutional frameworks reflect these conceptual models of information production and exchange, and have come, over the past few years,
  16. and starkly separate production from consumption.
  17. and practice of capital-intensive information and cultural production practices that emphasize proprietary, market-based models
  18. Our conceptions of human agency, collective deliberation, and common culture in these societies are embedded in the experience
  19. professional commercial core and a dispersed, relatively passive periphery.
  20. Our theories about how effective communications in complex societies are achieved center on market-based, proprietary models, with a