This is a fascinating study and while it's couched in business terms, after all it was commissioned by French Telco Orange, it raises, particularly in chapters 4 and 6, an intriguing question:
Are markets retreating, after decades of expansion, even as the public sector shrinks as well? There are two new ways in which they appear to retreat. One is the de-commodification of products. Things that used to be produced for exchange-value in the market, are now produced for use-value within communities. Wikipedia is the clearest example. It de-commodified general purpose encyclopedias. Open Access is doing the same to scholarly publications. Linux has been doing this to operating systems, Drupal for content management systems, etc. The second is the contraction of entire markets. The obvious case here is rapid rise of car sharing. The Economist has recently estimated that car sharing can lower the number of cars necessary to provide mobility by the factor of 15, that is, only about 6% of cars as compared to individual ownership [1]. Or open source software, for all the success that some open source software business have, the size of the old markets destroyed by it, is probably much larger then the size of the new markets created by it. [1] http://www.economist.com/node/21563280?frsc=dg|a On 09/26/2012 07:35 AM, Patrice Riemens wrote: > >Bwo Michel Bauwens > >* Report: A Synthetic Overview of the Collaborative Economy. By Michel >Bauwens, Nicolas Mendoza and Franco Iacomella, et al. Orange Labs and >P2P Foundation, 2012. > >URL = http://p2p.coop/files/reports/collaborative-economy-2012.pdf > >Summary via: > >http://p2pfoundation.net/Synthetic_Overview_of_the_Collaborative_Economy --- http://felix.openflows.com ------------------------ books out now: *|Vergessene Zukunft. Radikale Netzkulturen in Europa. transcript 2012 *|Deep Search. The Politics of Searching Beyond Google. Studienv. 2009 *|Mediale Kunst/Media Arts Zurich.13 Positions. Scheidegger&Spiess2008 *|Manuel Castells and the Theory of the Network Society.Polity P. 2006 *|Open Cultures and the Nature of Networks. Ed Futura / Revolver, 2005 # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: http://mx.kein.org/mailman/listinfo/nettime-l # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nett...@kein.org