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Open Source Methods Useful Way Beyond Software

Tom Steinberg writes "Former head of policy at the British Prime Minister's office, Geoff Mulgan, has co-authored a paper on uses of Open Source methods in arenas far beyond the normal Sourceforge universe. The paper is jointly written with Tom Steinberg, head of UK civic hacking fraternity mySociety and explores the use of open source methods to improve academic peer review, drafting of legislation and even media regulation."

2 of 193 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Open source and human nature by h4rr4r · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yes it would could then work, and there is already a name for this system...
    Marxism
    For the Americans in the crowed conveniently leave out the fact that it is a form of communism when you mention it. Otherwise you will be stoned to death or moderated into oblivion as I am sure I will be

  2. Re:Academic Peer Review by gowen · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I have read academic papers with 30+ authors
    Sure, that's pretty common in some fields (Biotech, for example). But 300+ authors? 3000? How many authors would you say the Linux kernel has?
    If the change history shows that the grad student did all the work, maybe they will actually get the credit they deserve?
    Well, that does presuppose that check-ins correspond to workload. And remember, if a supervisor has the original idea and devises the techniques to answer some question, and the grad student does all the grunt work, who's to say that the grad student deserves the credit? In that scenario (not universal, but not uncommon) he's replaceable in a way the supervisor isn't.
    --
    Athletic Scholarships to universities make as much sense as academic scholarships to sports teams.