451 CAOS Theory 
A blog for the enterprise open source community
Is social responsibility the key to corporate contributions?
Matthew Aslett, July 8, 2008 @ 7:05 am ETSome time ago I wondered aloud whether free and open source software might one day follow environmentalism from being dismissed as the realm of “sandal-wearing and beard-toting troublemakers or romantic idealists” to being a significant corporate agenda item.
While we are not at that stage yet, there are indications that open source development is being seen as a matter of social responsibility. Via Roberto Galoppini comes the news that the Software Freedom Law Center recently received a call from someone at a socially responsible investment house inquiring about “willingness to contribute to FLOSS” as a social responsibility item.
As Bradley M Kuhn explains: “This fellow was actually investigating the FLOSS credentials of various companies and trying to bring it forward as a criterion when considering how socially responsible their practices are. He seemed genuinely interested in bringing this forward as part of a social agenda for his company. ”
It is interesting to view this call in the context of Jim Whitehurst’s call for corporations to invest more in sharing and reusing their code via open source development. I suspect Jim’s talk of eliminating “waste” in IT software development was not accidental.
That speech prompted Dana Blankenhorn to call for the development of a “Code Recycling Center”. I commented at the time that at a local level such projects are being created, at least at for governments, but that corporate take up might be prompted by some sort of tax incentive.
I was forgetting that, according to the Center for American Progress “corporations and self-employed individuals may already take a deduction for their development expenses for both open source and proprietary commercial software” (the Center proposed in 2006 to extend a tax credit to individuals that create open source software).
Meanwhile, Stefano Maffuli has suggested the creation of a Free Software Fairness Index by which to classify open source businesses on the grounds of social responsibility. This in turn calls to mind Milking the GNU’s suggestion of an “Equitable Open Source” index by which to judge vendors on their patent policy, business model and development model.
As Roberto notes, Sun’s corporate social responsibility report explains that the company’s commitment to open source means that it shares its “technology and resources with communities worldwide to help eliminate the digital divide, create economic opportunity, and foster equal access to technology.”
Meanwhile I previously noted that a proposal was presented to Oracle’s shareholder meeting in 2007 asking the company to detail its commitment to open source and use its patent portfolio to protect open source. While Oracle opposed the proposal it did note that it intended to include information about its open source activities in the next social responsibility report (which it hasn’t yet published).
Back in March I wrote:
“Perhaps in years to come we will see big businesses boasting about lowering their proprietary licensing footprint through the more efficient use of computing resources, just as today they boast about the efficient use of natural resources. Maybe the laggards could pay someone else to adopt open source for them via proprietary offsetting schemes. While I am being flippant here, it wouldn’t seem unreasonable for shareholders to demand that businesses justify their spending on IT resources to ensure that profits are being reinvested efficiently.”
Clearly we’re not there yet, but the situation I desribed seems more likely today than it did just four months ago.
free viagra
buy viagra online
generic viagra
how does viagra work
cheap viagra
buy viagra
buy viagra online inurl
viagra 6 free samples
viagra online
viagra for women
viagra side effects
female viagra
natural viagra
online viagra
cheapest viagra prices
herbal viagra
alternative to viagra
buy generic viagra
purchase viagra online
free viagra without prescription
viagra attorneys
free viagra samples before buying
buy generic viagra cheap
viagra uk
generic viagra online
try viagra for free
generic viagra from india
fda approves viagra
free viagra sample
what is better viagra or levitra
discount generic viagra online
viagra cialis levitra
viagra dosage
viagra cheap
viagra on line
best price for viagra
free sample pack of viagra
viagra generic
viagra without prescription
discount viagra
gay viagra
mail order viagra
viagra inurl
generic viagra online paypal
generic viagra overnight
generic viagra online pharmacy
generic viagra uk
buy cheap viagra online uk
suppliers of viagra
how long does viagra last
viagra sex
generic viagra soft tabs
generic viagra 100mg
buy viagra onli
generic viagra online without prescription
viagra energy drink
cheapest uk supplier viagra
viagra cialis
generic viagra safe
viagra professional
viagra sales
viagra free trial pack
viagra lawyers
over the counter viagra
best price for generic viagra
viagra jokes
buying viagra
viagra samples
viagra sample
cialis
generic cialis
cheapest cialis
buy cialis online
buying generic cialis
cialis for order
what are the side effects of cialis
buy generic cialis
what is the generic name for cialis
cheap cialis
cialis online
buy cialis
cialis side effects
how long does cialis last
cialis forum
cialis lawyer ohio
cialis attorneys
cialis attorney columbus
cialis injury lawyer ohio
cialis injury attorney ohio
cialis injury lawyer columbus
prices cialis
cialis lawyers
viagra cialis levitra
cialis lawyer columbus
online generic cialis
daily cialis
cialis injury attorney columbus
cialis attorney ohio
cialis cost
cialis professional
cialis super active
how does cialis work
what does cialis look like
cialis drug
viagra cialis
cialis to buy new zealand
cialis without prescription
free cialis
cialis soft tabs
discount cialis
cialis generic
generic cialis from india
cheap cialis sale online
cialis daily
cialis reviews
cialis generico
how can i take cialis
cheap cialis si
cialis vs viagra
levitra
generic levitra
levitra attorneys
what is better viagra or levitra
viagra cialis levitra
levitra side effects
buy levitra
levitra online
levitra dangers
how does levitra work
levitra lawyers
what is the difference between levitra and viagra
levitra versus viagra
which works better viagra or levitra
buy levitra and overnight shipping
levitra vs viagra
canidan pharmacies levitra
how long does levitra last
viagra cialis levitra
levitra acheter
comprare levitra
levitra ohne rezept
levitra 20mg
levitra senza ricetta
cheapest generic levitra
levitra compra
cheap levitra
levitra overnight
levitra generika
levitra kaufen
Categories: Software
Comments RSS feed | Trackback URI




Hi Matt. A few years ago I worked on an internal corporate ESB, which eventually was donated to JBoss/RH and became the seed codebase used for JBoss ESB. From this experience, I can tell you that we had a major disconnect between the I.T team who was clearly excited to be able to donate this code, and the corporate lawyers who made us go through the equivalent of the Bataan Death March to actually get the IP rights signed over. Finally with a little properly placed pressure points we were successful. If it wasn’t for perseverance from a small set of key people, it never would have happened. Corporate legal at this company, and I suspect it would be the same in a lot of other places, just has no idea what open source is and how we benefit from it, and how to contribute to it. We were heavy consumers of open source, having created a large linux farm to replace the mainframe. We also used PostGreSQL and JBoss as part of our core infrastructure for J2EE application deployment. So we were eager and happy consumers of open source, saving lots of $ in upfront license costs, and in many cases forcing the large vendor usually servicing us to give us substantial discounts on our traditional support agreements so we would not dump them all together.
Had this donation of code not been donated to JBoss, it would certainly be a dead piece of old code someplace in an SVN repo. Now, it’s a thriving and successful open source project, with many many enhancements and contributions way above what this company would have been able to do by itself.
Thanks for the insight Daniel. I suspect you are right and the situation you describe is matched in most corporates. Aviva Canada is an example of how things can change however. It would be good to investigate the development further at some stage.
[...] 451 CAOS Theory » Is social responsibility the key to corporate contributions? Comments by Matthew Aslett about Free Software and Corporate Social Responsibilty (tags: corporate+social+responsibility fsfi index free+software business+ethics free+software+business) [...]
[...] wrote recently about the issue of increasing corporate contributions to open source. It strikes me that [...]
[...] the publication of Oracle’s Corporate Citizenship Report reminded me of this suggestion from earlier in the year that corporate and social responsibility might be key to encouraging [...]