Abstract

AbstractCorporations increasingly engage with open source software communities in the co‐creation of software. This collaboration between corporate professionals and open source software community members is strikingly different from the early days of software development where for‐profit firms attempted to dominate and control the industry while attempting to throttle the success of independent developers offering an alternative, open source option. While many metaphors like trading zones, common pool resources and ecosystems have helped understand the phenomenon, the metaphors do not portray what the industry was like before and after the transition. We adopt a postcolonial metaphor as an analytical lens to examine such collaboration based on qualitative data gathered over three years from executives, managers and developers within corporations that engage in open source software development. Drawing on these insights, we then theorize a “Third Design Space,” based on the concept of the third space proposed by Bhabha. This metaphor encourages the cultivation of a new design environment, creation of new design associations and circulation of shared design resources. Together these practices and behaviours make it possible to nurture innovative methods and new rituals for designing software with results and methods that represent a distinct departure from the competitive and proprietary past, even creating innovative artefacts that could not have been created without the Third Design Space.

Highlights

  • Software development has evolved since Raymond, in 1999, unsettled the field by presenting two metaphors of the open source world, the cathedral and the bazaar

  • To examine postcolonialism as a metaphor for corporate engagement in open source software communities, we searched the empirical material consisting of all transcribed field notes found in the project repository for evidence of colonizer terms (Table 4) that were mentioned as either a legacy or current approach

  • That we have examined the meanings of cultivation, creation and circulation in the field, we turn to a discussion of how our exploration of the communal engagement with open source communities using a postcolonial lens and a metaphorical Third Design Space contribute to our understanding of corporate-communal engagement

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Summary

Introduction

Software development has evolved since Raymond, in 1999, unsettled the field by presenting two metaphors of the open source world, the cathedral and the bazaar. Gutiérrez, 2008; Heath-Kelly, 2012; Hirji, 2015; Hudson & Mountz, 2016; Krmpotich, 2016; Lam, 2018; Mcintyre & Hobson, 2016; Routledge, 1996; Saha, 2011; Severini, 2010; Tekin, 2017; Themen, 2016; Verbaan & Cox, 2014) Because of their ability to visualize a third space, Discipline Critical human geography

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