Sustainability in Open Source Software Commons: Lessons Learned from an Empirical Study of SourceForge Projects

In this article, we summarize a five-year US National Science Foundation funded study designed to investigate the factors that lead some open source projects to ongoing collaborative success while many others become abandoned. Our primary interest was to conduct a study that was closely representati...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Charles M. Schweik
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Carleton University 2013-01-01
Series:Technology Innovation Management Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://timreview.ca/sites/default/files/article_PDF/Schweik_TIMReview_January2013.pdf
Description
Summary:In this article, we summarize a five-year US National Science Foundation funded study designed to investigate the factors that lead some open source projects to ongoing collaborative success while many others become abandoned. Our primary interest was to conduct a study that was closely representative of the population of open source software projects in the world, rather than focus on the more-often studied, high-profile successful cases. After building a large database of projects (n=174,333) and implementing a major survey of open source developers (n=1403), we were able to conduct statistical analyses to investigate over forty theoretically-based testable hypotheses. Our data firmly support what we call the conventional theory of open source software, showing that projects start small, and, in successful cases, grow slightly larger in terms of team size. We describe the “virtuous circle” supporting conventional wisdom of open source collaboration that comes out of this analysis, and we discuss two other interesting findings related to developer motivations and how team members find each other. Each of these findings is related to the sustainability of these projects.
ISSN:1927-0321