Topic: Free Software as Externality Overview: Free market economic theory relies on all costs being accounted for in the price of a good, and all benefits being appreciated in the purchase of a good. For many products, the free market adjusts the price without intervention. For some products, there are significant externalities. Externalities are costs or benefits that are a by-product of the manufacturing process, which are not reflected in the final product. An example of a negative externality is pollution. It does not cost British Petroleum as much to pump waste into a river as it gains from the manufacturing that produces that waste. The government balances negative externalities with taxes - through the EPA in the case of pollution. This increases the manufacturing cost of the good to reflect the cost to society of the externality. An example of a positive externality is Free Software. Companies that are not in the software business, and have no easy way of selling their software by-products should be encouraged to externalize the value of that software. For our free market economy to function efficiently, companies should receive tax credits for publishing by-product software under a Free Software license. -------------------------------------------------------------------- "We need commonsense judges who understand that our rights were derived from God. Those are the kind of judges I intend to put on the bench." President George W. Bush, 27 June 2002 http://www.nando.net/politics/story/453192p-3627921c.html "no religious Test shall ever be required" Constitution Article 6 http://www.law.emory.edu/FEDERAL/usconst/art-6.html --------------------------------------------------------------------