Seven Concerns Open Source Should Worry About: Part 2 – Antitrust

Posted by Andy_Updegrove on Jul 26, 2019 2:52 AM EDT
ConsortiumInfo.org Standards Blog; By Andy Updegrove
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It's easy to imagine that regulators should love free and open source software. After all, anyone can adopt it, change it, and distribute it. But that's not the only way to assess its impact on innovation.

Free and open source software (FOSS) development has for many years enjoyed an increasingly positive public image. Particularly in the last several years, it’s become recognized as the foundation upon which most of the modern computing world rests. FOSS proponents include many governments, too, including many in Europe and the European Commission itself.

That’s all good and quite appropriate, but it’s worth keeping in mind that FOSS involves the conscious agreement of head to head competitors to work towards a common result – something that would otherwise normally be a red flag to antitrust regulators in the US, competition authorities in Europe, and to many of their peers throughout the world. To date, those regulators do not seem to have expressed any concerns over FOSS development generally. But that can change.

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