Moritz Sinn wrote:
- all i want to say is: i doubt that free software will ever be more than a market niche in our economy. i already explained the reasons and the fact that the knowledge is shared and because of that the product would be cheaper doesn't change it. you can also reuse proprietary software and if sharing knowledge would make economic sense, then why is "intellectual property" (intellectual monopoly) more important today then ever before?
(Because economy and even society is more and more dictated by lawyers who are the ones who gain most from it?)
why do all companys keep their knowledge secret, why are new laws inveted to stop us from sharing our wisdom? economy would never be so stupid to demand something which is bad for itself!
I think you confuse what's better for the single company (in a given environment) and what's better for all. For a single company, it may have advantages to keep their knowledge secret, though it harms others. So if all do it, all will lose in total. (That's a basic principle, see "prisoner's dilemma".)
And it's one of the basic problems of capitalism, also in other areas. Capitalism wants companies to be selfish, selfish companies try to grow until they reach a monopoly, and a monopoly means no competition which is the basic idea of capitalism. (Very simplified, of course.) That's no proof that capitalism can't work (that would be a discussion for other places), just shows that you have to be careful with terms like "economic sense".
Frank