Alex Iskold wrote a very interesting article called “the danger of free“. He arguments, that the openness of the online society may have much worse results than we think or expect. He bases his thoughts on 4 reasons:

1. Free doesn’t make sense.

In the brave new world, subscription fees are gone and the salespeople are replaced by CPM advertising engines. The problem is, things are just not that simple. When the economy is bad (think 2008), then advertising is the first to be cut….The traditional subscriber base, which helps companies navigate through the economic downturns, is just not there, because it is no longer cool to charge people for the service.

I agree, that a good subscriber’s base could help a company get out of a bad situation. Being free doesn’t necessarily change that.

Openness hasn’t enabled only free services or products, it has also developed an increasing social sense of the public. Donations are not an alien practice anymore. Many bloggers have this cute ‘buy me a coffee’ button and wikipedia receives great amounts through donations.
If a company isn’t getting well, due to an economical recession, I trust its subscribers would donate to keep it working.

2. When free is dirty

While it is not clear that a lot of businesses in an economy can be supported only by advertising, we already know that free can be a powerful weapon in the hands of big companies.

Alex uses the example of IBM, which provided free services and opened the doors to sell the most expensive products and in the end created a monopoly, which led to a lack of innovation in software tools.
I don’t understand how a free tool can improve sales of another product, if these products are not combined or embedded. The Internet Explorer story is an example, yes. Microsoft embedded the online experience with its software. The IBM isn’t. As Brent posted in the comments (22nd comment):

…how can any IDE, open source or not, improve sales of commodity blade servers? It can’t.

I also don’t find it wrong, when an open source tool is so good, that there is no necessity for development. I’m not an expert, but isn’t the apache server doing this in the market too?

3. From free to an empire

In its endless quest to organize the world’s information, Google is also looking to kill off its archrival Microsoft. Just like Microsoft is going after search, Google is after one of Microsoft’s juiciest markets – Office.

A little competition never hurt anyone (almost anyone) and especially not the market and the consumers.

The point is that Google can afford to give away everything for free because of its success with search. This is being done openly now and it is just plain wrong. It is a dangerous poker game, where Google can raise stakes because it has a huge pile of cash.

And Microsoft can’t afford to give away?

4. Generation free

We are raising a generation of kids who do not want to pay monthly subscriptions for anything. Give me stuff for free and stick some advertising on it.

There I agree. It seems immoral or sold-out, to accept free stuff and accept being the ‘lab rat’ of marketing.
But I see a great difference between free products and free software. This is another field of discussion. We can’t compare hard working people buying material goods and web surfers using software. I find Friedrich Kittler’s text “There is no software” an interesting insight on the subject. (I actually suggest taking a look to more of his texts)

Conclusion

I suppose Alex’s post had on purpose a controversial structure. When the largest part of the online community advocates for openness, Alex’s post came as a big debate.

  • I’m also one of the advocates of openness (not only in software). Probably, because I trust people will give something in return – and I don’t mean money. I also believe in balance. Do something good and it will come back to you. I believe in the wisdom of the crowd.
  • The web has enabled the development of countless niches. Chris Anderson’s Long Tail explains perfectly, that each niche regardless how far in the tail it stands, receives attention. Openness has enabled users to develop more interests and to discover new possibilities.

But that’s where Alex’s thoughts are mostly intriguing. Is openness always used for a good cause?

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