Open Source Software is probably the world’s largest collective experiment in organized chaos: a borderless network of volunteers, companies, and organizations who build and maintain a bunch of applications that form digital modern life.
This article comes at the perfect time, building so well on your previous antifragility piece, which I truely loved. It makes me wonder if applying these open-source governance lessons to other complex systems, like the development of large AI models, is even remotely feasible, given the inherent human elements involved.
Hey Rainbow Roxy. Thanks for the kind words and your comment. I am not sure I understand how you mean "given the inherent human elements involved" could you please elaborate.
Now as far as the Open Source Governance styles are concerned, we find some of them frequently in Inner Source Software development as well. About AI / LLMs, if the project is Open or Inner Source, its governance could also follow one of these styles.
This article comes at the perfect time, building so well on your previous antifragility piece, which I truely loved. It makes me wonder if applying these open-source governance lessons to other complex systems, like the development of large AI models, is even remotely feasible, given the inherent human elements involved.
Hey Rainbow Roxy. Thanks for the kind words and your comment. I am not sure I understand how you mean "given the inherent human elements involved" could you please elaborate.
Now as far as the Open Source Governance styles are concerned, we find some of them frequently in Inner Source Software development as well. About AI / LLMs, if the project is Open or Inner Source, its governance could also follow one of these styles.