While I agree with the sentiment, I doubt the engineering. What OSE is doing is small-scale, MAYBE village level stuff. It will take decades to work out the kinks in the system so that it works at the village level. I do not forsee OSE scaling up to city-sized endeavors. The basic principles of open source technology might scale, but the implementation will be very different.
As far as I know (and I'm not an expert) utilities and infrastructure are already effectively open source. If a city wants to build a train they can just go look at a bunch of trains in other cities and copy what worked. I don't think anyone keeps that stuff secret. They just don't talk about it becuase it's incredibly boring.
The issue isn't the engineering tools not being available. The issue is that everyone, particularly politicians, thinks in "for profit" terms. Open source is basically just a service-oriented charity activity. It doesn't pay the bills. Anyone who is going to design or operate the infrastructure for an entire city is going to want to get paid and paid well. Otherwise they'll go do something else that pays. The potential exists for an open source approach to become a requirement that governments adhere to because it is more efficient, transparent and in the public interest. However, open source has not proven itself yet.
I suppose if OSE's experimental village works it will go a long way towards justifying experimentation on a larger scale.
"Recognizing that capitalism is a system rather than the default condition in the absence of a system reveals the possibility of other systems that share this organic character but lack the disastrous disadvantages of capitalism.) In other words, our attempts to manage our ecology too often resemble petrochemical monoculture rather than organic mixed farming."
> It could easily be that I'm misunderstanding, but I have to disagree with that. The fundamental component of capitalism is an exchange of goods and services that defines a value and is such an inescapable function that it can't possibly be optional. For better or worse, externalities will always be difficult, if not impossible, to price into the market. We can't care about what we don't perceive as affecting us. Calling this a "problem" is kind of like calling gravity a problem. There's no point in categorizing it that way because there's no "solution." the tragedy of the commons is not something that can be "fixed."
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