{
    "href": "/post/2014/10/14/jean-tirole-and-josh-lerner-on-open-source/",
    "relId": "2014/10/14/jean-tirole-and-josh-lerner-on-open-source",
    "title": "Jean Tirole and Josh Lerner on Open Source",
    "author": "pmjones",
    "markup": "html",
    "tags": [
        {
            "href": "/tag/economics/",
            "relId": "economics",
            "title": "Economics",
            "author": null,
            "created": null,
            "updated": [],
            "markup": "markdown"
        }
    ],
    "created": "2014-10-15 02:04:58 UTC",
    "updated": [
        "2014-10-15 02:04:58 UTC"
    ],
    "html": "<blockquote><p>Tirole and Lerner noted, with a bit of puzzlement that, compared with open-source software writers, academics were less likely to make their data sources public and more likely to allow their work to be hidden behind publishers\u00e2\u0080\u0099 paywalls. I think that in those ten years there has been a shift, at least in economics, more in the direction of the open-source model.</p></blockquote>\n<p>(I had a hard time deciding if this was a \"professional\" post or an \"general interest\" post. \"General interest\" won out.)</p>\n<p>Via <a href=\"http://www.arnoldkling.com/blog/tirole-and-lerner-on-open-source/\">Jean Tirole and Josh Lerner on Open Source | askblog</a>.</p>\n"
}
