Main Page

From Hacker Innovation: Redefinition and Examination of Outlaw Sources of Generativity for Future Product Development Strategies (2014) by Mike Pinder
Revision as of 12:04, 26 April 2016 by Mikepinder (Talk | contribs)

Jump to: navigation, search

Welcome

Welcome to the Hacker Innovation Wiki. It has been created to discuss a term in detail coined 'Hacker Innovation'. I am currently putting together this work in progress monograph: Hackers and Innovation: Redefinition and Examination of Outlaw Sources of Generativity for Future Product Development Strategies (2014) by Mike Pinder and this wiki is a place for others to critically discuss and contribute to the topic if they wish.

Please note, this is work in progress and I will be adding, updating, editing and revising sections based on new research, observations and feedback over time.

Feedback

How to leave feedback?

Feedback is central and very welcome to this work and I have included a comments section at the bottom of each page.

Contact: You can also get in touch here or with me via LinkedIn here. Thanks for reading!

Hackers-and-innovation-mike-pinder-3a.png

Hackers and Innovation: Redefinition and Examination of Outlaw Sources of Generativity for Future Product Development Strategies (2014) by Mike Pinder

Key Summary

Hacker-innovation-featured-image.png

If you don't want to read the entire monograph, you can read a summary of the key takeaways and points as a manifesto here.

E-Book & PDF Version

Hackers-and-innovation-epub-pdf-book111.png

Purchase E-Book (ePub & PDF) Version

You can read the monograph for free online here or you can purchase an ePub and PDF version for your smartphone, tablet, laptop or desktop e-reader.

Add-basket-version.png

Start Reading Online

Preface

The current world political climate, post-economic crisis and creative industry’s aggressive responses to new disruptive technologies and innovations are forcing governments and policy makers around the World to re-address the effectiveness, suitability and relevance of long established institutions in a digitally connected and distributed World. In the pursuit of economic growth, IP holders, distribution networks and content creators appropriate rents from internally generated or proprietary property but at the same time encroach upon strongly held ethics and values within the hacker landscape, in some cases reaching a critical intersection where the boundaries between open and proprietary developed property have become blurred with divergent goals, politics, interests, morals and power. As a result globally distributed hacker teams emerge and operate at the fringes, self-organising, governing and even innovating. The aim being open and unrestricted generation of higher, more relevant value peaks than those developed internally by firms restricted by and locked into tight internal product development cycles. This monograph is an in depth discussion of this complex environment, its origins, its dynamics and its impact between firm and hacker led innovation where the two can co-exist in a mutually beneficial and essential form. The intention is to promote discussion, inform policy and to open up the area for future research.

Table of Contents

Introduction & Aims

1.0 Introduction

Chapter 1

1.1 Traditional Conceptions of Hacking

Chapter 2

2.1 Re-defining and Understanding True Hacking

2.2 Extant Hacker Typology

2.3 Hacker Generations and Evolution

Chapter 3

3.1 Hacker Ethics and Morals

Chapter 4

4.1 Hackers, Problem Solving and Innovation

4.2 Hacker Innovation Cycles

Chapter 5

5.1 Hacker Innovation and Consumer Artefacts

5.2 Product Innovations Designed to be Hacked

5.3 Unlocking Generativity through Hacking

Chapter 6

6.1 Implications of Hacker Innovation for Firms

6.2 Hacking and Counter-cultural Rebellion

Conclusion

7.0 Conclusion

References