177 research outputs found
Informational Hold-Up, Disclosure Policy, and Career Concerns on theExample of Open Source Software Development
We consider software developers who can either work on an open source
project or on a closed source project. The former provides a publicly
available signal about their talent, whereas the latter provides a
signal only observed by their employer. We show that a talented employee
may initially prefer a less paying job as an open source developer to
commercial closed source projects, because a publicly available signal
gives him a better bargaining position when renegotiating wages with his
employer after the signal has been revealed. Also, we derive conditions
under which two effects suggested by standard intuition are reversed: a
'pooling equilibrium' (with both talented and untalented workers doing
closed source) is less likely if differences in talent are large; a
highly visible open source job leads to more effort in a career concerns
setup. The former effect is because a higher productivity of talented
workers raises not only the value but also the cost of signaling; the
latter stems from more effort and the choice of a high visibility job
being substitutes for the purpose of signaling. Results naturally apply
to other industries with high and low visibility jobs, e.g. academic
rather than commercial research, consulting rather than management
Social Ties and User Generated Content: Evidence from an Online Social Network
We use variation in wind speeds at surfing locations in Switzerland as
exogenous shifters of users' propensity to post content about their
surfing activity onto an online social network. We exploit this
variation to test whether users' social ties on the network have a
causal effect on their content generation, and whether conent generation
in turn has a similar causal effect on the users' abilty to form social
ties. Economically significant causal effects of this kind can produce
positive feedback that generate multiplier e¤ects to
interventions that subsidize tie formation. We argue these interventions
can therefore be the basis of a strategy by the rm to indirectly
faciliate content generation on the site. The exogenous variation
provided by wind speeds enable us to measure this feedback empirically
and to assess the return on investment from such policies. We use a
detailed dataset from an online social network that comprises the
complete details of social tie formation and content generation on the
site. The richness of he data enable us to control for several spurious
confounds that have typically plagued empirical analysis of social
interactions. Our results show evidence for significant positive
feedback in user generated content. We discuss the implications of the
estimates for the management of the content and the growth of the network
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