Two Harvard economists have built a model to elucidate the battle between Windows and Linux. There’s an interesting interview with the authors in which they discuss their findings.
Their conclusion?
Our main result is that in the absence of cost asymmetries and as long as Windows has a first-mover advantage (a larger installed base at time zero), Linux never displaces Windows of its leadership position. This result holds true regardless of the strength of Linux’s demand-side learning. Furthermore, the result persists regardless of the intrinsically better design and potential differential value of Linux. In other words, harnessing demand-side learning more efficiently is not sufficient for Linux to win the competitive battle against Windows.Having obtained this basic result, we investigate the conditions that will warrant that Linux ends up forcing Windows out. We do this by modifying the model in two ways. First of all, we look at the effect of having buyers such as governments and some large corporations committed to deployment of Linux in their organizations. We call such buyers strategic. In addition to cost-related reasons, governments back Linux because having access to the source code allows them to verify that sensitive data is treated securely. Binary code makes it hard to figure out who has access to information flowing in a network. Companies such as IBM, in contrast, back Linux because they see in OSS one way to diminish Microsoft’s dominance. We find that the presence of strategic buyers together with Linux’s sufficiently strong demand-side learning results in Windows being driven out of the market. This may be one main reason why Microsoft has been providing chunks of Windows’ source code to governments.
Second, we look at the role of cost asymmetries. In the base model we assume that the cost structures of Windows and Linux for the development, distribution, and support of software coincide. A natural question is then whether the central result that Windows survives in the long-run equilibrium regardless of the speed of Linux’s demand-side learning persists if there are cost asymmetries. We find that because OSS implies lower profits for Microsoft, the larger the cost differences are between Linux and Windows, the less able Microsoft is to guarantee the survival of Windows.
We also show that it is not all bad news to Microsoft. We analyze the effect of having forward-looking buyers and the presence of piracy, and conclude that both benefit Microsoft.
They also come to the counter-intuitive conclusion that piracy actually helps Microsoft!
In addition to this main result, we were also surprised to find that piracy may end up increasing Microsoft’s profits. To understand why, notice that there are two types of pirates: those who would not have bought Windows in the first place because it is too expensive, and those who would have bought Windows but now decide to pirate it. The first category increases Windows’ installed base without affecting sales. As a consequence, this group increases the value of Windows. And thanks to these pirates, Microsoft is able to set higher prices in the future (because the value of the system goes up). In addition, having these pirates means that Linux’s installed base does not grow as much as it would have if piracy weren’t there. The second type of pirates (those who in the absence of piracy would have bought Windows) reduces Windows’ sales and profit. Thus, if the proportion of first-type pirates is sufficiently large, Microsoft’s profits will increase with piracy…
Like all mathematical models, this one may turn out to be flawed, partly because it ignores variables that cannot easily be quantified. It’s also likely to prove irrelevant because it assumes that computing will continue to be platform- rather than network-based. But it’s interesting to see how economists approach the subject.
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3 Responses
renan
14|Sep|2006 1I think I will be flamed for this, but for me, piracy works as a large “marketing strategy” for Microsoft.
Once they have their “customer” base, they can push anti-piracy systems and the users will buy Windows.
Chris Lowe
23|Sep|2006 2The findings don’t surprise me - I’ve been saying the same thing (albeit without the research) for 6 months or more - since arriving in China.
There are many ways that Microsoft could discourage piracy, but if they stopped Chinese people using pirated copies of Windows, Linux would become the number 1 OS overnight. Chinese companies and private individuals will not, now or in the near future, pay for Windows, because they can not afford to. At the same time, there is a very large surge in computer literacy here. Mix those two factors with strong anti-piracy measures, and there would be a large scale defection to free OSes. The development of Linux would gather pace, and become even more viable an alternative in the first world.
China is just an extreme example of the importance of piracy in market share. If we consider GIMP vs. Photoshop, I believe that there is a similar marketing strategy; don’t make piracy too difficult, because many people simply won’t pay the price for Photoshop, and would switch to the GIMP. The GIMP is already almost as powerful as Photoshop: an large influx of users would give it an extra boost.
The fear of theses companies is not that their product will be pirated, but that they will lose the cash cows, the companies and individuals who *do* buy their product, because they have too much to lose if they are caught with pirated software. There is a low risk of discovery for pirates, linked up with catastrophic fines should the software company choose to sue the pirate. Individuals can take the risk, but businesses can not.
In contrast, more computer games are implementing piracy protection, because they make their money from the individual gamers, rather than large corporate licenses. They implement unique passwords verified by a central server, or insist on the installation media being kept in the computer.
I can not see Microsoft strongly pushing anti-piracy measures in the short-term. With the growth of Linux, Apple’s continuing development, and economic conditions in China and India, it would be suicidal.
Gadget Guy
06|Jun|2007 3“Once they have their “customer” base, they can push anti-piracy systems ”
This is how Cubase (the most used software in the recording industry) got a big user base back in the old atari days - by letting pirate copy’s slip out - it has not done them any harm
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