Venkatesh Hariharan (Venky)

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Venkatesh Hariharan is Corporate Affairs Director (Asia-Pacific) at Red Hat. In this role, he works with industry, academia, government and the community to accelerate the growth of the global open source movement. In 2006, he was awarded the "Indian Open Source Personality of the Year" by the organizers of Linux Asia 2006.
Hariharan is a former Executive Editor of Express Computer and the first
Indian to be selected for the prestigious Knight Science Journalism
Fellowship (1998-99) at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. As a
Knight Fellow, Hariharan spent a year looking at cutting edge
technologies that can be deployed for bridging the digital divide.
During his stint at Express Computer, he imparted a dynamic news
orientation to the magazine. He has interviewed some of the leading
figures in the world of technology including Microsoft's Bill Gates,
John Gage of Sun Microsystems, Stan Shih of the Acer Group and many
others. He has written for leading Indian and international publications
including MIT Technology Review, Upside, Slashdot, Economic Times, Times of India and others.
After his stint at MIT, Hariharan co-founded of IndLinux.org, one of the
leading localization groups in the India subcontinent. IndLinux.org has
localized the GNOME and KDE interface of Linux to Hindi and other Indian languages. IndLinux.org has helped localization groups in India, Bhutan, Nepal and other countries localize Linux and other open source software to their native languages.
Hariharan believes that open source and free software are powerful tools to empower emerging economies with the benefits of information technology. He has advocated the adoption of open source and open standards in emerging economies for political, cultural and economic reasons through his writing and his speeches.
His long term interest is in the area of technology and public policy. He maintains a blog on open source and open standards at http://www.osindia.blogspot.com.

Authored Comments

Contrarian, I'd be interested in your take after you have read the resources listed below.

"Innovation and Its Discontents: How Our Broken Patent System Is Endangering Innovation and Progress, and What to Do About It" (Princeton, 2004).

http://www.pupress.princeton.edu/chapters/i7810.html

Patent Failure: How Judges, Bureaucrats, and Lawyers Put Innovators at Risk

http://www.researchoninnovation.org/dopatentswork/

Venky

I couldn't have said it better, though I would have phrased it differently. And I cannot help repeating my disclaimer that I am not interested in value judgments of Indian or America societies. The larger debate is striking the right balance between "intellectual property" and "knowledge commons."