[AISWorld] Deadline extended: MCIS 2010: Information Economics & Business

Daphne Raban draban at gsb.haifa.ac.il
Fri Apr 23 01:15:40 EDT 2010


Dear Colleagues,

We would like to invite you to submit a paper to the MCIS 2010 conference
(http://www.mcis2010.org) and particularly to our track on Information
Economics and Business.  A description of the track is included below.

 

Important dates:

Deadline for all submissions: May 15, 2010

Notification of acceptance: July 1, 2010

Camera-ready versions: July 15, 2010

Conference: September 12-14, 2010

 

5th Mediterranean Conference on Information Systems - MCIS 2010

Tel Aviv, Israel, September 2010

Track proposal

 

Track title: Information Economics and Business 

 

 

Track description: 

 

Information is a constant challenge to economic theory and business
practice. It is ubiquitous and still hard to find on demand, over-abundant
and still insufficiently available to decision-makers, subject to private
ownership while it is, by nature, meant to be free. The increased
digitization of information and the rise of the Internet as key medium that
accommodates it as both "stocks" and "flows" account for a wide range of
innovative developments in managing information at large. The Economics of
Information, born as a stand-alone discipline in the pre-digital phase of
the post-industrial age, is now facing the challenge of shaping the
underlying rationalities applicable to dealing with information across
organizations, markets, communities and networks. 

 

Organizational boundaries are blurred when it comes to information systems.
Technologies that were conceived in the public domain find their way to
organizational applications. Systems that were previously well-defined
products are turning more and more into service models which are provided by
external suppliers.  How do companies monetize previously non-marketable
technologies or information resources?  How do decision makers evaluate such
systems and resources?  Are the known business models sufficient or are new
models needed to sustain the technological and cultural changes brought
about by the advent of creative industries and the rise of the creative
class?  These are some of the questions that this track wishes to address.

 

We invite submissions of papers (academic and practical, full research and
research-in-progress) dealing with, but not limited to, the following:

IS investment decisions

IS performance and ROI

New information business models 

Information markets

Innovative pricing of digital goods

The value of information

Web 2.0-based collaborative economy

Proprietary vs. Open Source Software 

Digital information: fee or free ?

 

We look forward to receiving your submissions.

 

Daphne Raban and Horatiu Dragomirescu

 

 

Daphne Raban, Ph.D.
School of Management and C.R.I.
University of Haifa
draban at gsb.haifa.ac.il
http://gsb.haifa.ac.il/~draban/home

http://ci.haifa.ac.il

 

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