The Digital Business Ecosystem (DBE)
Dates
Start date: 1 November 2003
End date: 31 October 2007
Summary
The two overarching objectives of the DBE project are to provide Europe with a recognised advantage
in innovative software application development by its small and medium-sized enterprises (software
producer SMEs) and to achieve greater information and communication technology (ICT) adoption by
SMEs in general. The DBE will achieve these objectives by adopting a multi-disciplinary approach
based on biology, physics, business and social sciences mechanisms and models to develop an
open-source distributed environment that can support the spontaneous evolution and composition of
(not necessarily open-source) software services, components, and applications. DBE transposes
mechanisms from living organisms like evolution, adaptation, autonomy, viability, introspection,
knowledge sharing, and self-organisation, to arrive at novel architectures and technologies, business
processes, and knowledge, thus creating a network of digital business ecosystems for SMEs and
software providers to improve their value networks and foster local economic development.
Objectives
Four areas of research encompassed by the DBE project are: 1) ICT transfer and adoption, training,
ethnography, etc.; 2) business modelling; 3) Computer Science, Software Engineering and enabling
technologies (web services, software agents, distributed architectures, ontologies, etc); and 4)
fundamental models (Maths, Physics, Biology, AI). One of the outputs of the project will be an opensource,
component-based software infrastructure that will act as a commons to support the
evolutionary optimisation of software services for SMEs. This digital infrastructure will fit the local
cultural identities and socio-economic needs of SMEs to support their participation in regional and
sectorial innovation clusters. The DBE will change the way SMEs and EU software providers use and
distribute their products and services. It will allow SMEs to link enterprise-wide external resources
and value networks, and to allocate them based on their business goals and priorities. The DBE is
based on the key finding that with such an evolutionary and self-organising system Europe could
harness the complexity of software production and its SME software industry could regain
competitiveness in the market.
Funding
EU FP6 (IST-2002-507953)

