Great talk about the status of Open Source. It starts off by talking about a developer leaving an open source project.

  • @saidg23
    link
    52 years ago

    It seems everyone is missing the point of free software entirely and also don’t understand value and economics.

    The point of free software is to make software that respects users freedoms. It does not exclude anyone including corporations. If you don’t want your stuff being used this way don’t use a free software license or dual license it.

    Even if you sold it in the first place you are not entitled to the value that that person or entity made with it unless you signed a contract saying so. All this talk about market value and fair compensation is nonsense. If they got paid for the work do they then owe the people who wrote the tools they used to create the software? How about the people who created the text editor they use or the people who created the programming language they used? You can keep going and find all the places were they used things other people made that they never even think twice about compensating.

    If you can’t afford to maintain a project because of a lack of funding then just stop doing it. simple as that. You don’t owe anyone anything.

    • @obbeelOP
      link
      22 years ago

      What you are saying is fine, until this:

      “What’s referred to as the open source sustainability problem has played out on a large scale where companies like Amazon have been accused of co-opting open source projects to stifle smaller competitors like Elasticsearch and MongoDB.”

      Companies are using open source to end smaller companies. There should be protection, practical and written, against that. At least the smaller companies should be the ones benefitting from it.

      • @saidg23
        link
        62 years ago

        This is not a problem with FOSS. It’s an economic system issue. I don’t see how paying FOSS developers more solves this particular problem. What people need to do is stop using proprietary software and relying on mega corporations like Amazon out of convenience, or at least perceived convenience.