• Touching_Grass@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I fell in love with may cease to exist, and in its place, we will have something closer to a souped-up version of TV – focused largely on passive consumption, with much less opportunity for active participation and genuine human connection

    Amen

    Seriously bugs me to think how there’s an aging generation that didn’t grow up with all this commercialized internet and they built it on principals like open source and to eliminate things like data scarcity. But now there’s a generation that knows nothing but commercialization and seems to support putting everything behind paywalls and hopes to one day commercialize themselves if they’re lucky.

    But what is really scary is watching guys like Richard Stallman get sick without any replacement.

    • stella@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Stallman has done his part and more.

      It’s up to us to carry on his legacy.

    • Carlos Solís@communities.azkware.net
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      1 year ago

      Here’s the point, he probably should not be replaced as-is. His trademark stubbornness has gotten the free software community in trouble before, and while admittedly that same stubbornness is what has allowed the FSF to persist in the face of corporate attacks over the years, that same stubbornness has also prevented the FSF from having a firmer standing in the software community, due to its own ideological purism and reluctance to collaborate with less strict actors like the Open Source Foundation. During the time where Stallman was temporarily banned from the FSF, I could see an ideological move towards leniency. Before Stallman left, they kept complaining about users that didn’t quit the entirety of proprietary software cold-turkey (and socially isolated themselves as a direct result). After Stallman left, though, they started to go for an approach they call the “freedom ladder”, where they request people to start using as much free software as they viably can.

      But if he absolutely has to be replaced as-is, it’s incredibly difficult to find somebody with the same degree of insistence. Eben Moglen was, in my opinion, the most viable candidate, but sadly he was recently outed as an abusive employer.