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DATE | 2006-05-24 |
FROM | Ruben Safir
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SUBJECT | Re: [Balug-talk] [rick@linuxmafia.com: Re: [NYLXS - HANGOUT] Its a sorry day for The Linux?Journal]
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On Tue, May 23, 2006 at 11:14:06PM -0700, Rick Moen wrote: > Ruben kindly forwarded a second post from Richard: > > >> I (continue to) dispute my friend Richard's assertion that the open > >> source movement has only practical (pragmatic) goals. It has in my > >> experience the same goals as does the free software movement -- but uses > >> differing marketing terminology to advance those goals. > >> > > Your experience is very different from mine. > > > > In my experience, statements that advocate "open source" cite only > > practical goals, such as making software powerful and reliable. They > > argue that software which is not open source is likely not to be > > powerful and reliable; but when confronted with the non-free program > > which IS powerful and reliable, they have no criticism to make. > > Actually, this subtly but fundamentally changes the subject on the fly. > > Please note carefully what I said: I said that in my experience the > _goals_ are the same, but different marketing terminology gets used. > You then cite "statements that advocate" -- but those are, in fact, the > aforementioned marketing terminology. You essentially conflated goals > with tactics, there. Thus, you didn't actually compare our experience > (of the matter under discussion). > > My apples were indeed not orange -- but the oranges were in a different > produce bin. ;-> > > As to "having no criticism to make" when confronted with a powerful and > reliable non-free codebase, I find that difficult to believe. Not being > an open-source advocate, I nonetheless think I can simulate one at need: > > Proprietary package $foo is claimed to be powerful and reliable, > but that is a mirage: $foo can be maintained and developed only > as long as its owner permits, and can be adapted only to situations > and needs he/she authorises. The owner may retire to the country > and take up beekeeping tomorrow; $foo then becomes unmaintainable > abandonware. Our computing needs to be planned not just for today, > but for a variety of tomorrows. Something that potentially has the > remaining development life of a... mayfly is not "reliable" in any > meaningful sense, and it's "power" cannot safely be relied on. > We're much smarter to rely on open source alternative $bar, whose > advances may not have quite reached $foo's, but unlike $foo's are > ours permanently, and lack the unacceptable restrictive baggage. > > Any resemblance to Prof. D.J. Bernstein's primary offerings is strictly > intentional. > > > > To mention one real example, consider the question, "If you are > > developing a free program, and you find that a non-free version > > control system helps you do the work, should you use it?" Torvalds > > answered that question "yes" a few years ago. I would be surprised if > > the OSI web site presents any argument to the contrary. > > An argument from the standpoint of lack of evidence, especially on a > matter not within OSI's purview in the first place, seems an amazingly > weak one. > > That aside, it should be nonetheless noted that, when McVoy approached > OSI on the subject in 1999, they made a special point of giving him a > ringingly unwelcoming response: > http://lwn.net/1999/features/BitKeeper.php3 > > Note the limits thereof: OSI made absolutely crystal clear that > BitKeeper, even under its original and less-noxious licence, was not > within a country mile of being open source per their DFSG-equivalent > definition. And then they stopped there, because that's where the scope > of their concern ended. > > OSI are not the people I would look to for crusading pursuit of freedom > _per se_, but in General Semantics terms the map of their promised > land's territory seems to pretty much exactly match yours. > > > Another real example is, "Should you add non-free drivers, programming > > platforms, and apps to GNU/Linux distributions?" The free software > > movement says, "No, because non-free software is unethical." By > > contrast, supporters of open source typically consider their inclusion > > a positive feature. > > Oh, now you're defining "[typical] supporters of open source" to fit > your rhetorical needs of the moment. > > First, you're being vague: Which "supporters", specifically? > Proprietary-software corporations and patent-constrained hardware > manufacturers who would happen to find that outcome convenient? That > seems more than a little facile. Second, any idea that is to be judged > by a selective subset of its casual adherents is in deep trouble. You > cannot fairly draw a conclusion about the idea's merits from _that_. > > Third, you're replicating the careless error of that other guy on this > mailing list who (badly) quoted Torvalds as supposedly being an obvious > spokesman for open source (when he has in fact not purported to do that > at all): You're rather blatantly disregarding the _truly_ obvious > spokesmen for that movement -- the people who for almost a decade have > _been_ the literal spokesmen: If you're trying to establish that such > statements are characteristic of open source, then where are the > quotations to that effect from OSI Board members and official spokemen? > Larry Rosen? Russell Nelson? Michael Tiemann? > > I don't think you can, because I know to one degree or another all of > those people and most of the others, and your portrayal simply does not > reflect their views. > > _______________________________________________ > balug-talk mailing list > balug-talk-at-lists.balug.org > http://lists.balug.org/listinfo.cgi/balug-talk-balug.org
-- __________________________ Brooklyn Linux Solutions
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DRM is THEFT - We are the STAKEHOLDERS - RI Safir 2002 http://fairuse.nylxs.com
"Yeah - I write Free Software...so SUE ME"
http://www.mrbrklyn.com - Consulting http://www.inns.net <-- Happy Clients http://www.nylxs.com - Leadership Development in Free Software http://www2.mrbrklyn.com/resources - Unpublished Archive or stories and articles from around the net http://www2.mrbrklyn.com/downtown.html - See the New Downtown Brooklyn....
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