So, these takes that Mullenweg is threatening the foss movement itself....
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Clifford Adamsreplied to Clifford Adams last edited by
@polotek @jenniferplusplus
Some legal restrictions are a good, even necessary thing for large projects--imagine if any random person could trademark the "Python" programming language. With Jennifer's proposal it could be clear when a project is changing governance as it grows, and avoid unpleasant surprises later.
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@wikicliff @jenniferplusplus all of these things require people to do actual work. It's not for lack of knowing what to do. It's lack of people showing up to make sure it happens. Everybody is hoping somebody else will do it for them. And in this case, everyone was happy to leave it to Matt and assume he was doing something reasonable.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
That was timely
The Stallman report
Comprehensive report detailing Richard Stallman's political program in defense of sexual violence, allegations of misconduct, and the misconduct of the Free Software Foundation
The Stallman report (stallman-report.org)
This was an awkward thread to write, because the FSF is the obvious party that *should* be providing the kind of support and guidance the foss movement needs. We need responsible stewards. We need tools to perform that stewardship. And we need to learn to recognize it's absence. The FSF should have built those things. But instead they've rejected the premise that stewardship even exists, and they've frozen the movement in the 1990s.
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@jenniferplusplus I think it's ok to pay especial attention here because one of the grounds on which some of us have been selling open source is that it *averts* problems like this. "You can always just fork it" and so on. We're now obligated to prove that true, I think.
If someone tried to argue this is a unique problem with open source well no, that's wrong, if anything open source just makes the problem more plain because the dynamics aren't hidden inside a corporationβ
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@jenniferplusplus βbut a softer statement like "does this threaten open source as a movement" well maybe it does!, because if freedom from the effects of bad governance is an advantage of open source and that *evaporates*, then it raises the question of whether open source can compete with commercial software on its remaining merits.
Overall I think it makes more sense to focus on the WP case than the Oracle/Twitter case, because the WP case we have the power to change (because of open source)
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@jenniferplusplus this said, I *have* been both avoiding Oracle for years and pointing at cases like Oracle for years to argue "this is why you cannot trust any software unless it is open source"
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Lawrence Pritchard Waterhousereplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
@jenniferplusplus "on github"?? rotflbtc
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Boo Ramsey π§π»ββοΈπ§ββοΈπ»πreplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
@jenniferplusplus @jordan Speaking of, I think the organizations that exist who could/should provide these resources (e.g., OSI, Software Freedom Conservancy, FSF, etc.) largely see themselves only as arbiters (or, rather, stewards) of licensing.
The Linux Foundation appears to go beyond licensing support to provide training and continuity for its member projects.
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@mcc Sure, I've also avoided oracle whenever I had any say in the matter. But Oracle's bad behavior wasn't painted as an existential threat to proprietary software.
To your point about the supposed benefits of open source. I hope people weren't presenting it as giving freedom from the effects of bad governance. Because it absolutely doesn't, and never could. We're living through those effects right now, after all.
What it does do, is empower us to know about and fix bad governance.
1/
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
@mcc
But, that's not a power the movement has had any practice or support in exercising. That's the ultimate problem. There wasn't a common understanding that WP was vulnerable to Mullenweg's whims. Or that this was a risky situation for the project. And there certainly wasn't a common understanding of what to do about it, even if some critical mass of people had realized.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
Apparently I need to clarify this github remark? For some reason?
https://hachyderm.io/@jenniferplusplus/113302317130502287I'm not proposing that github should play a role in deciding what good governance looks like. I'm proposing that FOSS institutions and advocates would do that. And I'm proposing that they would teach people to recognize it and care about it, to the point that github would feel pressured to surface that information in a structured way.
If you read that in a different way... I dunno. But stop it.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Lawrence Pritchard Waterhouse last edited by
@lpwaterhouse
https://hachyderm.io/@jenniferplusplus/113307107949579137I have no idea what you're trying to say with this keysmash. If you want to try again, you have one chance to engage with my actual point before I block you.
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@jenniferplusplus could governance be enshrined in the license? Like, you agree that your forks also abide by such and such agreed upon structure for governing the project. Maybe it's worth keeping those things separate? I don't know. Ugh. It's so hard
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@Scmbradley honestly, no. We've gone as far as licenses can take us. We need to stop giving them this level of attention.
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to Boo Ramsey π§π»ββοΈπ§ββοΈπ»π last edited by
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hamish campbellreplied to Jenniferplusplus last edited by
@jenniferplusplus we talked about this a lot here https://socialhub.activitypub.rocks/search?q=OGB then the implementation never happened and is now #blocked by passive negativity.
This is a bad history to this, which we need to look at as we develop new paths so as not to repeat #techchun
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Jenniferplusplusreplied to hamish campbell last edited by
@hamishcampbell that link doesn't go anywhere