On Mon, 20 Sep 2010 04:20:54 +0900
timecop <time...@gmail.com> wrote:

> And this, friends, is why people just say fuckit and stop contributing.
> Enjoy your GPL circlejerk.

THIS is why so many of us on the open source side of the fence get so upset at 
folks on the closed source side.

People stop contributing and just say "fuck it" when the manager of project, 
whatever its purpose, whether open or closed source, stops accepting bug 
reports, patches, comments, etc. and starts doing whatever he or she wants to 
with that software.  That certainly doesn't seem to be the case with the gEDA 
project, or this list wouldn't exist, by definition.

Each person has their own reasons why will not contribute to a project, 
whatever that project's purpose, and each author has their own reasons why they 
choose one license over another.  If you don't like a project or its license, 
that is your right, but do not presume to speak for *anyone* else but yourself.

As long as you're going to take pot shots at how we choose to manage our 
licensing and contributing mechanisms, I must point this out:  In the closed 
source world, software companies and even many of the smaller authors generally 
have at least one or two of these things to deal with: 

* Software patents.  Ignoring for the moment that these should not exist at 
all, some commercial software companies have tens of thousands of patents.
* Negotiated and signed license agreements spanning many pages, just so that 
one author can borrow some code from another author's product.
* End User License Agreements so complex that no one short of an attorney can 
understand them, let alone the end user who is expected to click "I Agree" just 
so they can get on with what they wanted to do.
* Illegal distribution of (unmodified) copies of commercial software.
* One or more lawyers on hand ready to sue because of one or another asinine 
reason... broken software, violation of one of the above, DMCA claims.
* Vendor lock-in.
* Critical bugs which the author/company refuses to fix, on the grounds that 
the next version will be better anyway.  In commercial software, this of course 
means more money out of the user's pocket to pay for the upgrade.

Perhaps you'll notice how these things just don't exist in significant numbers 
in the open source world, despite having about as many software applications as 
the closed source world.

When something like this does become a problem, we try to *fix* it, usually for 
free (as the end user sees it anyway).

I decline to mention things that are specific to the OS that is usually 
associated with the closed-source world, since those things could also affect 
an otherwise purely open-source system built on that OS.

-- 
"There are some things in life worth obsessing over.  Most
things aren't, and when you learn that, life improves."
http://starbase.globalpc.net/~ezekowitz
Vanessa Ezekowitz <vanessaezekow...@gmail.com>


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