On 27/11/2007, Nick Reynolds-A&Mi <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>  Let me play devil's advocate for a moment.
>
> Making more things free and open only benefits a small group of
> technologists who are clever enough to know how to use the results.
>

I see no problem with this, in fact it's a good thing, it incentiveises
intelligence. A technocracy is much better than the idiocracy that we
currently live in.

The general mass of the population still want finely crafted mass
> entertainment and other products of a high quality and gloss. Making
> everything free and open destroys the funding model that makes this happen,
> which includes copyright and other intellectual property rights.
>

The general public like fast food too, that doesn't mean that a McDonalds a
day is good for them, most people (myself included) are stupid and don't
know what's good for them in areas outside of their expertise. I let
nutritionists and dietitians recommend what I should eat, I don't see why
software engineers, IT consultants etc. shouldn't be able to recommend free
software as the best alternative (where and when it is) regardless of the
wider consequences to various funding models. That's not their problem,
they're being paid to deliver $project on time not worry about copyright law
reform.

There's a trade off between making everything open and quality and reach.
>

Why? Take Firefox for example, it's open, it has reach and it's a quality
product. there's no "trade off" in fact I can think of quite a few quality
open products, reach is a problem to be solved not something that has to to
be traded away.

You could argue that news for example should adopt a completely free and
> open model. But who is going to make the investment to ensure that some
> stories are still told? Investigative journalism is expensive and often
> dangerous. Money needs to be spent to do it.
>

Free and open doesn't necessarily mean that there is no cash involved, look
at the companies that sell support for free products or the way Firefox gets
money from Google. as examples.  I'm sure news  organisations will continue.
I read plenty of news on the web every day for free it's mostly ad funded.
And i don't see anyone stopping buying newspapers just because they can read
it online either.

While in my heart I'm much taken by the idea of making everything open, I
> smell a whiff of elitism about some of these arguments (i.e. "I want
> everything free because that's convenient for me and I don't care about
> anybody else")
>

elite
-noun
the choice or *best of anything* considered collectively, as of a group or
class of persons.[1]

I see no problem with elitism if it means we get the "best of anything".

[1]paraphrased from http://dictionary.reference.com/search?q=elite&x=0&y=0

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