On 2019-03-13 08:30, Aaron Wolf wrote:
On 2019-03-13 7:05 a.m., [email protected] wrote:
I follow what you're saying about open/open source and not demonizing
it, but would you mind clarifying the part about open source not
really
being different? What is it in near unity with?
The set of licenses that the OSI approves as "Open Source" and that
FSF/GNU approves as "Free software" is near unity. Hence, the set of
all
software in the world that is "Open Source" is near unity with the set
of software that is "Free/libre".
The distinctions are almost not worth mentioning. The Watcom license
*requires* the publishing of changes, even changes for only private use
— and the OSI approved it while FSF did not. The FSF has approved a
couple licenses the OSI felt were just not legally clear enough but no
other objections… almost no software in existence uses any of the
disputed licenses.
Now, there's DEFINITELY philosophical distinctions. People often get
confused because of how strongly Richard Stallman pushes against "Open
Source", but if you look carefully, he always says "call it Free/libre,
don't call it Open Source" and similar. He cares what we call it, but
he
doesn't want people to think that "it" is a different thing per se.
Besides political/philosophical issues, the practical matter is that
lots of people in the "Open Source" perspective make FLO software
specifically for use in *proprietary* end products while the
"free/libre" perspective opposes the creation of proprietary software.
But they still acknowledge that the "Open Source" *part* of the
proprietary development is unambiguously "free/libre" software.
I guess for me it comes down to the fact that, while yes they are 'near'
unity (open source and free/libre), the differences between them are
great enough that a pioneer of free software and the pioneer of the
copyleft paradigm is adament that the terms should not be conflated. As
a proponent of both open source and free/libre (which is also open
source admittedly, but with additional benefits). Of course it could be
argued that open source has it's 'benefits'. But as Richard Stallman
points out,(maybe one could argue it's just his point of view, but it's
a pretty defensible point of view, imo) the benefits espoused by OS/OSI
are mostly practical advantage and aren't a 'movement of freedom and
justice' as he (and many others) view the free/libre movement. I'm new
to the discussion/distinction myself so I looked into it a bit after
reading the article you linked. Stallman's words on the subject are here
if anyone isn't familiar.
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.en.html
His perspective is summed up here I think.
The terms “free software” and “open source” stand for almost the same
range of programs. However, they say deeply different things about
those programs, based on > different values. The free software
movement campaigns for freedom for the users of computing; it is a
movement for freedom and justice. By contrast, the open > source
idea values mainly practical advantage and does not campaign for
principles. This is why we do not agree with open source, and do not
use that term.
So, while, they're NEAR unity as you say, the differences are actually
great enough that he does not not agree with them.
Additionally, from the link you posted, it seems clear that the OSI has
held quite different perspectives on open source than it does even now,
and of course they could change course in the future. For those reasons,
I agree that the distinction should be kept clear for everyone,
especially new-comers like myself. I've extolled 'open source' but I
will likely (after more research) shift to free/libre and speak more
clearly when discussing OS vs Free/libre. I think all of the real
enthusiasm in the space (the sustainable enthusiasm) is due to the
additional philosophies espoused and championed by the free/libre
movement.
Of course, the article you linked also talks about the advantages of the
open model and community contributions. Those are also great causes to
champion. I think the free/libre movement includes that though, and goes
further, so again, the distinction is important.
Of course, the movement isn't about dictators or absolute authorities,
so discussion is healthy. These are the things I've learned from the
free/libre movement.
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