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[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][tlug] Open source and free are the same [was: Wine and installing of Internet Explorer]
- Date: Mon, 07 Jun 2004 14:16:43 +0900
- From: "Stephen J. Turnbull" <stephen@example.com>
- Subject: [tlug] Open source and free are the same [was: Wine and installing of Internet Explorer]
- References: <11034577.1086542207495.JavaMail.root@example.com><20040606185408.GG23557%jmglov@example.com>
- Organization: The XEmacs Project
- User-agent: Gnus/5.1006 (Gnus v5.10.6) XEmacs/21.5 (chayote, linux)
>>>>> "Josh" == Josh Glover <tlug@example.com> writes: Josh> The definition of Open Source software includes the Josh> requirement that software be free as in speech (with various Josh> definitions of exactly what "free as in speech means", which Josh> is at the kernel of RMS's beef with "Open Source" as opposed Josh> to "Free Software"; for the purposes of most sane people, Josh> suffice it to whip out a Venn diagram:[1][2] Both your Venn diagram and your statement of rms's beef are inaccurate IMO. Even rms admits that open source software licenses are basically the same as free software licenses. There are some corner conditions where they theoretically differ, and one big practical difference. The OSI approved the Apple Public Software License while the FSF did not. Which proves that the OSI are human, because the APSL is neither free by the FSF's definition nor open source by the OSI's IMO. Interestingly enough, rms's biggest worry about the current GPL v.2 is that it doesn't deal with the "ASP loophole" (ie, if you sell an EDP service over the Internet but run all the programs on your own machine, you can effectively proprietize GPL'd software you don't own), while that is exactly what the offensive clause in the APSL attempts to do. The problem according to rms is invasion of privacy, but I don't see how you can effectively close the ASP loophole without an invasion of privacy. On balance, I think that serves to show how close to identical the two definitions and their implementations by the FSF and OSI actually are. The important difference is entirely in the presentation. Open source advocates advocate free software because it's economically superior to proprietary software, or because it empowers users and developers. Free software advocates advocate open source software because it doesn't violate certain inherent human rights---it's a moral issue. rms's beef with the open source movement is that it implicitly undervalues freedom, and leads to "backsliding." He has no problem with open source software as such, except that OSS software is far more likely to come with permissive licences (not Copyleft) than FS is, and he believes that Copyleft leads to more free software in the appropriate sense of "more." Recommended reading on the subject are rms's book "Free Software, Free Society", and Sam Williams's (I think that's the guy's name) partial biography of rms "Free as in Freedom". Search "free software" on Amazon, they'll pop right up. Linus's book is really interesting too, although it sheds only a little light on the politics. They're all pretty cheap, at least by textbook standards (more expensive than bunkoban novels), but if you're really in a cash crunch you can get almost all of rms's book on the gnu.org site under philosophy. Josh> Neither am I willing to run Windows when I have a licence Josh> key, obtained legally or otherwise, because I feel that the Josh> Windows OS is detrimental to the Internet as a whole, both Josh> in terms of security and in terms of standards adherence. Just go by the Orange Book standards and pull the plug on the LAN card. Love that C2 rating. :-) Josh> In fact, for me, the main reason that I do Open Source is as Josh> a courtesy to my fellow man. In this, RMS and I are on the Josh> same page. I don't know if you are. As far as I can tell, rms doesn't give one Italian lira[1] for non-programmer humans.[2] Their rights don't count, except for their right to hire programmers to work on free software programs that they themselves can't fix. In particular, he discounts their right to alienate their right to source for sufficient compensation (ie, "if you reduce the price enough, I'll buy a binary without source, or source without the right to redistribute") to nothing. N.B., he doesn't deny the right, at least he claims he doesn't, but he does use terms like "backsliding" and "slavery" to describe its exercise. My own assessment, which is IMHO and YMMV, and is very likely a "value judgement",[3] is that rms's advocacy of free software is solipsist: he feels his rights were violated and he is on a crusade to make sure his rights are never violated again. He's willing to extend the protection of his rights to you, of course, but he's not interested in your opinion of what your rights are. Footnotes: [1] At one point in the 1980s, the paper the 1000 lira not was printed on was worth more than 1000 lira at the recycle shop.... [2] In regards to software. In his published comments on development economics, he's actually regressive. He thinks that we can improve the lot of the poor in the "South" by protecting the jobs of workers in the "North" from unfair import competition! Anybody from Bangalore in the audience? [3] ISTR Rick Moen had something to say about value judgements, or maybe I'm confusing that with his rant on "ad hominem" arguments. Always a fun read. http://www.linuxmafia.com/~rick/faq/ -- Institute of Policy and Planning Sciences http://turnbull.sk.tsukuba.ac.jp University of Tsukuba Tennodai 1-1-1 Tsukuba 305-8573 JAPAN Ask not how you can "do" free software business; ask what your business can "do for" free software.
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