Things not included in either concept include: - community building - accepting contributions from other people - ethical use of software - distribution mechanisms - governance - use of paid vs free labor
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And many more - I’ve made a whole huge list. Perhaps I will even
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Open source & free software licenses were designed to correct the power imbalance that existed 30 years ago - when large companies selling proprietary software held power over their users. “Take this software for free!” the licenses said. “Fix it yourself if something breaks.”
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Open source and free software licenses gave power to the users - the individuals - at the expense of the companies.
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But that balance of power has shifted over the last 30 years. What we are noticing is that free and open source software is now accumulating power once again in the _companies_, since they’re the end the users of the software, rather than individuals.
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And so we are seeing calls for licenses that shift power back to the authors - who are often still individuals or collectives rather than companies.
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The OSI can persist in its insistence that “open source” means transferring power to the user, but if they do, I think they’re missing the larger point of their movement.
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If we want free and open source software to continue to be about giving power to individuals at the expense of companies, then it’s time for a change.
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I want to read more about the legal aspects of open source licensing - both generally in terms of what kind of case law exists, and specifically around what constitutes "distribution."
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Replying to @sarahmei
@unixterminal the big question is above about laws and what constitutes distribution.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes
There are cases on contract interpretation that indirectly govern how open source licenses are read but surprisingly few cases specifically on the unique aspects of the licenses themselves. You could argue this is evidence open source successfully self-governs.
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