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Open Source Software

The Future of Open Source is Still Very Much in Flux (technologyreview.com) 49

Free and open software have transformed the tech industry. But we still have a lot to work out to make them healthy, equitable enterprises. From a report: When Xerox donated a new laser printer to MIT in 1980, the company couldn't have known that the machine would ignite a revolution. While the early decades of software development generally ran on a culture of open access, this new printer ran on inaccessible proprietary software, much to the horror of Richard M. Stallman, then a 27-year-old programmer at the university.

A few years later, Stallman released GNU, an operating system designed to be a free alternative to one of the dominant operating systems at the time: Unix. The free-software movement was born, with a simple premise: for the good of the world, all code should be open, without restriction or commercial intervention. Forty years later, tech companies are making billions on proprietary software, and much of the technology around us is inscrutable. But while Stallman's movement may look like a failed experiment, the free and open-source software movement is not only alive and well; it has become a keystone of the tech industry.

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The Future of Open Source is Still Very Much in Flux

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  • This not to take away the good that Stalleman did but can we stick to reality.

    Open source is not is flux. People trying to lock down others is.

    • by Sesostris III ( 730910 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @03:46PM (#63778712)
      GNU Hurd?
      • Yup, and that contradicts the headline, Gnu Hurd isn't in flux at all, it's been consistent vapourware for over 30 years now.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday August 18, 2023 @04:29PM (#63778786)

      What operating system did Stalleman release?

      Emacs

  • To get away from being forever in bed with Big Flux, I opt for lemon juice. It's... ...never mind. Too much research needed for a pretty stupid joke...

  • Are the tech bros not rich enough? Do they need us to switch to more exploitable licenses if they are supposed to afford another mega yacht? An island? A small country?
  • >A few years later, Stallman released GNU, an operating system
    Oh, i didn't realise Hurd was released in the 1980's. How's it going?

    • Hurd [...] How's it going?

      To put it nicely: Hurd is a research kernel, and not all research pans out.

      The GNU system is a userspace environment atop Linux, Darwin, NT, or the kernel of FreeBSD. During its development, it was also deployed atop the kernels of proprietary UNIX systems and atop Hurd. Over the 1990s, while AT&T was clinging to its claims over *BSD, Linux quickly became the usual kernel for a production GNU system. As of the 2020s, GNU/Linux is by far the most popular operating system on Internet servers and quite pop

      • GNU/Linux is by far the most popular operating system on Internet servers and quite popular on software developers' workstations as well

        If we're looking at the utilities that control user space, at this point, it would be more accurate to call it systemd/Linux.

  • Go Away, Rebecca. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Friday August 18, 2023 @03:35PM (#63778684) Homepage Journal

    You don't walk into a room of successful people - among the most successful and impactful of all time - and tell them how they're doing it wrong.

    Imagine complaining to Henry Ford, Pablo Picasso, and Jim Henson that they need fixing because some low-H college professor somewhere said so.

    This desire to whip weird folks into normalcy is perhaps the most destructive force a society can experience.

    Try doing some heavy lifting before you deign to criticize.

  • bureaucracy (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jmccue ( 834797 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @03:43PM (#63778706) Homepage

    Many big open source projects are surrounded by a bureaucracy. In many cases, people working in these bureaucracies are making a lot of money. People doing the real work, from from it. It kind of mirrors what is happening in Commercial Businesses with Upper Management vs the Worker.

    At one time, people would develop something to "scratch an itch" and release it. Why would someone working on signifiant projects for free now, enriching these bureaucracies. So now, many people working in these large projects are doing it for a salary, dealing with a bureaucracy, not to "scratch an itch". So here we are.

    • Re: bureaucracy (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Darrellicte ( 5946698 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @05:58PM (#63778942)
      Speaking as one of the few independent open source developers out here, the reason why too many open source projects are surrounded by bureaucracy is that itâ(TM)s really difficult to eek out a living wage by developing open source independently, even if your software is considered critical infrastructure (as one of my projects is.) Generally your choices as an open source developer are: (1) Be independent and maximize your ability to serve the needs of the community, which involves living month to month and begging for funded development and patronage so you can pay your bills, or (2) Work for a corporation and spend most of your time on administrivia and the corporationâ(TM)s agenda. Bear in mind that (1) will probably earn you 20-25% of (2), at least in my experience, so it wouldnâ(TM)t even be an option for people who have families to support.
  • It's called capitalism. Greed is good. Show me the money. what ever. Tons of products and money making corporations started as open source projects 25 years ago. Almost every single one is no longer functionally available to users for free despite thousands of donated hours by global programmers working on their own to improve the product and ecosystem. . Some were bought out, others closed the good stuff while keeping a token shell they call "community version", or having some crippled version with
  • by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @04:24PM (#63778776) Homepage

    The future of Free Software is absolutely fine; it's not going anywhere.

    The fact that it's very hard for corporations to make large profits from Free Software is not relevant to Free Software's future because there will always be non-profits and hobbyists who carry Free Software forward.

    Capitalism, at least to some extent, is well and good, but it does tend to induce a reality-distortion in which everything is measured in terms of money.

    • The future of Free Software is absolutely fine; it's not going anywhere.

      The fact that it's very hard for corporations to make large profits from Free Software is not relevant to Free Software's future because there will always be non-profits and hobbyists who carry Free Software forward.

      Capitalism, at least to some extent, is well and good, but it does tend to induce a reality-distortion in which everything is measured in terms of money.

      The hobbyist has always been a endangered species in the software world. Even in the early pc days programmers with the majority of influence and fame have been hobbyists "while working for Xerox" or hobbyists "while working for IBM" or some other major software developer.....

      • by dskoll ( 99328 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @05:55PM (#63778934) Homepage

        There are tons and tons of open-source projects that don't have a corporation behind them. I don't think we're in any danger of running out of people willing to do this.

        Examples: PostgreSQL, Gnome, KDE, kdenlive, Inkscape, Gimp, rsync, Perl, Python, XFCE, ...

      • by gweihir ( 88907 )

        The hobbyist has always been a endangered species in the software world. Even in the early pc days programmers with the majority of influence and fame have been hobbyists "while working for Xerox" or hobbyists "while working for IBM" or some other major software developer.....

        I do not think they are. Sure, people doing this for fun will not produce the mountain of bad commercial software produced, but everything needed is there. The difference is that commercial crap gets produced because somebody wants to make money. FOSS gets produced because somebody sees a need for it being produced and the existence of that need is far less often the case. The big advantage of FOSS is that it only gets changed if there is a technological or user-driven need to a change, not because somebody

    • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @06:53PM (#63779064)

      That nicely sums it up. The fact of the matter is that FOSS transcends the idea if an economic system. In a sense the idea of an economic system is far less refined and (in the case of capitalism) outright primitive in comparison to the FOSS approach. Not arguing that there are better systems than capitalism, but you do not even need an ecconomic system at all and the FOSS idea would still work. What you do need is the need for people that see value in collaborating with others to solve complex problems and that want to solve problems just because that solves problems.

    • Just making things sustainable is fine. Trying to maximize profits often results in opposite effect. So I'd say non-profits are the hotspot.
    • Closed-source is measured in money. Open-source is measured in ego.

      Almost all people work towards the goal of profit, albeit under different names.

  • by lsllll ( 830002 ) on Friday August 18, 2023 @04:44PM (#63778812)
    From TFS:

    But while Stallman's movement may look like a failed experiment

    According to who? Wikipedia says:

    Stallman launched the GNU Project, founded the Free Software Foundation (FSF) in October 1985,[2] developed the GNU Compiler Collection and GNU Emacs, and wrote all versions of the GNU General Public License.

    So unless MsMash is on the "vi" camp in the vi vs. Emacs debate, nothing appears to be dead. Last I checked FSF is alive and well, and so are the GPL 2 and 3, as are Emacs and GCC.

    • Saying the GPL is "alive and well" is a yuge understatement.
      And there are a host of other free software licenses covering billions of lines of code that the world runs on too.
      Of course there are a handful of niches still controlled by proprietary software, but it's certainly not the norm.

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Indeed. I see not failure there. Somebody is being stupid.

    • by Dixie_Flatline ( 5077 ) <vincent@jan@goh.gmail@com> on Saturday August 19, 2023 @10:27AM (#63780106) Homepage

      That's seriously where you're going to truncate the quote? The rest of the LINE agrees with you:

      But while Stallman's movement may look like a failed experiment, the free and open-source software movement is not only alive and well; it has become a keystone of the tech industry.

      And in some ways, it MAY look like a failed experiment. More and more software infringes on our rights every day. Those articles pop up constantly here. Surveillance software, trackers in everything, the enshittification of the web. This is the most disingenuous quoting of a summary I've seen in a long time.

      • More and more software infringes on our rights every day. ⦠Surveillance software, trackers in everything, the enshittification of the web.

        The rights that software allegedly infringes upon have nothing to do with the rights of the source code of that software itself. It's perfectly possible to write open-source software that surveils, tracks, and enshittifies the web. (Whether any such software actually exists is irrelevant.)

      • by lsllll ( 830002 )
        You're ugly, but your used ID is 5077. Second part of the sentence is correct, but the first part is probably wrong, because I believe you're a beautiful person. According to you, I can't criticize the first part.

        More and more software infringes on our rights every day. Those articles pop up constantly here. Surveillance software, trackers in everything, the enshittification of the web.

        So? Are they closed-sourced software? If so, what's new and what does that have to do with OSS? Are they open-sourced software? Don't like it? Fork it!

  • It's just in adolescence. Big companies are starting to get interested. Linux has many corporate backers, as has the FSF, and many, many other projects.

    Unfortunately, the less glorious projects to support haven't got that many (or none at all) backers. Corporations want to be seen. They choose their philanthropy carefully.

    I wouldn't be amazed if wanting to be seen was one of the non-public reasons why Microsoft bought github; "look, we provide a place for all these open source community projects! We're all

  • I mean, 100 years ago licensing of any kind wasn't even a thing, at least not in everyday life. 100 years before that, copyright wasn't a thing. Why would we think these kinds of changes would ever stop?

  • When you read nonsense like "equitable enterprises", you know it's an article full of BS you can safely skip. Generally, if an article isn't written in proper English and isn't reasonably concise, you know it's an article full of BS you can safely skip
  • I mean, as usual. And the headline is bad. Also as usual. And frankly, the summary is terrible.

    Look, "in flux" really just means "still changing" in this context. There's a lot of stuff that's still changing in the FOSS world, and the article read as a whole doesn't presage its doom, it merely tries to grapple with the realities. How do people make this into full time work? Only a few people get paid, but sometimes they're making software that becomes really important. FOSS, like most software, has a divers

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