Well, yeah, okay I guess? But then, there was a brief AWS outage, which then implies that "millions of people simultaneously experienced digital serfdom."
And the solution is... more GPL? I don’t know? And neither does the author? Because the real issue here is whether we’ll have "the courage to design your way through it"? Which doesn't sound like a licensing issue at all?
Stallman recognized that someone else's computer was going to serve them and open source was, maybe ironically, meant to facilitate that. Open source client to a proprietary service isn't some kind of contradiction, it's respecting your freedom to control your computer same as it always has been.
Especially the GPL vs Permissive License conflation with the Corporate Hosting problem.
Also, the sociological phenom of tech people falling into culty ideals is really interesting and maybe a bit problematic.
“This is the Stallman Paradox: the growing chasm between our intellectual reverence for genuine free software principles and our practical convergence on venture capital-optimized extraction models that merely cosplay as "open source."”
…ok?
What does RMS have to do with this? What does the GPL have to do with this?
Such a letdown.
I'm trying to figure out who this rant is aimed at: is it complaining that people trying to get corporate jobs writing software are writing software for corporations who are using Open Source, and claiming that's some sort of contradiction that needs to be escaped? It's easy to escape. Be poor. Lots of people do it. But if that's not an option for you, writing OSS at a corporate job is no worse that writing proprietary software at a corporate job.
Are you working for scammers? Almost everybody else is too! You should quit, if you're independently wealthy (i.e. invested in scammers), or don't mind being poor. But working on OSS at your scammer job isn't any worse than writing proprietary code at your scammer job. So I don't get it.
Anybody think they've successfully translated this?
edit: also, I think a lot of people need to face that fact that a ton of OSS isn't even useful for anybody but large-scale corporations. It was written by them (or people wanting to be them), for them. Can't see anything wrong with that.
Since when has Stallman changed his principles?
teddyh•5h ago
No source is given for these questionable statistics. It makes me suspect that the entire point of the article is to make people unquestionably accept the statement that GPL usage “has collapsed”. It also speaks about Stallman exclusively in the past tense.