Moral obligations
Posted Jul 23, 2003 17:53 UTC (Wed) by
ccchips (subscriber, #3222)
In reply to:
Moral obligations by rjamestaylor
Parent article:
Open Source Victoria files ACCC complaint against SCO regarding Linux
This kind of approach is starting to sound like a good idea. When Della Croche tried to commandeer the Linux trademark, the last published letters I saw on the matter were about people trying to find the guy to begin criminal preceedings against him.
To see such a thing happen to SCO's management seems really sweet at the moment. I haven't contributed much code to Linux (only a patch sent to a tape driver developer and a patch to a tape archive program developer, both of which were not added in my name.) However, I have great sympathy for the Linux developers, especially considering some of the caustic remarks that have come from SCO personnel about free software being ridiculous. The implication of what SCO management says is staggeringly dark; to wit, that priceless voluntary contributions of code are worth absolutely nothing to them.
Think about it; this very thing is what made American gold-miners and panners into paupers; whenever they would find gold, the locals would start inflating the price for goods and services; meanwhile, the people who were here first anyway (the Native Americans) were being literally stripped of everything they had, including their lives. The kind of behavior the corporate managers of SCO and the Canopy Group have engaged in is very much starting to remind me of the way Native Americans were treated. Scare tactis, derogatory remarks, accusation of theft (of property that was swindled from the natives in the first place,) and so on.
I went through a management change at my company, in which the new managers had already decided ahead of time what we needed. In the beginning, these new managers were very pompous, very much into stroking the egos of the people who were here already, and very dishonest about how much they valued our opinions. I saw that almost instantaneously, but, due to circumstances beyond my control, I had to put up with it.
As time went on, of course, the gloves came off and the claws came out.
If there's one thing all the Linux volunteers and supporters should understand right now, above everything else, it's this: there are some people who will do anything under the power of gold, including, but not limited to, the murder of their relatives. When dealing with corporation owners and *stock traders,* it's absolutely imperative that we watch like hawks.
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