OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
Posted Apr 25, 2022 21:57 UTC (Mon) by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)In reply to: OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct by pebolle
Parent article: OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
No it is certainly not a goal for everyone. Anyone can develop free and open source software for a large variety of reasons besides marketshare. Maybe it is a hobby, maybe they are just scratching their own itch, who knows. Most free and open source projects I suspect have marketshare not in their mind at all.
> No, it doesn't. It's merely pointing out that busywork is what it is: a waste of time.
Yes it does because otherwise you have to agree you can't just tell volunteers what to do. What is busywork for you is interesting and engaging work for others. Calling what others considers to be important as busywork will get you ignored.
Posted Apr 26, 2022 16:10 UTC (Tue)
by pebolle (guest, #35204)
[Link] (12 responses)
Whatever the motivations of individual developers are, the goals of the Free Software movement are crystal clear. And this is an issue where open source and free software actually can't be lumped together: "For the Open Source movement, non-free software is a suboptimal solution. For the Free Software movement, non-free software is a social problem and free software is the solution."
How does this not translate to a 100% marketshare if you're into free software?
Posted Apr 26, 2022 18:25 UTC (Tue)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (7 responses)
Posted Apr 26, 2022 18:45 UTC (Tue)
by pebolle (guest, #35204)
[Link] (6 responses)
"Your project seeks to solve a social problem. Its strategy to do so might even work. However, your project doesn't have a Code of Conduct. This means large parts of the population are dissuaded from involvement. Therefore I rather not have your project try to solve that problem, however effective it may be."
Posted Apr 26, 2022 18:48 UTC (Tue)
by mpr22 (subscriber, #60784)
[Link]
Posted Apr 26, 2022 19:09 UTC (Tue)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (4 responses)
Posted Apr 26, 2022 19:59 UTC (Tue)
by pebolle (guest, #35204)
[Link] (3 responses)
The social problem that free software seeks to solve is non-free software. Whoever solves it - Amish housewives, Nordic fishermen, Thai monks, Afrikaner farmers, Detroit choir boys - is immaterial to that movement.
Posted Apr 26, 2022 20:00 UTC (Tue)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link] (2 responses)
Posted Apr 26, 2022 20:25 UTC (Tue)
by pebolle (guest, #35204)
[Link] (1 responses)
How do these Mormon youth and Iranian girls make it impossible for most people to feed starving people or exercise their freedom to use software?
Posted Apr 26, 2022 20:30 UTC (Tue)
by mjg59 (subscriber, #23239)
[Link]
Posted Apr 26, 2022 18:35 UTC (Tue)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link] (3 responses)
It's fine for you to subscribe all the way to this ideology and believe this follows but you must recognize that plenty of software gets produced by people who don't subscribe to this "movement" and this includes major contributors within several GNU projects, often funded by the same companies that produce a lot of proprietary software. So making the assumption that what they are working on, often voluntarily, is "busy work" because you don't see the connection between what they are working on and marketshare is obnoxious.
Posted Apr 26, 2022 19:13 UTC (Tue)
by pebolle (guest, #35204)
[Link] (2 responses)
If distributions do not strive any more to make free software or open source - pick your favourite - ubiquitous they should be clear about that. I suggest "Freetime Linux OS", "openHOBBY", "Uvebeenfooled" and "Debate, The Universal debating society".
Posted Apr 26, 2022 19:42 UTC (Tue)
by rahulsundaram (subscriber, #21946)
[Link]
Declaring it "busy work" and "third rate legalese" goes far beyond raising doubts.
> If distributions do not strive any more to make free software or open source
They do make plenty of software without necessarily subscribing to your ideology on marketshare. They also do plenty of other related work including artwork, translations, documentation, communication, marketing, infrastructure management and so forth.
Posted Apr 27, 2022 9:18 UTC (Wed)
by kleptog (subscriber, #1183)
[Link]
The number of people working on free/open source software is in the millions, maybe even hundreds of millions. The number of people ascribing to any kind of Free/Open Source software *movement* is tiny. Linux distributions generally don't ascribe to any particular movement. Each distribution has its own goals, just as any organisation has its own goals.
And even if you as a user use any particular distribution, that doesn't mean you ascribe or even like the goals of the distribution you are using. Debian is driven by its Social Contract. It promises to provide software according to its own guidelines. At no point does it say it is promoting any particular movement. OpenSUSE has it's own goals. There is no deception: people don't use a Linux to be part of some kind of movement. They do it because it helps them in some way.
What you are suggesting is about as absurd as suggesting that anyone drinking coffee is part of a Coffee Drinking Movement, or that anyone driving a car is part of a Car Driving Movement. People have their own reasons for doing things.
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct
OpenSUSE adopts a new code of conduct