Richard Stallman was right since the very beginning. Every warning, every prophecy realised. And, worst of all, he had the solution since the start. The problem is not Richard Stallman or the Free Software Foundation. The problem is us. The problem is that we didn’t listen.
Interesting read, although a bit too preachy at times.
In my opinion, this is a utopian point of view that does not work in real life and glances over a lot of good things of GPL.
Linux and a lot of open source would not be here today, in this shape, without big companies using it for their commercialized software. You really think Microsoft would contribute to Linux source code if it can not use it commercially? You really think ANY company would contribute to ANYTHING if they can not commercialize it?
Linux is what it is today because not only volunteers, but companies depend on it being stable and feature-full. If companies did not care to contribute to it, it would be dead and only a pet project of few volunteers.
Who would pay all these people to work on it? Sure, some of them would work for free as a hobby, some of them coud get paid from donations. But its nowhere near enough to make Linux or any other FOSS project big and popular.
Until people need money to survive, AGPL will never be the most popular license and it should not if you want to have FOSS.
And what is so bad about it? You still have base open source code that they use to make their software, make your own. You are mad because companies take open source code, and charge for it. Then, you take it and make the software free.
You want everybody to use FOSS, sure. Who will be customer support? Who will fix and be responsible for stuff when they dont work? How will you pay these people?
Free as in, free to do whatever the fuck you want with it. Not free as in free to do whatever you want, except make money to survive.
The problems you describe are due to capitalism: profit motivated commerce. The open source business model has a focus that monetizes the human actions that are a value-add, such as continued development of targeted features, tech support and other things it makes sense to pay for specialized knowledge, but the tangibles are still open for all to modify, audit or use as they want.
I discovered GNU/Linux in school in the 90's, then as I got better access to the internet at home and Linux magazines I learned everything about RMS and GNU and the FSF.
I latched on to it all. Apart from retro systems with their various proprietary operating systems I have no time for any proprietary software if I can help it.
The Retro systems get a pass because I'm interested in old computers.
This was a really good read and definitely one of those things I’m hoping begins soon. As someone who yearns to use FOSS for all things it’s certainly getting harder and harder
Stallman is one of my biggest inspirations. It's nice that there was a guy who was right about so much for so long when the vast majority of people around him were wrong.
I don't think he's right about everything, but he's right about most things.
I think he could go further in some ways. For example, I think copyright and patent laws should die.
For example, I think copyright and patent laws should die.
Stallman doesn't want anything like that. The GPL for example wouldn't work without copyright.
What Stallman wants is software patents do be illegal (you can patent your new garden hose as much as you like) and copyright should be returned to what it was, a much shorter term. It's supposed to give a time limited monopoly on a work in order to make sure the author is encouraged to create new works frequently. Instead it has become a gravy train for life plus a huge number of years after the authors death.
For example, I think copyright and patent laws should die.
Copyright doesn't need to die, it just needs to become irrelevant. The GPL and Creative Commons depend on copyright law to exist. So if everyone just started using Free Software licenses and Free Culture licenses (which will realistically never happen), the negative consequences of copyright would be minimized. It's the best of both worlds, really.
I'm sorry, you're not the first person to bring up this argument so I feel like you're just repeating what you've heard before without understanding it.
If there were no copyright and patent laws, creative Commons and the GPL wouldn't be necessary.
The guy helped me in my radicalization, whether I've noticed it in the past or not, and inspite of all the libertarian nonsense along the way.
I still stand with my decision on defending him in 2019 that he should remain the head of the FSF. There is simply no one else like him, even if he's somewhat of a peculiar character though, and has said on multiple occasions unnaceptable things.
The problem with copyleft is that it makes it inherently difficult to make a living off of developing software. It prevents people from using the most straight forward way of selling their product. To be fair, some people do make it work but it's either because they sell enterprise support or SaaS. This model doesn't work for desktop applications and regular users. All you're left with is donations. Go look at some of the average salaries for incredibly popular software like VLC. You won't like what you'll find.
It's really a problem with the way copyright, or copyleft advocacy is done, written or proposed .... there will be an endless debate about it forever.
One of the things that should change is our collective culture of paying for things we value and are actually important in our society and civilization. Everyone should be made aware of the work that developers, admins, hobbyists and programmers do for free. We should normalize donations, contributions and subscriptions to these things and these people.
If it became normal that thousands or millions of users everywhere contributed dollars or even cents for the work that is done for the benefit of everyone .... there would be more than enough money to protect the copyright of software and even pay for the work these people do.