| "Isn't that fair though? Writers could do it for fun and give away their work for free." No. When I read this I think of Bruce Perens and BusyBox. [0] BusyBox, created by Perens as a floppy rescue/boot/installer disk for Debian, written as a single binary. [1],[2] Real handy if your partition failed or you needed to install an OS or update. This didn't stop unscrupulous companies installing BusyBox charging for it and violating the GPL licensing agreements. [3] At no time did these companies chip in to help in the development of BB. Yet they wanted (needed) the inclusion of this useful software. This is HN, a place where smart people hang out at the intersection of technology and commerce. I posted the article as an experiment to see what possible commercial possibilities could be imagined. SVG is too important to the web
to let it whither and die.
There must be some other way to continue this kind of work sustainably. What else can you think up?Reference [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BusyBox [1] https://busybox.net/about.html [2] https://busybox.net/oldnews.html [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/BusyBox#GPL_lawsuits |
You can argue the point 2 ways
1. Bruce Perens did BusyBox for fun and gave it away for free. After words some people were bad and got sued. So what does his making it for fun and free have to do with after words people got sued
2. Bruce Perens did Busybox and fun and gave it away not for free. His price is that if you it in a product (or portions of it, details don't matter to the point) that product (or portions of it) must also be GPLed.
If you take this interpretation then we're back to the same thing, what does this story have to do with "Writers could do it for fun and give away their work for free."