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by remram 1442 days ago
Again, I am not saying this isn't the right way or that you are doing anything wrong. I just think that if we are asking people giving away their code for free to do a migration and learn another tool for the greater good, for free, and before that they also have to put in their credit card number and pay their own money... people won't do that, righteous as it may be.

A call for action is all the more effective if that action is easy. The Software Freedom Conservancy's call has a lot of background but if the proposed action is "host it yourself" or "pay money for SourceHut", I worry that we will not move forward.

2 comments

I'm not sure that we'll be moving forward if we're not willing to answer to the fact that our indulgence in free services is putting our freedoms in jeopardy. What use is it if you jump ship from GitHub to another service which is letting investors foot your bill? It'll just be the same story in a few years. SourceHut is designed for long-term sustainability and an ethical operating model.

If you feel differently, perhaps Codeberg is for you instead? SFC recommends them as well and I am just as happy to see projects move there as I am to see them on SourceHut -- we're a paying (but non-voting) member of Codeberg ourselves. Diversity is healthy for the ecosystem, but the proprietary platforms ought to be expelled.

> I'm not sure that we'll be moving forward if

I totally agree with you! This is why I think we will not be moving forward, with things as they are.

Why do you pay Codeberg and what is your role with them?
We use them to host our status page on independent infrastructure:

https://codeberg.org/ddevault/pages

We started paying as soon as we started relying on them for this purpose. We pay one euro short of the minimum contribution for voting rights, to support them while respecting their independence. Codeberg is doing wonderful work that we (and the community at large) are depending on and we're prepared to support that without hesitation. Diversity is good for FOSS.

> Codeberg is doing wonderful work

how are they different, or better, than any other floss instance (disroot, framagit, gitgud, savannah, NotABug, pagure, etc)?

They're backed by a member-owned organization, are in good financial standing for the long term, and it is run by good people that I trust. The others may be good as well but I think that Codeberg has really got it nailed.
> people won't do that, righteous as it may be

On the contrary, it means only people that really want to be on Sourcehut will do so.

Which is probably for the best, certainly while it’s still in an alpha state.

Slow and steady wins the race.

Again, not talking about SourceHut but the give-up-GitHub movement.

Only having a few committed users join SourceHut is great for SourceHut. Having only a few committed users leave GitHub is not great for GiveUpGitHub.

The others can go to Codeberg, Notabug, etc.