| Nope. Sorry but you don’t get to hijack the term “open source”. There’s a reason we have gone to considerable lengths to define it https://opensource.org/osd Openness is an important principle and it includes not discriminating against fields of endeavour. Think “open society” not “open jar”. And if you disagree? Well, then I have some free software to sell you! > Software developers who have any business sense will tell you that customers presume that open-source is synonymous with source-available. As a software developer with business sense, I call BS on this made-up “fact”. All true scotsmen agree with me. |
The problem with this viewpoint is that the OSI is not the final arbiter of the English language.
Yes, the OSI has an "official definition" of what constitutes "open source" software, but there is a large group of people in the industry that equate the term "open source" with the concept of the source being available, and nothing more. You can shout "wrong, wrong, wrong!" all you want, but I doubt you are going to change many of those people's minds.
The Free Software Foundation has a similar problem with the term "free software".
The people making the definitions are generally passionate about those definitions (for good reasons, mostly, in my estimation). However, I don't think an approach that starts with "Sorry but you don't get to hijack the term" is going to have a net positive effect. If anything, it will probably have a negative effect.