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by mcpackieh
1067 days ago
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> but guess who pays the OSI's bills: https://opensource.org/sponsors/ For their corporate sponsors, not supporting usage restrictions is a feature, not a bug. Stallman and the FSF are hardly darlings of the corporate world, but they also consider the first and most important software freedom to be: "The freedom to run the program as you wish, for any purpose (freedom 0)." This is something people in this space earnestly believe in, not something they're just being paid by corporations to espouse. If you don't share these values, then that's your prerogative. Simply use another license and ignore people who complain about it; since they don't share your values you shouldn't care what they think. https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.en.html#four-freedoms |
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I imagine the corporate world is very happy with the FSF, because they represent the most popular non-permissive licenses by a significant margin, and RMS's stewardship of the FSF in the era of GPLv3+ has been an enormous help in the rise of popularity of permissive licenses.
> This is something people in this space earnestly believe in, not something they're just being paid by corporations to espouse.
I'm not implying that its adherents are influenced by corporations, but that its adherents have seemingly taken its tenants as holy writ instead of critically re-examining them in the context of today's open source landscape.