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by gchamonlive 950 days ago
Why is it redundant? Redundant to what? What would account for what opensource brings without opensource itself?
3 comments

The F, free software. opensource® isn't needed but it became a bigger brand than free software and everything with source available is called open source nowadays
You have free software. Free software is pretty rigidly defined. You also have open source software, which people also seem to think is defined. I'm my opinion, the concept of open source software is vague enough that its definition is open to interpretation. Look at the people claiming that source available software is open source. Source available software is, in fact, open source software, even if it's not compatible with copyleft. Free software is not open to interpretation. Open source software can be free software, but some software can rightfully be called open source software even if it isn't free software. So, if we are using the terms interchangeably because they are the same thing, then open source is a redundant term. If open source software and free software are not the same, which might be the case sometimes, then I want free software. I'm not a programmer. I don't care to make money from software and, frankly, I don't care about the money making aspect of software. Open source stuff, to me, reeks of corporate capture. I don't want telemetry, or to be bled financially to use a product. I don't believe that software is or can ever be a product. Algorithms shouldn't be copyrighted even if they are wrapped in a programming language. I don't care about implementation. I think this is a case of A is B and B is sometimes A. It's the sometimes case that really bothers me. https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point....
> I don't believe that software is or can ever be a product

You must mean should be, since we have decades of evidence to the contrary.

I mean that software, in it's written form, is the documentation of knowledge from software development, a service. I view sciencing as another service that produces knowledge. Knowledge has zero cost of duplication and, as such, cannot be considered a product. Artifacts that are produced by the application of knowledge are products because they have a non-zero cost of duplication. Computer hardware is an example of a product. I don't view intellectual property as property either. Software, in my opinion, isn't a product. Software is knowledge. I don't claim to be correct. I'm attempting to share my point of view. Anything with zero cost of duplication isn't a product in my mind because these things are infinitely copyable once created. Once a mathematician discovers a math they don't retain rights to it. Charging money for software is, in my view, no different than trying to make people pay for secret knowledge. You might be able to keep the secret locked down for a while, but it will get out eventually. Knowledge is the closest thing we have to magic, and if we choose to view it through the zero sum lens of capitalism, I think that does society a disservice in the long run. If I were a wizard I would share the magic, not try to charge money to teach people a spell or two. It might be the case that all products are knowledge given form, but keep in mind that knowledge exists before and after discovery and its fruits/artifacts must be created with work.
Free Software is inherently open source
Yes. The problem is that open source isn't free software.