| > One of the cool things about open source is that other people can do that for you! This is a very valid point, but we should all recognise that some people⁰ explicitly don't want that for various reasons, at least not until they've got the project to a certain point in their own plans. Even some who have released other projects already prefer to keep their new toy more to themselves and only want more open discourse once they are satisfied their core itch is sufficiently scratched. Open source is usually a great answer/solution, but it is not always the best one for some people/projects. Even once open, “open source not open contribution”¹ seems to be becoming more popular as a stated position² for projects, sometimes for much the same reasons, sometimes for (future) licensing control, sometimes both. -- [0] I'm talking about individual people specifically here, not groups, especially not commercial entities: the reasons for staying closed initially/forever can be very different away from an individual's passion project. [1] “you are free to do what you want, but I/we want to keep my/our primary fork fully ours”. [2] it has been the defacto position for many projects since a long time before this phrase was coined. |
The "primary" fork is the one that the community decides it to be, not what the authors "wants". Does it really matter what is the "primary fork" for those working on something to "scratch their own itch"?