| > Is this really about "scratching your own itch" or is this some thinly-veiled control issue? I wasn't attempting to veil it at all. It is a control issue for some. Sometimes someone is happy to share their project, but wants to keep some hold on the core direction. > > other individual/team/etc taking a “we are the captain now” position rather than “this is great, look what we've done with it too” The scenario is that someone opens up a project but says "I am not going to take any external contribution". Then someone else finds it interesting, forks it, that fork starts receiving attention and the original developer thinks to be entitled to control the direction of the fork? You are missing a step. I said that if someone has this concern then they might not open the project at all, until they feel ready to let go a bit. At that point “open source but not open contribution” and control over forks are not issues at all because the source isn't open and forking isn't possible. > That is what copyright is for and the patent system are for I don't know about you, but playing in those minefields is not at all attractive to me, and I expect many feel the same. If I had those concerns, and legal redress is the solution, I now have two problems and the new one is a particularly complex beast, it would be much easier to just not open up. |
Then do not hide it behind the "people just want to scratch their own itch". It is a bad rationalization for a much deeper issue and the way to overcome this is by bringing awareness to it, not by finding excuses.
> wants to keep some hold on the core direction.
You are really losing me here. The point from the beginning is that the idea of "direction" is relative to a certain frame of reference. There is no "core" direction when things are open. The very idea of "fork" should be a hint that it is okay to have people taking a project in different directions.
> it would be much easier to just not open up.
Agreed. But like I said: you can not have both ways. If you want to "keep control" and prevent others from taking the things in a different direction, then keep it close but be honest to yourself and others and don't say things like "it's not ready to be open yet" or "I want to share it with others but I worry about losing recognition".