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Thank you, and it's great that it was recognised a structural change was needed inside and that they attracted you to help implement that. I understand there's deep and long threads on the mailing list, and that there are great flaws with the SSPL. That the communication with MongoDB crashed and left a sour after taste I can imagine. But the fact now is that there's a deeply flawed SSPL out there, OSI's only real public statement is very dismissive of it. It does not address at all the concerns of Elastic or MongoDB, painting them as some sort of bad guys, when in fact their products have always been open source, even when they were so valuable they really didn't need to be. And the companies that drove them away from what OSI considers open source, are OSI's two biggest sponsors! Two sponsors it is worth mentioning, who built their products entirely as proprietary closed software, on top of open source software. So now, wether they meant to or not, OSI has profiled themselves as defenders of proprietary platforms, making no effort to acknowledge the plight of open source companies, and lost credibility to such a degree that now again one the great open source companies has dismissed their approval and went for an unapproved license. If the OSI was really serious about the "greater good", they would have worked with the FSF and helped MongoDB, Elastic and Redislabs defend against proprietary platform companies such as AWS and Google with an AGPLv4 that has the provisions the SSPL introduced without causing the concerns other people raised in this thread with regard to (possibly intentional?) vagueness around what does and does not need to be open sourced. If that had happened, then maybe today Redislabs would have announced their switch to an OSI approved open source license, and the OSI would have retained its legitimacy and reputation. How many great budding open source/open core projects have been inspired by the success of Redis, MongoDB and Elastic, that now will consider the same path as these companies, or worse, that of Hashicorp? |
Frankly speaking, I would love to see also a detailed criticism of the AGPLv3. I would love to have a better understanding of why the SSPL was deemed necessary and what needs the AGPLv3 fails to satisfy... So far, the only explanations I've heard are superficial at best.
You have to also realize that most of these companies are not interested in copyleft or in the values of Open Source to empower users. They're following a very well known path, one that Phipps calls the rights ratchet model. Call it the SugarCRM model, if you prefer: it's a very very predictable pattern, from Open Source to proprietary in about 10 years https://meshedinsights.com/2021/02/02/rights-ratchet/
These are complex matters though and I'm convinced that they cannot be eviscerated properly on a social media, or only on an online forum. We need better ways.