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Unfortunately, I don't understand what this article is trying to say, but I respect the author and made a diligent attempt. Yes, open source is now common place. But I sometimes wonder if it, too, is a market failure, in that many projects are governed by, or mostly funded by, single entities, e.g. Facebook (React), Google (Flutter, Go, Android), Docker (Docker), and so on... Is C++ a better example of open source, with broad industry contributions? What about WebAssembly? Major browsers (Chromium) can pretty much refuse to support some functionality, and that'll be the end of that. The power centralization has severe consequences for openness. I'm not convinced that community/industry-driven public-good type of FOSS will continue to flourish.
If anything, I worry that we'll end up with a bunch of "open source" projects that in reality have built-in limitations (or as the author said "a carefully engineered bottleneck"), that prevent truly open adoption (like HashiCorp preventing contributions that compete with their commercial edition feature offering). |
The important part though is that people have the freedom to use, modify, and learn from them. Imho it would only be market failure if that freedom disappears.