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by Spivak
323 days ago
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There is clearly a tension here where a bunch of people want to call their software open source without actually believing in what open source actually means. And this is absurd because it is betraying the fact that it's a marketing term. It seems like a bunch of startups realize that if they're trying to market to certain kinds of developers, if the software isn't open source, they won't touch it. You seem to believe that we shouldn't create closed source software but at the same time directly advocating for it—that's what it is that's what you're describing. If you want a more practical and less idealistic reason why it sucks when software companies prevent people like AWS from using their software, it's because the actual users of your software, the customers of AWS, wish to pay AWS to host it for them. They would like to hire the lovely folks who work at AWS to host and manage the software for them and the license prevents that. You are preventing your users from doing what they want with the software. And that's the rub, that's why it's important to not discriminate based off of use. |
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That just isn't going to work anymore.
The hyperscalers know this and they want you to keep building software this way. They'll write a managed version of your thing and collect all your money.
Fair source would be "customers can use this in an unlimited way as long as they don't sell a managed version".
That's what we need to do. Carve out the ability to make money for the originators doing the work.
Open source has turned us all into serfs working on giant kingdoms we don't own.
NOTE ALSO, the OSI has been so corporate captured that their definition of open source AI is not at all open. You shouldn't trust them at all.