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by dasil003 4859 days ago
Yes, he was definitely putting the cart before the horse. Forcing people to pay for every tiny little project would lead to far less open-source activity on the low-end. The lack of support may be a problem, but it's necessary–not everything is worth supporting. And frankly, a couple dozen people paying $5 is not enough to seriously encourage anyone to commit themselves to long-term maintenance. You have to turn the complaint on the head and ask yourself are we better with the code out in the wild even if it's unsupported than not existing at all? It's hard to deny that the answer is yes. Even if you have to learn it and self-support, there's still an opportunity to save time and for new ideas to blossom.
1 comments

> Forcing people to pay for every tiny little project would lead to far less open-source activity on the low-end.

Forced? Don't think that was ever suggested nor even a remote possibility.

>You have to turn the complaint on the head and ask yourself are we better with the code out in the wild even if it's unsupported than not existing at all?

Well, yeah. I don't think anyone's really claimed this is some stark choice betwee financial support or nothing at all. The article, to me, was about improving the existing model.