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posted by chromas on Wednesday September 12 2018, @03:41PM   Printer-friendly
from the No-sir,-I-don't-like-it dept.

Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard

In our increasingly politicized world, it has become popular to chant "all software is political." Software builds the systems that free or constrain us, the thinking goes, and so we should withhold it from bad people. This is the thinking that has led Microsoft employees and others to decry contracts tech companies have with ICE (US Department of Homeland Security Immigration and Customs Enforcement), insisting that their software only be sold to people they like.

[...] Over the years we as an open source community have experimented with all sorts of stupid ideas, like efforts to block anyone from using code for commercial purposes unless they pay. Each time, we've realized that as good a goal as it is for developers to get paid, for example, the destruction caused by closing off the code to uses we don't like ends up ruining the foundations upon which open source rests.

This is dramatically more important, however, when it comes to attempts to politicize open source software.

As developer Chris Cordle stated, "Nobody wins" and the "whole idea [undergirding open source] dies" ... "if an author arbitrarily picks and chooses who can and can't use it based on whoever Twittersphere is mad at this week." It doesn't matter if there is tremendous cause for that anger. Open source dies when it becomes politicized.

Source: https://www.techrepublic.com/article/why-politicizing-open-source-is-a-terrible-idea/


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  • (Score: 2) by fyngyrz on Wednesday September 12 2018, @06:20PM

    by fyngyrz (6567) on Wednesday September 12 2018, @06:20PM (#733767) Journal

    Parent:

    In fact, today in $current_year, there are more slaves than at any previous point in history, although as a percentage they are fewer than the norm.

    Reality:

    Neither slavery nor involuntary servitude, except as a punishment for crime whereof the party shall have been duly convicted, shall exist within the United States, or any place subject to their jurisdiction.

    According to the US Bureau of Justice Statistics (BJS) 2013 numbers*, 2,220,300 adults were incarcerated in US federal and state prisons

    There are plenty of slaves to go around. Plenty of law extant with no rational social value whatsoever (many of those laws having to do with unjustifiable interference in personal / consensual choice) to make more slaves, too.

    * Google [google.com] puked up the 2013 numbers at the top to a request for the 2018 US prison population.

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