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posted by martyb on Tuesday March 10 2020, @11:51PM   Printer-friendly
from the quite-the-coc-up dept.

Open Source Initiative bans co-founder, Eric S Raymond:

Last week, Eric S Raymond (often known as ESR, author of The Cathedral and the Bazaar, and co-founder of the Open Source Intiative) was banned from the Open Source Intiative[sic] (the "OSI").

Specifically, Raymond was banned from the mailing lists used to organize and communicate with the OSI.

For an organization to ban their founder from communicating with the group (such as via a mailing list) is a noteworthy move.

At a time when we have seen other founders (of multiple Free and Open Source related initiatives) pushed out of the organizations they founded (such as with Richard Stallman being compelled to resign from the Free Software Foundation, or the attempts to remove Linus Torvalds from the Linux Kernel – both of which happened within the last year) it seems worth taking a deeper look at what, specifically, is happening with the Open Source Initiative.

I don't wish to tell any of you what you should think about this significant move. As such I will simply provide as much of the relevant information as I can, show the timeline of events, and reach out to all involved parties for their points of view and comments.

The author provides links to — and quotations from — entries on the mailing list supporting this. There is also a conversation the author had with ESR. The full responses he received to his queries are posted, as well.


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  • (Score: 2) by barbara hudson on Sunday March 15 2020, @04:56PM

    by barbara hudson (6443) <barbara.Jane.hudson@icloud.com> on Sunday March 15 2020, @04:56PM (#971611) Journal

    Wrong. The internet has warped people's behaviour. When someone tells you what traffic is like, do you demand proof? When someone says that bananas are on sale do you demand proof? When someone tells you that they got a raise, do you demand to see their old and new paycheques? When someone tells you who they voted for, do you demand proof?

    And yet the internet is somehow different. Screw that. Don't believe me, no skin off my nose. I . OWE . YOU . NOTHING .

    Same as everyone else on the internet.

    It's amazing that demanding the same level of discourse online as offline is seen as so radical.

    Explain to me and everyone else how there's some sort of requirement for anyone to prove anything they post on the internet. And then explain how you are violating that rule by refusing to post using your real identity, but that's somehow okay, because internet.

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