jongjong
today at 10:31 PM
After being an open source dev for over a decade, I've built up a kind of moral objection to certain kinds of open source.
If it was truly "for everyone" then we'd be seeing many more small tech startups succeed and a more vibrant ecosystem where open source devs would be supported and have access to opportunities. Also, getting traction would be more merit-based.
Currently, open source, in certain domains, is almost exclusively monetized by users whose values oppose my own. I'd rather sell or even give away cheap unlimited, permissive licenses to users of my choice, one by one and give them an actual competitive edge, than this faux "share with everyone" attitude. I explicitly don't want to share with bad actors. I explicitly don't want to empower bad actors.
The value extraction pipelines in the economy are too strong, all the value goes into a tiny number of hands. It's so direct and systematic, I may as well just hand over my project and all IP rights exclusively to big tech shareholders. This is an immoral or amoral position given the current system structure.
Open source is fundamentally not what it used to be because the composition of beneficiaries of open source software are fundamentally different. Well I guess it depends on what kind of software but for what I'm doing, it's definitely not going to benefit the right people.
carefree-bob
today at 10:42 PM
Open source is not intended to be for everyone or to benefit everyone, it is intended to be a type of "digital commons" where programmers can go and learn from each other and take existing code and build ontop of it. Obviously this benefits primarily developers and those who can understand the code or who need to use it, which will include many businesses but also hobbyists and self-taught programmers as well as students.
Before open source, even things like compilers and C libraries were closed source, and you needed to buy them from a vendor and were in trouble if the vendor went out of business. The original C compiler and library by Bell Labs were only licensed for $20,000 in the early 1970s. That's over $100,000 today. Imagine living in a world where it cost you $100,000 to access a c compiler. The effect of that is that only very large businesses and universities had access. Everyone else was locked out.
Now, we don't need to worry about that, we have a large library of tooling, we have operating systems, we have compilers and frameworks, all open source. That is the purpose of open source code and it has worked remarkably well.
But if you want to "benefit everyone", then look for something like universal basic income, as software licensing models aren't the tool to accomplish that.