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    <title>Open Source Hypocrisy: Tag linus</title>
    <link>http://www.opensourcehypocrisy.org/articles/tag/linus</link>
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    <ttl>40</ttl>
    <description>Keeping Open Source Real</description>
    <item>
      <title>Homesteading the Noosphere</title>
      <description>&lt;p&gt;&lt;a href="http://catb.org/~esr/"&gt;Eric S. Raymond&lt;/a&gt; is a rather high-profile personality in the industry. &lt;a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eric_S._Raymond"&gt;His involvement in open source started decades ago&lt;/a&gt;, and you could say that he&amp;#8217;s been a primary participant from the beginning.&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;He&amp;#8217;s written a fascinating essay on the topic that I&amp;#8217;m starting this site over, called &lt;a href="http://catb.org/~esr/writings/homesteading/homesteading/"&gt;Homesteading the Noosphere&lt;/a&gt;.&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;Some of the most appropriate quotes for this website:&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Historically, the most visible and best-organized part of the hacker culture has been both very zealous and very anticommercial. The Free Software Foundation founded by Richard M. Stallman (RMS) supported a great deal of open-source development from the early 1980s forward, including tools like Emacs and &lt;span class="caps"&gt;GCC&lt;/span&gt; which are still basic to the Internet open-source world, and seem likely to remain so for the forseeable future.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;For many years the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt; was the single most important focus of open-source hacking, producing a huge number of tools still critical to the culture. The &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt; was also long the only sponsor of open source with an institutional identity visible to outside observers of the hacker culture. They effectively defined the term `free software&amp;#8217;, deliberately giving it a confrontational weight (which the newer label `open source&amp;#8217; just as deliberately avoids).&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Thus, perceptions of the hacker culture from both within and without it tended to identify the culture with the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt;&amp;#8217;s zealous attitude and perceived anticommercial aims. &lt;span class="caps"&gt;RMS&lt;/span&gt; himself denies he is anticommercial, but his program has been so read by most people, including many of his most vocal partisans. The &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt;&amp;#8217;s vigorous and explicit drive to ``Stamp Out Software Hoarding!&amp;#8217;&amp;#8217; became the closest thing to a hacker ideology, and &lt;span class="caps"&gt;RMS&lt;/span&gt; the closest thing to a leader of the hacker culture.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;The &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt;&amp;#8217;s license terms, the ``General Public License&amp;#8217;&amp;#8217; (GPL), expresses the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt;&amp;#8217;s attitudes. It is very widely used in the open-source world. North Carolina&amp;#8217;s Metalab (formerly Sunsite) is the largest and most popular software archive in the Linux world. In July 1997 about half the Sunsite software packages with explicit license terms used &lt;span class="caps"&gt;GPL&lt;/span&gt;.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;Ok, so that explains the one group. But there is another&amp;#8230;&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;But the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt; was never the only game in town. There was always a quieter, less confrontational and more market-friendly strain in the hacker culture. The pragmatists were loyal not so much to an ideology as to a group of engineering traditions founded on early open-source efforts which predated the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;FSF&lt;/span&gt;. These traditions included, most importantly, the intertwined technical cultures of Unix and the pre-commercial Internet.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;The typical pragmatist attitude is only moderately anticommercial, and its major grievance against the corporate world is not `hoarding&amp;#8217; per se. Rather it is that world&amp;#8217;s perverse refusal to adopt superior approaches incorporating Unix and open standards and open-source software. If the pragmatist hates anything, it is less likely to be `hoarders&amp;#8217; in general than the current King Log of the software establishment; formerly &lt;span class="caps"&gt;IBM&lt;/span&gt;, now Microsoft.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;To pragmatists the &lt;span class="caps"&gt;GPL&lt;/span&gt; is important as a tool, rather than as an end in itself. Its main value is not as a weapon against `hoarding&amp;#8217;, but as a tool for encouraging software sharing and the growth of bazaar-modebazaar-mode development communities. The pragmatist values having good tools and toys more than he dislikes commercialism, and may use high-quality commercial software without ideological discomfort. At the same time, his open-source experience has taught him standards of technical quality that very little closed software can meet.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;Excellent reading, as the piece goes on to explain how the pragmatists gained a foothold with the introduction of linux and Linus Torvalds, who has always been a pragmatist and takes occasional potshots at the zealots.&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;Increasingly it was the anticommercial purists who found themselves in a minority. How much things had changed would not become apparent until the Netscape announcement in February 1998 that it would distribute Navigator 5.0 in source. This excited more interest in `free software&amp;#8217; within the corporate world. The subsequent call to the hacker culture to exploit this unprecedented opportunity and to re-label its product from `free software&amp;#8217; to `open source&amp;#8217; was met with a level of instant approval that surprised everybody involved.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;blockquote&gt;
		&lt;p&gt;&amp;#8220;In a reinforcing development, the pragmatist part of the culture was itself becoming polycentric by the mid-1990s. Other semi-independent communities with their own self-consciousness and charismatic leaders began to bud from the Unix/Internet root stock. Of these, the most important after Linux was the Perl culture under Larry Wall. Smaller, but still significant, were the traditions building up around John Osterhout&amp;#8217;s Tcl and Guido van Rossum&amp;#8217;s Python languages. All three of these communities expressed their ideological independence by devising their own, non-GPL licensing schemes.&amp;#8221;&lt;/p&gt;
	&lt;/blockquote&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;I&amp;#8217;ll leave the rest of the reading for you as a literary exercise :-)&lt;/p&gt;


	&lt;p&gt;Pragmatists, unite!&lt;/p&gt;</description>
      <pubDate>Thu, 26 Jul 2007 15:17:00 +0000</pubDate>
      <guid isPermaLink="false">urn:uuid:01293e55-d395-4dd6-bc67-3f253da8c418</guid>
      <author>Spacemonkey</author>
      <link>http://www.opensourcehypocrisy.org/articles/2007/07/26/homesteading-the-noosphere</link>
      <category>Reading</category>
      <category>esr</category>
      <category>gnu</category>
      <category>gpl</category>
      <category>bsd</category>
      <category>linus</category>
      <category>torvalds</category>
      <category>ericsraymond</category>
      <category>fsf</category>
      <category>rms</category>
      <category>richardstallman</category>
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