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Bruce Perens Aims For OSI Executive

Posted by kdawson on Tue Mar 18, 2008 04:44 PM
from the board-games dept.
mutube writes "Open Source advocate Bruce Perens began petitioning for support in election to the OSI Executive Board. Because it's a self-electing board, demonstrable community support is needed to attain a seat. Perens is standing on a platform of reducing over-representation of vendors in OSI leadership in favor of developers. In his petition notice, Perens suggests that recent Open Source involvement by Microsoft could lead to their being offered a place on the board. With his background fighting SCO and the Novell-Microsoft patent agreements, Perens would be a good counter-balance."
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  • Anyone at OSI who values freedom will resign if Microsoft gains a seat on the board. Microsoft is an enemy of free and open software. Organizations that recognize or endorse Microsoft are also enemies. Good luck, Bruce.

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      I think that is a bit short sighted. Even if Microsoft is an "enemy" they have in the recent months started releasing more and more open source software. They have also started making amends in the browser space to follow the W3C standards. There is even an entire test suite they created with over 700 tests.

      Do I dislike Microsoft. Yes? Can I take what good they do and use it to my advantage. If they meet the requirements and pre-req's for the OSI, then why should they not be allowed to be a member?
      • OSI does not have any members, only a board of directors. Microsoft should not be allowed on the board barring a dramatic and clearly sincere shift in its position and actions, because it cannot be relied upon to act to promote open software.

          • by pintpusher (854001) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @07:43PM (#22790444) Journal
            I have mod points, but have to point this out so that people aren't confused.

            Parent is not Bruce Perens. its .Bruce Perens.

            note the period at the beginning of the name...

            Not the real guy!!
          • The parent post [slashdot.org] is a fake. The real Bruce Perens has user-id 3872, not one of those six-digit ones.
          • That's not the real Bruce Perens. Note username and high uid.
                • by rtb61 (674572) on Wednesday March 19 2008, @04:18AM (#22793178) Homepage
                  To pick off both comments in the one hit. Being an employee of M$ does not make a person evil, they just happen to be an employee of M$ and they are defined by their behaviour while they are an employee of M$. An individual is nominated to the board, not a representative of M$, hence if that individual leaves, another individual will replace where ever they come from, whether it be M$ or not.

                  So it is all the the the qualifications and the qualities of the individual and how well they will fulfil that role, not race colour, creed, religion 'hehe' should they be currently employed by M$ and be some what considered as closed source fundamentalist. Personally I believe Bruce Perens to be the best candidate for the current vacancies and did the petition thing, how ever at some point in the future there will be other vacancies and just because a person is or has been employed by M$ should not exclude them, not that I can think of any current M$ employees that would be considered suitable for a 'chair' on the OSI board.

      • I imagine that 99% of the folks at Microsoft have their heart in the right place. Certainly most of the ones I meet do. There are a few who do not at the top, and unfortunately the rest have to take orders sometimes. As we can see from the recent shenagians around the ISO vote, Microsoft has not given up its habit of playing dirty.

        I have been on committees with them before, for example the patent policy board at W3C. I know how to deal with it professionally.

        Thanks

        Bruce

        • by asuffield (111848) <asuffield@suffields.me.uk> on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:30PM (#22788998)

          I imagine that 99% of the folks at Microsoft have their heart in the right place. Certainly most of the ones I meet do.


          My own observation of their employees has been that the problem is, by and large, not one of intent. Microsoft is a textbook example of how you can pave roads with good intentions. Much of the harm they do isn't deliberate, it's a mixture of bad planning, worse execution, and generally being oblivious to the idea that they aren't perfect (at least until it's too late to do anything about it).
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          I think that's pretty optimistic. I wouldn't assume that 99% of people at RedHat or Canonical had their "heart's in the right place". What makes you assume that of Microsoft?
          • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

            I think that's pretty optimistic. I wouldn't assume that 99% of people at RedHat or Canonical had their "heart's in the right place". What makes you assume that of Microsoft?

            Well, rather than being actively malevolent, a lot of people just don't give a damn. Some know that they can do the right thing but choose not to get involved. Maybe they'll tell you it's "over their pay-grade".

        • by Naughty Bob (1004174) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @06:05PM (#22789494)
          According to the internets, Dextrocardia is believed to occur in approximately 1 in 100 people.

          Your 99% figure for MSFT therefore has a ring of truth, if not truthiness.
    • OSI hasn't told me who else is running. And probably most of those folks would rather die than let MS on the board. But some wouldn't.

      Bruce

      • This sounds like a high school class president run. How does MS being on the board of an organization that as far as I can see in my usage of OSS does about as much as the protocol stack it shares its name with hurt or help anything.

        Actually, why would anyone want to be on it's board?
        • OSI is generally recognized as the organization that tells you if a license claiming to be Open Source actually is Open Source or if it's in some way giving you less rights than should come with Open Source. Those rights being defined in something I created 10 years ago called the Open Source Definition, which people seem to mostly still agree with. The main function of that board is to interpret those rules and certify licenses.

          I think the "high school" nature of this is because the board is self-elected. Otherwise, there would be some formal structure that you could see around the election. The last time I asked Mike Tiemann, the closest definition I got of when the election is was "before the April board meeting", which I think is April 2.

          I don't know that MS is a candidate, indeed I have not been told about any candidates. I don't think they'd win, so far. I trust most of the current board not to elect them. I have been on other commitees with Microsoft folks, for example the patent policy board at W3C. Unfortunately, they still like to play dirty. Someone like me can help to balance them.

          Bruce

    • by ushering05401 (1086795) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:02PM (#22788712)
      Unfortunately such a withdrawal of OSI participants in response to MS involvement would be a PR victory for MS.

      One of the most common perceptions I find among my MS clients is that open source and zealotry go hand in hand. If MS appears to be embracing the community and the community rejects them the concept of the open source community as a collection of immature idealists (read not corporate America ready) would be cemented in many minds.

      When MS does begin their full force campaign to infiltrate the OSS community it should be met with carefully considered diplomacy, not blunt force resistance. Anything else will be a victory for MS.
      • Well, if they would stop doing the patent FUD, and stop stuffing ballot boxes at ISO, and in general stop the dirty fighting, we wouldn't need diplomacy. But I agree that they can make us look bad if we won't come to the table with them. We just have to make sure they don't leave with the table.

        Bruce

        • But I agree that they can make us look bad if we won't come to the table with them. We just have to make sure they don't leave with the table.

          Nor should the table budge an inch to suit their needs. Microsoft is not a leader in the open-source world, and until they get their act together, and have had their act together for some time (say, a decade), I really don't see why anyone should trust them. Give MS "observer status" at OSI if you want---perhaps they'll learn something---but to give them decision-making power on the board is irresponsible.

      • by perlchild (582235) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @06:28PM (#22789780)
        So in other words, as long as open source(which includes, and requires, a cleaner "process" than Microsoft) wants to fight Microsoft on OSS's own turf(clean process) they lose(not corporate), on Microsoft's own turf(shady legitimacy), they lose, on neutral ground(which I haven't seen yet, as everyone seems to have some form of bias(or can seem to, if you're arguing against them), they also lose.

        The opposition from OSS to Microsoft usually stems from people who wanted to be Microsoft friends, and who saw how Microsoft treats its friends/partners. (Long list, from Stacker to kerberos implementations gone wrong, etc...) If you are in OSS, you can see that Microsoft has a history of cheating, you can (with some justification) expect them to try to cheat you, but the business guys expect you to ignore this, or else, YOU are against the corporate ethos? Diplomacy is all well and fine, but it's usually best employed between parties whose good faith is equal.

        Let's just agree corporate America isn't ready for open source, I for one am ready for the next debate. Microsoft will not clean up its act without a BIG stick on the nose. So far, it's only got a rolled up newspaper, and only when it got caught red-handed. They have not shown "good faith", they have done damage control. They've never formally renounced "embrace/extend/extinguish" as a modus operandi. This is the people we have to be diplomatic with... Can we just agree we don't want to play, and go home? There's been a very long, bloody history of bad faith(mostly on their part, but yes there have been zealots on the other camp too, however, there's only been casualties on one side), too big to ignore unless something changes(they could formally drop OOXML, and embrace ODF(not in a year, not after the next shareholders meeting, but now!) something LOUD, something that shows they believe in openness(not necessarily open source) that they are willing to face the anger of their shareholders over it. (I've kept fantasizing they'd opensource office instead, but that won't happen that's just a fantasy).

        If Microsoft continues with software as a service, they will either become an unstoppable juggernaut, or make themselves completely irrelevant. They don't need the opensource crowd, so what diplomacy we do is just allowing them to dodge bigger and bigger fines from regulatory body, not enticing, encouraging, or helping them believe in openness. And right now, they are making money in giving just the apparence of openness, and corporate America does not care, can not care, will not care, but will bemoan its fate when a stronger Microsoft has it again by the balls and ask us, "where were you, we knew you hated them, why didn't you warn us, you're it guys, etc...". And we'll just tell them, we've been telling you, you just told us we were fanatics... Well sometimes, even fanatics have real opponents, people who believe just as fanatically(if only at the top) in exactly the opposite idea.

        I for one think openness means Microsoft cannot bully the market, since I've not seen them win market share on product merit in quite some time, I think they need to bully the market in order to enhance their shareholder value. More openness would be against increasing their market capitalisatiion, and therefore a bad thing, for them. It's mutually exclusive, we can build a market where everyone can play, or Microsoft can build a market where they give permission to play, it's not exactly a place for compromise...
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          Microsoft will not clean up its act without a BIG stick on the nose. So far, it's only got a rolled up newspaper,

          If you must use doggy analogies, then I'm afraid that Microsoft have spent so long tasting blood that they'll never make a good pet now. They're known to be dangerous around children and other pets, and have been known to go after adults as well.

          I'm sorry, but there's only one thing to do - put them to sleep. I know it sounds cruel, but it's the best option of a pretty bad bunch - the alternati
    • Christ, you sound like you're trying to convince Christians to expel the moors from Spain. Microsoft's just a company like any other, making software just like any other. If Microsoft's "an enemy of free and open software" then what is Adobe? Intuit? Apple? Etc? Are any companies *not* enemies of free and open software?
      • Microsoft certainly has been more active in attacking the free software movement and in particular Linux. Sure, other companies want you to buy their software rather than use something else, but most of them haven't generated the amount of FUD that Microsoft has or engaged in the bullying that Microsoft has. Do you see the Opera folks behaving like Microsoft? I don't think so. Do you see Corel trying to lock people into WordPerfect's file format? No, they were one of the original members of the OASIS commi

      • Christ, you sound like you're trying to convince Christians to expel the moors from Spain. Microsoft's just a company like any other, making software just like any other. If Microsoft's "an enemy of free and open software" then what is Adobe? Intuit? Apple? Etc? Are any companies *not* enemies of free and open software?
        Hi Blakey,

        There is a scale of corporate collaborators with the Open Source community. It runs the range of Benefactor, Symbiote, User, Parasite. All companies can be fit somewhere on this scale, sometimes we argue about what label one should get. NASA, back when it sponsored the development of most of the Linux network card drivers, was a benefactor. They didn't really plan to use them for their own operations. Most companies that attempt to be a sincere partner with the community are symbiotes, and they return value to the community in exchange for the value they get for their business, for example by developing more Open Source. Users are folks who just passively use the software without doing anything for the community - but we like to have Users because they give us the artistic gratification of seeing our software used and they sometimes become Symbiotes. Parasites are folks like SCO, that take value from the community in a harmful way.

        MS, unfortunately, while they are spewing patent FUD at us, while they are attempting to pervert the standards vote at ISO by creating dozens of new members for a single meeting, Microsoft doesn't belong on the partner scale at all. Apple tries to participate in Open Source, sometimes not successfully as when they took Open Darwin private, sometimes successfully as when they support the CUPS printer management system. Adobe, I don't know enough about their recent activities, but they made some open standards that we use very extensively, like Postscript, Type 1 and PDF. They also have been putting DRM in PDF, etc., which is generally negative.

        So, Microsoft is not just like any other company just like you are not like any other person. We have to make judgements based on the way they act.

        Bruce

        • by zotz (3951) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @08:34PM (#22790850) Homepage Journal
          "Users are folks who just passively use the software without doing anything for the community - but we like to have Users because they give us the artistic gratification of seeing our software used and they sometimes become Symbiotes."

          Bruce,

          I think you are missing one key thing users give us... Just by using... Network effects.

          I would have a much easier time asking people to switch from office to openoffice.org if everyone else was already using openoffice.org and not office. (I hate using that .org, has the other openoffice not gone away yet?)

          We would be getting much better hardware support if we had more plain users. This is a positive input plain old users give us. Even if they don't contribute money or code.

          Your thoughts?

          all the best,

          drew
          http://packet-in.org/wiki/index.php?title=Main_Page [packet-in.org]
          Packet In - net band... copyleft music?
      • >Adobe?
        Certainly not a friend, although they do benefit from open-source software. They seem like the penultimate holdover from pre-internet software companies: first-mover advantage -> de facto file and ui standard -> price bloat -> ever-tighter copy restrictions -> ?undermining open source alternatives?

        Intuit?
        Not a friend, although they do offer software to "open source systems"http://www.intuit.com/about_intuit/press_room/press_release/2007/06-13.jhtml [intuit.com]. I agree with you though, these comme
      • The only one of the four vendors you list produces an operating system. That one exception relies on an open core to their OS, too. IOW, they have little reason at present to try and stop Open Source projects in their tracks. At present, anyway.

        Though I wouldn't exactly call any one on your list an Open Source promoter, Microsoft is the only software vendor that would dearly love to kill any software, especially Open Source, that doesn't run exclusively on Windows. They've killed others who've simply threat
  • For campaign funding, perhaps you could take a cut of that undisclosed settlement [slashdot.org] for BusyBox (which I believe you started) [wikipedia.org] that was paid out to two other developers?
    • Re:BusyBox Funding? (Score:5, Informative)

      by Bruce Perens (3872) * <bruce AT perens DOT com> on Tuesday March 18 2008, @04:57PM (#22788666) Homepage Journal
      Unfortunately, one of those developers tells me that every line of code I wrote in creating Busybox is gone from the code base, and that I have no rights :-( . I am not sure I believe that, but there is no good to be had in further engaging with that developer, I have bigger battles to fight.

      Bruce

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        Unless your contribution consisted only of small, isolated bits, which as I understand it was not the case, even if there is nothing left that is recognizably your original code, BusyBox as a whole is still a derivative work and you therefore retain rights in it, no?

        • Re:BusyBox Funding? (Score:5, Informative)

          by Bruce Perens (3872) * <bruce AT perens DOT com> on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:17PM (#22788880) Homepage Journal
          Unless your contribution consisted only of small, isolated bits, which as I understand it was not the case, even if there is nothing left that is recognizably your original code, BusyBox as a whole is still a derivative work and you therefore retain rights in it, no?

          I don't want any money. And regarding settlements, SFLC generally gets money to support its own operations, and I suppose that the plaintiffs want some money to compensate their efforts. They are after all consultants who get paid for their time.

          But I am a bit uncomfortable about the whole thing.

          Bruce

        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          Unless your contribution consisted only of small, isolated bits, which as I understand it was not the case, even if there is nothing left that is recognizably your original code, BusyBox as a whole is still a derivative work and you therefore retain rights in it, no?

          The legal theory of homoeopathic copyright (ie, derivative works that don't contain any of the original content) is one that has been often proclaimed by lawyers but never firmly decided in court. So realistically, no (unless you have the time a

          • Actually, that depends on who your opponents are. If they are a large, well-funded corporation, the financial barrier may be great. If it is a matter of getting other developers of software you started to recognize your rights, it may not be.

      • Unfortunately, one of those developers tells me that every line of code I wrote in creating Busybox is gone from the code base

        Shouldn't that be fairly straightforward to verify?
        • Shouldn't that be fairly straightforward to verify?

          Yes. But I thought it was better to just walk away from the silly argument. And in any case he's had time enough to remove those lines deliberately.

            • Well, if I had kept running both those projects for 10 or 12 years, this would not have happened. So, it's my fault too. But then again, maybe I would not have a child, and maybe I would not have achieved some of the other important things that I've done. In general, I'm better off for having a life - I was a lot harder to get along with before I had one :-)

              Bruce

  • I usally respond to Slashdot comments if I see them. But you are also welcome to call me at 510-984-1055, or to email bruce at perens dot com . The phone rings in my office and home, and stops ringing when we would be sleeping.

    Thanks

    Bruce

    • by AresTheImpaler (570208) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:01PM (#22788704)
      SWEEEET, I now have parens' phone number! I'm going to show it off to all my friends!!! zomg! ;)
    • by eln (21727) on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:15PM (#22788866) Homepage
      Whoa, that's the exact same number this hot chick gave me at the bar last night. Dammit, I KNEW it was fake. Either that or I had the worst case of beer goggles in history.

    • Bruce,

      I just wanted to say that whilst I don't always agree with you on everything I think that having someone who is as reasonable as you helping to protect us from the whims of big vendors and especially MS can be no bad thing. I'm not sure how I can support you in any way in this endeavor but I wish you all the luck in the world.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        I'm not sure how I can support you in any way in this endeavor but I wish you all the luck in the world.

        Thanks! I am conscious that nobody listens to me unless I have the support of folks like you. There are mistakes I've made, that I would take back if I could. I'm trying very hard not to make them this time.

        Thanks

        Bruce

        • There used to be people who would play "fake Bruce Perens" on Slashdot, a decade before there was a Fake Steve Jobs. Here's a rare, surviving fake bruce [slashdot.org], he's currently moderated to -1, good. Please be sure to moderate such folks to oblivion. When this was really bad, it led to me having a signature pointing out that the real Bruce has that four-digit user-id. And then somebody made an Eminem parody song about "The Real Bruce Perens". Oh, the history!
      • Would you be a proponent of the phrase, "OSI Certified," and discourage the use of the far more ambiguous, and non-trademarked term "open source"?

        Sorry, no. And this is not because I disrespect anyone, it is because erosion of the term will not improve anything. Although "Open Source" is not federally registered, it is a trademark, and has the same status as "OSI Certified" because the attempt to register "OSI Certified" failed - I don't know why.

        "Open Source" includes both source code and the set of rights defined by the Open Source Definition, which I created as the Debian Free Software Guidelines and which only later was taken up by OSI. "OSI Certified" means that OSI agrees that the license in question meets that definition.

        I think the term you are looking for is "Disclosed Source Code". That means you can see the source code, but there are not necessarily any rights connected with that. There are many names that can be used for similar things: Shared Source: Microsoft's flavor, various different licenses with no rights in common. Some folks can see source code in some cases. Creative Commons: Usually used for non-software assets, the only common right between all of the licenses is that you can read or view them. And there are things called "crowdsource", "Public Source", and so on.

        Bruce

      • by totally bogus dude (1040246) on Wednesday March 19 2008, @03:38AM (#22793060)

        Many of your arguments seem to be based on the "broken windows" fallacy.

        While companies do make money from litigating patents, that money has to come from somewhere else: and that somewhere else is other companies. It's not creating wealth, it's simply redistributing it. In some cases this may be a good thing, e.g. a small company getting a chunk of cash from a big company that already has more money than it's able to inject into the economy; however, this comes at a cost in innovation and competition.

        Software patents are particularly harmful, because software development is one of the few fields with relatively low barriers to entry. A handful of innovative developers can put together something pretty impressive for a few million dollars, but if they do they're almost certainly going to get sued by someone else who isn't pushing the envelope. The best they can hope is to get bought out by a larger company. The US has been the world leader because of constant innovation, but the threat posed by software patents threatens to curtail that.

        anything "open source" (gpl, etc) is anti-business

        Since you claim to be serious, you really need to remember that very little software is written to be sold. The majority of software is used internally at businesses who have no intention (and often no method) of directly profiting from it. The software is used to improve business efficiency, which in turn allows greater production, hiring of more employees, and therefore leads to infinite sales and profits.

        Open source software has the potential to greatly reduce the cost of developing software in-house, which means that more of it can be developed and therefore more benefit can be obtained from it in terms of improved efficiency.

        Microsoft Office "Open" XML is a good example of what you don't want, because it means virtually everybody using computers at a business has to pay Microsoft a bunch of money in order to function. This is great for Microsoft and the people they employ and so on; however that's a pretty small part of the entire economy. For the most part, all it does is redirect wealth from a very large chunk of the economy to a very small part. Most people don't in any way benefit from Microsoft's profits.

  • by Bruce Perens (3872) * <bruce AT perens DOT com> on Tuesday March 18 2008, @05:01PM (#22788700) Homepage Journal
    Please sign here. [techp.org]

    Thanks

    Bruce