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Submission + - Open Source Initiative bans co-founder, Eric S Raymond (lunduke.com) 5

Okian Warrior writes: 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 (the “OSI”).

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

Raymond made the following statement, on February 27, 2020, on his personal blog:

        “I – OSI’s co-founder and its president for its first six years – was kicked off their lists for being too rhetorically forceful in opposing certain recent attempts to subvert OSD clauses 5 and 6. This despite the fact that I had vocal support from multiple list members who thanked me for being willing to speak out.

        It shouldn’t be news to anyone that there is an effort afoot to change – I would say corrupt – the fundamental premises of the open-source culture. Instead of meritocracy and “show me the code”, we are now urged to behave so that no-one will ever feel uncomfortable.

        The effect – the intended effect – is to diminish the prestige and autonomy of people who do the work – write the code – in favor of self-appointed tone-policers. In the process, the freedom to speak necessary truths even when the manner in which they are expressed is unpleasant is being gradually strangled.

        And that is bad for us. Very bad. Both directly – it damages our self-correction process – and in its second-order effects. The habit of institutional tone policing, even when well-intentioned, too easily slides into the active censorship of disfavored views.”

Comment Sounds a bit like a SARBOX bill but for privacy... (Score 4, Interesting) 276

SARBOX makes executives personally responsible for the accuracy of the financial data they put out. This has made them get serious about the source of that financial data within their own company. Maybe a bill like this would help with privacy the same way.

Comment certainly true around here. (Score 1) 217

There is a cable provider and there is a dsl provider. No fiber is available. There are 5G wireless providers starting to penetrate the area, but where I am there is as yet no line of sight. LTE wireless is spotty right where I am. I've been paying as much for a slow DSL line as backup to the cable for my business needs and I need it so rarely that I'm ready to finally pull it. My need for backup for those rare times is finally lower, and LTE coverage is at least sufficient to meet that occasional need. HOWEVER: Until recently I would definitely have considered my area one of those where Fiber was deliberately delayed due to lack of competition.

My state did try to force Verizon to put fiber to every home. They said they won't permit any fiber with a commitment to doing the whole state in a certain time frame. Verizon promptly sold their telephony business in my state to a smaller provider and left. Now we have crappy land line service and still no fiber.

Comment Re:Why even project? (Score 1) 296

<quote>

<quote><p>This is Emirates Airlines we're talking about. The people who charge $15,000 a ticket and give you a bed seat and an in-flight shower.</p></quote>

<p>I'm glad Delta doesn't have in flight showers. I'm sure I'd be crammed next to some jackass taking a shower and there's no way I'm not getting sprayed in those cramped quarters.</p></quote>

If American Airlines had showers, they'd be a kitchen sink sprayer and a paper napkin, and you'd have to stay seat-belted in next to the others in your row while you used it. To turn it on, you'd have to first watch a five minute sales pitch for their credit card.

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