A Look Back At 10 Years of OSI 73
blackbearnh notes that this week marks the 10th anniversary of the Open Source Initiative. He points us to O'Reilly's ONLamp site, where Federico Biancuzzi (who frequently interviews notables in the Open Source community for O'Reilly) has a collection of interviews with some of the founders of the OSI, including Bruce Perens and Eric Raymond. "Eric Raymond: There is a pattern that one sees over and over again in failed political and religious reform movements. A charismatic founder launches the movement, attracts followers, and enjoys significant successes; then he dies or leaves or attempts to name a successor, and the movement disintegrates rapidly. One of the classic, much-studied cases is that of John Humphrey Noyes and the Oneida Community, 1848-1881. It was especially clear in that case that its succession crisis and eventual collapse was due to over-reliance on Noyes's personal leadership. At the time I co-founded OSI in 1998 I judged that FSF would very likely undergo a similar crackup if it lost RMS, and was determined to avoid that if possible for OSI."
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Lo the surprise.
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Perhaps since 'free' is number 1 of your definition of open source, perhaps the 'FOSI'
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It was the Slashdot title that abbreviated, not them. A quick glance at their website suggests that they name themselves as "Open Source Initiative", and only then use the abbreviation when the context is clear. There must be countless organisations that have abbreviations in common with other things.
Any confusion here is due to the Slashdot article title, but is it asking too much to expect people to RTFS? Would you complain at Slashdot articles on PCs, asking why
Open Systems Interconnection? 7 Layer model? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Open Systems Interconnection? 7 Layer model? (Score:5, Interesting)
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You can tell when you are in a network protocol department when there are posters of the protocol layers all over the place, RFC's pinned to the walls and somebody has written APSTNDP along the side of a door.
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Much easier to remember that way.
Re:Open Systems Interconnection? 7 Layer model? (Score:4, Funny)
I'm glad we had this talk.
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Bingo! (Score:1)
Although curiously in my case, many years ago I did actually meet the elusive and shy beast when I worked on an comprehensive email suite that used X.400 transport and X.500 Directory Services. We were up against competition like CC:Mail and I thought we had a good product. Sadly it died a whimpering death when the top marketroids decided not to push it out to the customers.
Ne
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The only way these charlatans manage to survive is to continually attempt to get media coverage implying they are relevant.
The OSI is like those shysters who sell people deeds to plots of land on the Moon - their only worth is proportional to how dumb and gullible you are.
Source code licenses are nothing more than tools. Each license should fit the particulars of that developer or company's needs or plans for their work. Trying to hijack that process to further your own nutty ideological goals is pathetic.
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The big issue is that some people involved in OSI on the board or otherwise have strange notions* about the scope of authority that the organization has. These strange notions are at odds with official OSI documents, and see to be the cause of a lot of unpleasantness on the lists.
*Michael Tiemann, unfortunately counts among these, as does Rick Moen and Russ Nelson. They suggest that the OSI has the moral and legal a
Irony? (Score:5, Funny)
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Oh come on (Score:5, Informative)
I don't know if you are that humor-impaired, but I think you're wrong to expect that other folks would be.
Bruce
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Re:Oh come on (Score:4, Interesting)
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http://www.forbes.com/forbes/2006/1030/104_print.html [forbes.com]
To my generation (early 20s) RMS comes across as an egotistical control freak. I grew up with free software (largely thanks to him, I'm sure), but I don't know of any actual contributions he has made to free software in recent history. Instead, he ridicules people who don't associate his name with their own open source software (GNU/Linux is a joke), and acts like a fool because he thinks he can ride on th
Troll alert (Score:2)
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I'm sure you hear this stuff all the time, but I just wanted to re enforce that there are sane people out there who fight for free software, and disagree with the methods of RMS. Thanks for reading
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Yeah, a link to goatse.cx would probably have been more informative. You post such a link. You propagate such vitriolic shit. Certainly don't expect a detailed response. And that's coming from someone who mostly agrees with you about Eric Raymond's beliefs, so if you've lost people like me -- someone who thinks a lot li
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Be that as it may, I *do* agree with you on your assessment of RMS as an egotistical control freak. For people who think I am just being harsh, please consider:
1) Go and *read* the discussions between RMS and the participants on debian-legal relating to whether the FSF GFDL is Free enough for Debian.
2) Read Thomas Bushnell's resignation letter from the HURD pro
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So you're commenting as an outsider then. You don't pick someone else's leader.
information will be free... when corporations... RMS can't code...
Oh, to be 20 years old with no accomplishments again.
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He definitely doesn't look like someone who should be influential in any sane community
As embarrassed as she is by the fact that she actually said "community", the fact remains that he doesn't have a clean, respectable appearance. He's a smart man with a lot of good ideas (many I don't agree with, but good nonetheless). In a perfect world he'd be judged by these things, but instead he's being judged by the fact that he looks like he's going to ask you for spare change. Add to this the fact that he says that all softw
More troll alert (Score:2)
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I think that we as a community need to be very careful as to the sort of credit we give RMS. Legitimately he has:
1) Started the dialog about software freedom as analogous to free speach. He hasn't upheld very high standards of either (sacking Thomas Bushnell from HURD because he objected to the forced advocacy provisions in GNU documentation is a good example) but he has started the discussion and we would n
snap social judgment (Score:3, Insightful)
Geeks might think it's funny, but if someone who didn't know about the FSF and RMS walked in, they'd just think, "Who is this tosser?"
I was thinking about this aspect of human nature at my favorite coffee shop yesterday. The curious aspect of this is our ingrained tendency to admire (or mentally confer social status toward) the kind of person who takes one look at something like this, and makes the snap "loser" judgment. There is in practice no social approbation for the fact that this snap social judgment might be wrong, or that making this snap social judgment is a talentless act (the average nine year old does it six times before re
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Re:Irony? (Score:4, Informative)
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That's not irony. I think you missed his point. RMS remains a charismatic figurehead of an important organisation, and ESR is not. Lest we think this is due to any failing on the part of ESR, he informs us that he chose to remain out of the spotlight, in order to serve the greater good. Opinions will differ as to whether this is more self-serving revisionism, or if he really did exercise that kind of foresight.
yp
Wait a minute... (Score:2)
FSF without RMS (Score:1)
To me, RMS is the FSF.
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I'd imagine FSF without RMS would be like FSF Europe. I know nothing about FSF Europe apart from the fact that it exists, despite being a FSF associate member and European.
To me, RMS is the FSF.
That's exactly my fear.
I am a member of the Fellowship of the FSFE and get their bi-annual letter and all of their press-releases, but that isn't really much.
RMS is a great leader, but he really shines as a spokesperson: he is easily recognized and creates awareness. No matter who you speak to: they all have an opinion about him.
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We'd be sad, but it wouldn't end FSF.
Agreed. All I'm saying is that ESR's version of the story seems to suggest that the only reason he's not as highly regarded as RMS is because he chose not to be, and not because he isn't really bringing anything to the table.
RMS continues to present a considered, consistent and insightful perspective on issues related to Free Software. You may or may not agree with what he says, but he says it well and is a good spokesperson for the FSF. On the other hand, while ES
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Imagine if he'd actually sought the spotlight.
Oneida Community. (Score:1, Interesting)
It's not off topic, it's referenced in the summary.
ESR, master of puppets (Score:2, Insightful)
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Of course it was doomed to failure. (Score:3, Funny)
You can type more than that for your subject. (Score:1)
Actually (Score:1)
ESR and political crap reduction (Score:5, Interesting)
I'm glad that ESR sees at least one of his goals as being to reduce the amount of political crap flying around in the community
After he'd already equated Free Software with moralizing and conducting ideological warfare, you could be forgiven for thinking he was more interested in spreading bullshit that containing it.
yp.
OSI == Irrelevant (Score:1)
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and guns
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and guns
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smug alert (Score:1)
Ah... yes. The ol' Noyes/Oneida example from the shopworn canon of 19th-century personality cult case-studies. Is it even necessary to reference this classic, much-studied case by name? Is its relevance not simply assumed by all whenever the discussion turns to leadership and succession? Excuse me a moment [puff] [puff] while I take a drag [puff] [puff] off my calabash pipe and then savor the heady ar
Cults go on if they own real estate (Score:2)
Look at Scientology. Hubbard is dead, but the organization keeps rolling on. It might be around in a century, positioned somewhat like Christian Science. Even the Rosicrucians [rosicrucian.org] keep plugging along.
It helps if the cult owns real estate. Christian Science, the Rosicrucians, and Scientology all invested heavily in prime real estate during the founder's lifetime. (When in San Jose, visit Rosicrucian Park, a city block of pseudo-Egyptian buildings surrounded by a residential neighborhood.)
The FSF needs a
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The FSF isn't a money making machine.. so there isn't much chance of that.
The SFLC [softwarefreedom.org] on the other hand...
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Hubbard's death had little impact upon the "Church" because, by the end of his life, Hubbard wasn't really running the show anymore. If what I've read is to be believed, Hubbard was a drug addled fool sailing about aimlessly, while the more lucid, higher standing members of the "religion" kept the ball rolling (and the money rolling in).
In other words, Hubbard had a successor, whether he liked it (or was even aware of it) or not.
Portnoy? (Score:1)
OSI? Give me a break. (Score:2)
The "Open Source Movement" or "Open Source Initiative" as, I guess they like to call themselves are just harming the free software movement.
First, I have to vent this: OSI is the Open Systems Interconnection, or basis for the OSI Model. Do the "Open Source" guys have to add confusion to this as well?
I'm going to say this again, but I will preface it with I believe that their intentions are probably sincere,