On Mon, Sep 12, 2022 at 01:47:49PM -0400, Chuck Zmudzinski wrote:

[...]

> [...] A disadvantage is that often the priorities of the developers who 
> release
> free, open source software are not always the same as the priorities of any 
> particular
> user [...]

This might have been different back when the user used to be the paying
customer. That ship has sailed long ago. Even back then, attention was
optimized towards the "biggest subset".

> Megha Verma of medium.com goes so far to say a disadvantage of OSS is that 
> free
> open source software can be misused for malicious purposes, but it would be 
> hard
> to prove what she says is true, but her point is that the way open source 
> projects
> are governed lends itself to possible abuse. This is how she explains it:
> 
> "Open Source Software is accessible to all means it can be used and misused.
> And, that’s where it turns unconstructive for us. With OSS, we can expect 
> harm,
> virus transfer, identity burglary, and many other malicious practices to hurt 
> the
> process." [1]

Aha. That's why the most virus-ridden operating system out there is "open 
source".
Oh, wait...

This is naive.

No. Such simplistic views are just wrong. I'm not saying free software
is immune against malware. Not by a long shot. There are strengths and
weaknesses -- in my eyes, the biggest strength of free software (I much
prefer this spelling to the other, mind you) is the higher average level
of proficiency among their users, something free software fosters by its
very model.

Cheers
-- 
t

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