Hey Nishant,

On 07/24/2010 06:14 PM, Nishant Prakash Kashyap wrote:
*Finally I've learned one thing, even Open Source is not for Community,
it is test bed for Corporate houses, a place for them to get the
developers work for free, finally put a logo and then earn name, fame or
money(anone one or all). And if any of the community member ever tries
to give his REAL open views, best is taken care to supress the views.*


Why do you feel that way ? Are you just in rant mode ? It is ok. Everyone has a sense of disillusionment at one point or the other. However, it would be good to remember a few things in moments like this:

a. The principles behind free software existed *looooong* before 'open source' became a buzz word and appealing to the corporate houses. Except for a few extremely dedicate individuals *most* free software developers had day time jobs in full blown /proprietary/ companies (eg: Sun, Novell, IBM ...etc). That did not stop them from doing what they loved in their free time and exchanging the fruits of their labor in a free manner. Think about this a bit. There was a time (just about 20 years back !) when even /suggesting/ something resembling open source within your company would only end up making you look like a fool. ...and I'm not even talking about some lowly developers ...a lot of who's-who of the FOSS world didn't even have the choice to work at a company which was at least in some manner open to FOSS. FOSS survived those times and there are companies now who at least work with the community (even if the motivation is personal gain).

b. The reason a company exists is because of money. There is *nothing* wrong with using FOSS as a "test bed for Corporate houses, a place for them to get the developers work for free, finally put a logo and then earn name, fame or money(anone one or all)...." In fact that is the way most successful FOSS companies work ! The point to remember is, even doing this, requires time, effort, dedication and most importantly an understanding of the sharing culture inherent in the community. Any company that does not get this, might be able to leach of the community for a while but will die in the long run. Look at Sun as an example of this. Companies can't just take and 'not' give back. It doesn't work that well in the long run. Companies like Red Hat have understood this.

c. If you think anyone /owes/ you something because you are part of the community, you need to re-examine why you are here in the first place. Every FOSS developer makes a choice to use/adopt and contribute to FOSS for /personal/ reasons. They contribute freely knowing fully well that their contributions might be just 'taken' by anyone (without even a thank you note) and that they'll get nothing in return. This is ok ! Think about this too a bit. Say you write an encryption library and release it under an open source license, now /anyone/, including Pakistan, China, North Korean, Al-Qeada have the 'freedom' to use your software for any purpose (freedom 0[1]). You should /understand/ the implication of this before saying that you believe in FOSS. You should come to the maturity to understand that FOSS developers don't care what you do with the software as long as you stick to the limited set of rules enforced by the copyright license. So if greedy companies are 'leaching' off the community and not following the 'spirit' of FOSS, let them. If however, they are breaking the law by ignoring the conditions of the copyright, you can take them to court[2].

d. Finally, understand that *you* are the community. Each one of us makes it what it is. The leaders of the community as we know it today, faced a lot of problems, but they stuck by their principles, some working silently to improve the software in their free time while their efforts were being 'taken advantage' of by greedy people, others being extremely vocal and refusing to compromise even a bit - however, in the end they won and are winning ! Perceptions won't change overnight. Corporate greed will *never* die. /You/ as a person have to make the choice whether you want to continue believing in the principles of FOSS. It is nobody's responsibility (least of all corporate's) to facilitate the community, it is just a choice /you/ make.


Hope you give up your negativity, forget about greedy companies and return to being part of this FOSS community, which is *ours* to make it whatever we want to make it.

cheers,
- steve

[1] http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html
[2] ...and organizations like EFF (http://www.eff.org/) and gplviolations (http://gpl-violations.org/) will help you with that.


--
Regards,
Nishant Kashyap


--
random spiel: http://lonetwin.net/
what i'm stumbling into: http://lonetwin.stumbleupon.com/
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