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March 22, 2007

Torvalds on "proprietary"

Torvalds on "proprietary": Linus Torvalds hits on an angle that puzzled me -- the moralistic tone of some (not all!) arguments about how humans should conduct working relationships -- the hidden assumptions and emotion beneath objections of "but it's proprietary!" He's more laissez-faire in things which don't interest him. Some seen to feel threatened by diversity, though. I've snipped four paragraphs into the extended entry here.

The real basic issue is that I think the Free Software Foundation simply doesn't have goals that I can personally sign up to. For example, the FSF considers proprietary software to be something evil and immoral.

Me, I just don't care about proprietary software. It's not "evil" or "immoral," it just doesn't matter. I think that Open Source can do better, and I'm willing to put my money where my mouth is by working on Open Source, but it's not a crusade -- it's just a superior way of working together and generating code.

It's superior because it's a lot more fun and because it makes cooperation much easier (no silly NDA's or artificial barriers to innovation like in a proprietary setting), and I think Open Source is the right thing to do the same way I believe science is better than alchemy. Like science, Open Source allows people to build on a solid base of previous knowledge, without some silly hiding.

But I don't think you need to think that alchemy is "evil." It's just pointless because you can obviously never do as well in a closed environment as you can with open scientific methods.

We may have different specific ideas of what "fun" is, but it sounds like we take the same approach of avoiding that "good/evil" worldview, and are tolerant of the different choices of others.

Posted by JohnDowdell at March 22, 2007 04:11 PM

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Comments

His "science vs. alchemy" comparison really drives me good.

Adobe's point of abstracting from the teasing good/evil axis of software meaning measurement is the one of strongest point: keep it forever, you're wise!

Posted by: Rostislav Siryk at October 16, 2007 06:09 AM