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4336 lines
208 KiB
XML
<chapter>
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<title>FLOSS</title>
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<desc>...</desc>
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<mails>
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<mail>
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<nbr>0.0</nbr>
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<subject><nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
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<from>Aymeric Mansoux</from>
|
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<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
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<date>Fri, 11 Nov 2011 14:23:23 +0100</date>
|
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<content>Most discussions around the influence of the free software philosophy on
|
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art tend to revolve around the role of the artist in a networked
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community and her or his relationship with so-called open source
|
||
practices. Investigating why some artists have been quickly attracted to
|
||
the philosophy behind the free software model and started to apply its
|
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principles to their creations is key in understanding what a free, or
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open source, work of art can or cannot do as a critical tool within
|
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culture. At the same time, avoiding a top down analysis of this
|
||
phenomenon, and instead taking a closer look at its root properties,
|
||
allows us to break apart the popular illusion of a global community of
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artists using or writing free software. This is the reason why a very
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important element to consider is the role that plays the license as a
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conscious artistic choice.
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Choosing a license is the initial step that an artist interested in an
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alternative to standard copyright is confronted with and this is why
|
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before discussing the potentiality of a free work of art, we must first
|
||
understand the process that leads to this choice. Indeed, such a
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||
decision is often reduced to a mandatory, practical, convenient,
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possibly fashionable step in order to attach a "free" or "open" label to
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a work of art. It is in fact a crucial stage. By doing so, the author
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allows her or his work to interface with a system inside which it can be
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freely exchanged, modified and distributed. The freedom of this work is
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||
not to be misunderstood with gratis and free of charge access to the
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creation, it means that once such a freedom is granted to a work of art,
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||
anyone is free to redistribute and modify it according to the rules
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||
provided by its license. There is no turning back once this choice is
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||
made public. The licensed work will then have a life of its own, an
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autonomy granted by a specific freedom of use, not defined by its
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author, but by the license she or he chose. Delegating such rights is
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||
not a light decision to make. Thus we must ask ourselves why an artist
|
||
would agree to bind her or his work to such an important legal document.
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After all, works of art can already 'benefit' from existing copyright
|
||
laws, so adding another legal layer on top of this might seem
|
||
unnecessary bureaucracy, unless the added 'paper work' might in fact
|
||
work as a form of statement, possibly a manifesto. In this case we must
|
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ask ourselves what kind of manifesto are we dealing with, what is its
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message? What type of works does it generate, what are their purpose and
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aesthetic?
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The GNU manifesto
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In the history of the creation and distribution of manifestos the role
|
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of printing and publishing is often forgotten or given a secondary role.
|
||
But, what would have become of the Futurist Manifesto without the
|
||
support of the printing press and the newspaper industry in France and
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the rest of Europe? Not much, probably. So it is not without irony that
|
||
one of the anecdotes often given to illustrate the motivations of
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Richard Stallman to write the GNU Manifesto, the founding text behind
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||
the free software movement, is tightly linked to the story of a
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defective printer. Indeed, very often, the origin of the document starts
|
||
with a story about a problem Richard Stallman and some colleagues of his
|
||
faced when Xerox did not give away the driver source code of the printer
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||
they had donated to MIT, preventing the hackers at the lab to modify and
|
||
enhance it to fit their specific needs. In this case, this particular
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||
printer model had the tendency to jam and the lack of feedback from the
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machine when it was happening made it hard for the users to know what
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was going on. [1] Beyond the inability to print, and behind what seems
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||
to be a trivial anecdote, this event still remains one of the best
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examples to illustrate the side effects proprietary software can have in
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terms of user alienation. The programmers and engineers that were using
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the printer could have fixed or found a workaround for the jamming, and
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contributed the solution to the company and other users. But they were
|
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denied the access to the source code of the software. Such a deadlock is
|
||
one of the reasons why the GNU manifesto was written. What is unique in
|
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this manifesto, is the idea that software reuse and access should be
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enforced, not only because it belongs to a long history of engineering
|
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practice, but also because software has to be free.
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||
|
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Looking at the text itself, we can see that the tone and the writing
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style used by Stallman make the GNU Manifesto closer to an art
|
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manifesto, than to yet another programmer's rant or technical guideline.
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As a matter of fact, we can read through the document and analyse it
|
||
using the specific art manifesto traits that Mary Ann Caws has isolated
|
||
based on the study of art manifestos produced during the twentieth
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century. [2] For instance Caws explains that "it is a document of an
|
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ideology, crafted to convince and convert." This is correct, the GNU
|
||
manifesto starts with a personal story, turns it into a generalisation
|
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including other programmers and eventually involving the reader in the
|
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generalisation and explaining to her or him how to contribute right
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away. Caws also characterises the tone of manifestos as a "loud genre",
|
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and it is not making a stretch to see this feature in the all-capital
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recursive acronym GNU and the way it is introduced to the reader. It is
|
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the first headline of the manifesto and sets the self-referential tone
|
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for the rest of the text, as well as embodying a permanent finger
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pointing to what it will never be: "What's GNU? Gnu's Not Unix!."
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Furthermore, she reminds us that the manifesto âdoes not defend the
|
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status quo but states its own agenda in its collective concern", which
|
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is what Stallman does with the use of headlines to announce the GNU
|
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road-map and intentions clearly: "Why I Must Write GNU," "Why GNU Will
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Be Compatible with Unix," "How GNU Will Be Available," "Why Many Other
|
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Programmers Want to Help," "How You Can Contribute," "Why All Computer
|
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Users Will Benefit." the GNU Manifesto also instructs its audience on
|
||
how to respond to the document with the presence of a final section
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||
"Some Easily Rebutted Objections to GNU's Goals" that lists and answers
|
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common issues that come to mind when reading it. Last but not least,
|
||
manifestos are often written within a metaphorical framework that
|
||
borrows its jargon from military lingo and for many the GNU Manifesto is
|
||
being perceived and presented as a weapon, essential in the war against
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||
the main players of the proprietary software industry, such as
|
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Microsoft. In fact many hackers saw in the GPL an effective tool in "the
|
||
perennial war against Microsoft." [3] Thus, when the copyleft principle,
|
||
the mechanism derived from the GNU manifesto, is introduced in the 1997
|
||
edition of the Stanford Law Review, it is precisely described as a
|
||
"weapon against copyright" [4] and not just a 'workaround' or 'hack'.
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||
>From the manifesto to the license...
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||
|
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This particular concept of freedom, as it is expressed in the manifesto,
|
||
is focused on the usage and the users of software. It will eventually
|
||
lead to the maintenance by the Free Software Foundation (FSF) of a
|
||
definition of free software and the four freedoms that can ensure its
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||
existence. On top of that, the GNU Manifesto is practically implemented
|
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with the GNU General Public License (GPL), that provides the legal
|
||
framework to enable its vision of software freedom. It means every work
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||
that is defined by its author as free software, must be distributed with
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||
the GPL. The license itself works as a constant reference to the
|
||
manifesto, by the way it is affecting the software and its source code
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||
distribution. Every software distributed with the GPL becomes the
|
||
manifestation of GNU, and the license's preamble is nothing else but an
|
||
alternative text paraphrasing the GNU Manifesto. This preamble is not a
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||
creative addition to the license, on the contrary the Frequently Asked
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Questions (FAQ) of the FSF even insists that it is an integral part of
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the license and cannot be omitted, thus making form and function
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coincide.
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Even though the GPL was specifically targeting software, it does not
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take long for some people to see this as a principle that could be
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adapted or used literally in other forms of collaborative works. As
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||
early as 1997, copyleft is mentioned as a valid framework for
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||
collaborative artworks in which artists would pass "each work from one
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||
artist to another." [5] Of course, this is suddenly brought to our
|
||
attention not because of the collaboration itself, but because of its
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||
sudden legal validity. Indeed the idea of passing works from one artist
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||
to another and encouraging derivative works is nothing new. For
|
||
instance, back in the sixties, mail artists such as Ray Johnson even
|
||
used the term "copy-left" in their work, [6] and it was possible on some
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||
occasions to spot the now very popular copyleft icon, an horizontally
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mirrored copyright logo, marking a mail art publication. In this context
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copy-left was seen as a symbol of "free-from-copyright relationships"
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||
with other artists in a way that was "not bound to ideologies".[7] In a
|
||
strange twist, the use of this term is echoing years later, not without
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cynicism, in some reproductions of Johnson's works which are now stamped
|
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"Copyright the estate of Ray Johnson."[8]
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|
||
So why a sudden interest in such practices? Precisely because of the
|
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growing development of intellectual property in the field of cultural
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production. At the time, under the 1976 copyright act, the only
|
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recognised artistic collaborative work was the joint work, in which it
|
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is required that all the authors agree that all their contributions are
|
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meant to be merged into one, flattened down, work. This made perfect
|
||
sense in the context of the print based copyright doctrine but was
|
||
clearly not working for digital environments where the romantic vision
|
||
of the author is dissolved in the complex network of branches, copies
|
||
and processes inherent to networked collaboration. This situation
|
||
provided much headache to lawyers focused on the copyrighting of
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digitally born works. One of these works is for instance Bonnie
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||
Mitchell's 1996 âChainArtâ project, in which her students and fellow
|
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artists were invited to modify a digital image and pass it to someone
|
||
else using a file server. In such a project the whole process and its
|
||
different iterations are the work itself, not the final image at the end
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of the chain. The work exists as a collection of derived, reused and
|
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remixed individual elements that cannot be flattened down into one
|
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single 'joint work' and as a consequence, from a legal perspective,
|
||
could neither be protected nor credited properly under the limited
|
||
copyright regulations.[9] No surprise then that Heffan picked the Chain
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||
Art project as an example of artistic work that could greatly benefit
|
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from the GPL and the use of copyleft that can encourage "the creation of
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collaborative works by strangers".[10]
|
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...and back to the manifesto
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|
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Although this conclusion makes perfect sense legally, it clearly
|
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overlooks and diminishes the artistic desire to reflect upon the nature
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of information in the age of computer networks. Many artists adopted the
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GPL early on, not because of their wish to collaborate with strangers,
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but instead to augment their work with a statement derived from the free
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software ideology. For instance Mirko Vidovic used the free software
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definition to develop the GNU Art project,[11] in which suddenly, the
|
||
GPL becomes a political tag, a set of meta data that could be applied to
|
||
any work of art. By choosing the GPL as a means of creation and
|
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distribution, artists are aiming at implementing an apparatus similar to
|
||
the digital aesthetics that Critical Art Ensemble (CAE) had described
|
||
"as a process of copying [â] that offers dominant culture minimal
|
||
material for recuperation by recycling the same images, actions, and
|
||
sounds into radical discourse".[12] The weapon against copyright becomes
|
||
a flagship for the recombining dreams of the digital resistance as
|
||
envisioned by CAE. But by directly reusing the GPL, projects such as GNU
|
||
Art failed none the less to really break through the position of
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Stallman that refuses to take part in judging if whether or not works of
|
||
art should be free.
|
||
|
||
This is why a few lawyers, MÃlanie ClÃment-Fontaine, David Geraud, as
|
||
well as artists, Isabelle Vodjdani and Antoine Moreau, felt the need to
|
||
make more explicit the artistic context and motivations of a liberated
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||
work of art by creating the Free Art License (FAL), equivalent to the
|
||
popular free software GNU public License and articulated specifically
|
||
for the creation of free art. [13] Suddenly, the license becomes an art
|
||
manifesto. In the FAL the rules of copyleft are exposed, they stand on
|
||
their own and enable the artistic creation, not for the sake of creating
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||
but as a means to produce singular and collective works. What is seen as
|
||
freedom is just a very specific definition as envisioned in the GNU
|
||
manifesto and that can only exist within the set of rules it represents.
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||
Moved to an artistic context, the rules to define freedom become a
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||
system to make art. In the same way that 'cent mille milliards de
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poÃmes' was the 1961 OuLiPo manifestation of creative rules, the free
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art license is also a combinative manifesto, one that enables free art.
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||
It is not a simple adaptation of the GPL to the French copyright law, it
|
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is a networked art manifesto that operates within the legal fabric of
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culture.
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||
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Anyone who respects the rules of the FAL is allowed to play this game.
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Just like the ludic aspect in OuLiPo's work, and its probable root from
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Queneau's flirt with surrealism, artists who start to consciously use
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the GPL and the FAL solely for its 'exquisite' properties might start a
|
||
superficial relationship with the creative process. Indeed, Raymond
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Queneau, co-founder of the OuLiPo reminded us already that we should not
|
||
stop at the process' aesthetics itself because "simply constructing
|
||
something well amounts to reducing art to play, the novel to a chess
|
||
game, the poem to a puzzle. Neither saying something nor saying
|
||
something well is enough, it is necessary that it be worth saying. But
|
||
what is worth saying? The answer cannot be avoided: what is useful."[14]
|
||
In other words and adapted to the FAL, the network aesthetics are not
|
||
enough, their existence must be contextualised and positioned to escape
|
||
its fate of a convenient technological and legal framework. This is why
|
||
if the game aspect is obvious in the collective works that surround the
|
||
FAL, we must see beyond the rules that are presented to us to perceive
|
||
that such an artistic methodology aims to be an answer to the issue
|
||
perceived by Chon in the analysis of the âChainArtâ project. Namely, to
|
||
engage with the fluidity of information and try to turn the clichÃd
|
||
attitude of artists towards their unique and immutable contributions to
|
||
art into a useful game. At the same time the emphasis is put on the
|
||
collective nature of production and not community work.
|
||
|
||
The main issue with the intention of the FAL is that unlike the digital
|
||
aesthetics modeled by CAE from LautrÃamont's ideas,[15] the mechanism of
|
||
a free art, against the capitalisation of culture and for the free
|
||
circulation of ideas within the network can only work by making the
|
||
machine responsible for this very same capitalisation legitimate. While
|
||
the mail art derivatives are happening outside of any obvious legal
|
||
regulations, the copyleft art is literally hacking the system to reach a
|
||
symbiosis and establish a kingdom within the kingdom. As a consequence
|
||
these political works are very different from the artistic politics
|
||
developed after the Russian revolution and World War I. Here, the artist
|
||
is not an agent of the revolution but the vector of an 'arevolution'. A
|
||
copyleft art is in the end not so much a critical weapon but instead a
|
||
cornucopia that operates recursively and only within the frame of its
|
||
license. Artists that are engaging with it, thus turning the license in
|
||
a shared manifesto, cannot materialise an anti-culture, a counter
|
||
culture, nor a subculture, they must create their own from scratch.
|
||
Instead of seeking opposition and destruction of an enemy, they aim at
|
||
founding and building.
|
||
Conclusion
|
||
|
||
If we look at 1897 MallarmÃ's 'Un coup de dÃs jamais n'abolira le
|
||
hasard', it is possible to only see it as an interesting visual design
|
||
experiment in poetry. This approach misses the reason why this work
|
||
exists in the first place. By turning art into the gathering and
|
||
composing, even painting of both time and space within a text, it
|
||
reached the apotheosis of parnassianism and symbolism upon which
|
||
modernism broke through.[16] A similar issue of complex lineage and
|
||
contextual information surrounds a document such as the FAL and leads to
|
||
concurrent 'raisons d'Ãtre.' Indeed, the FAL is not just an 'excercice
|
||
de style,' it is the embodiment of several elements that are announcing
|
||
important changes in artistic practices: a call to turn legal rules into
|
||
a constrained art system, a reflection on the nature of collaboration
|
||
and authorship in the networked economy, a living archeology of the
|
||
creative process by bringing traceability and transparency, and
|
||
ultimately, the mark of an age of copyright and bureaucratic apotheosis
|
||
that is pushing artists to develop their practice within the
|
||
administrative structure of society and embed it in their creative
|
||
process.
|
||
|
||
Unfortunately, and this is one of the reasons there is so much confusion
|
||
and misunderstanding about the use of such licenses by artists and
|
||
theoreticians, is that, with such a manifesto where form meets function,
|
||
once the license is used, it triggers a process of rationalisation that
|
||
leads to a fragmentation of the original ideology and intention into
|
||
different, possibly contradictory, elements:
|
||
|
||
* A toolkit for artists to hack their practice and free themselves
|
||
from consumerist workflows.
|
||
|
||
* A political statement against the transformation of the digital
|
||
culture into what CAE calls the "reproduction and distribution network
|
||
for the ideology of capital".
|
||
|
||
* A legal and technical framework to interface with the current
|
||
system and support existing copyright law practices.
|
||
|
||
* A lifestyle, and sometimes fashion statement.
|
||
|
||
In practice it is possible for an artist to only see one of these facets
|
||
and either ignore or not be aware of the others, making the license as
|
||
manifesto multidimensional, open to different interpretations, not
|
||
unlike the medium it was drafted in: the law.
|
||
|
||
---
|
||
|
||
[1] Sam Williams, Free as in Freedom: Richard Stallman's Crusade for
|
||
Free Software, ed. Sam Williams (Sebastopol: O'Reilly and Associates,
|
||
Inc., 2002).
|
||
|
||
[2] Mary Ann Caws, Manifesto: A Century of Isms (Lincoln: University of
|
||
Nebraska Press, 2000).
|
||
|
||
[3] Ibid. 1, p. 13.
|
||
|
||
[4] Ira V. Heffan, "Copyleft: Licensing Collaborative Works in the
|
||
Digital Age," in Stanford Law Review, Vol. 49, No. 6 (Jul., 1997), pp.
|
||
1487-1521.
|
||
|
||
[5] Ibid.
|
||
|
||
[6] "From Mail Art to Net.art (studies in tactical media #3)", McKenzie
|
||
Wark, email on the nettime mailing list,
|
||
http://www.nettime.org/Lists-Archives/nettime-l-0210/msg00040.html.
|
||
|
||
[7] "RYOSUKE COHEN MAIL ART - ENGLISH", accessed May 13, 2011,
|
||
http://www.h5.dion.ne.jp/~cohen/info/ryosukec.htm.
|
||
|
||
[8] Ibid. 6.
|
||
|
||
[9] Margaret Chon, "New Wine Bursting from Old Bottles: Collaborative
|
||
Internet Art, Joint Works, and Entrepreneurship," in Oregon Law Review,
|
||
Spring 1996.
|
||
|
||
[10] Ibid. 4.
|
||
|
||
[11] "GNUArt", accessed May 13, 2011, http://gnuart.org.
|
||
|
||
[12] Critical Art Ensemble, "Recombinant Theatre and Digital
|
||
Resistance," in TDR (1988-), Vol. 44, No. 4 (Winter, 2000), pp. 151-166.
|
||
|
||
[13] "Free Art License 1.3," accessed April 19, 2011,
|
||
http://artlibre.org/licence/lal/en.
|
||
|
||
[14] Constantin Toloudis, "The Impulse for the Ludic in the Poetics of
|
||
Raymond Queneau," in Twentieth Century Literature, Vol. 35, No. 2
|
||
(Summer, 1989), pp. 147-160.
|
||
|
||
[15] Ibid. 12.
|
||
|
||
[16] Jacqueline Levaillant, "Les avatars d'un culte: l'image de MallarmÃ
|
||
pour le groupe initial de la Nouvelle Revue FranÃaise," in Revue
|
||
d'Histoire littÃraire de la France, 99e AnnÃe, No. 5 (Sept. -Oct.,
|
||
1999), pp. 1047-1061.
|
||
|
||
a.
|
||
--
|
||
http://su.kuri.mu</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Message not available</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Mon, 14 Nov 2011 23:38:05 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Keith Sanborn said :
|
||
|
||
> Very interesting to consider Mallarmé and OuLiPo in this context.
|
||
>
|
||
> So is this endgame a condition of history or are there ways out?
|
||
> Beyond the mutually exclusive strategies you enumerate? Do you have
|
||
> one to propose? Or must we make our own inferences from the
|
||
> interstices between the elements of your text?
|
||
|
||
The only thing that I'd like to propose is an encouragement to artists
|
||
interested in the topic to keep in mind that free culture is a hub where
|
||
many agendas and interests will collide and overlap regardless of their
|
||
personal intention and the one of the license creator. Knowing that
|
||
might be a beginning of a strategy.
|
||
|
||
That said, it is worth mentioning the existence of projects that attempt
|
||
to break down the "multidimensional" nature of some free cultural or
|
||
open content licenses. Some of which will be familiar to this list's
|
||
members: the Peer Production License, the Open Art License, the
|
||
exception GPL aka ethical GPL, personal "forks" of the Free Art License,
|
||
etc.
|
||
|
||
In each case, the recipe is the same: isolate an issue that is not
|
||
compatible with a mode of production, a creation process, a belief or
|
||
philosophy and then forbid/manipulate it as a condition hard coded in
|
||
the license.
|
||
|
||
Such licenses are more than an artistic statement, in the sense of a
|
||
purely artistic phantasy, they also aim at founding and building a body
|
||
of cultural expressions. But none of them are a way out, instead it is a
|
||
way in, a further nesting into some strange legal matryoshka, building
|
||
on top of the original copyleft nest within copyright.
|
||
|
||
Best,
|
||
a.
|
||
--
|
||
http://su.kuri.mu</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.4</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 11:15:43 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Hi
|
||
|
||
Am 11.11.2011 14:23, schrieb Aymeric Mansoux:
|
||
|
||
> It is in fact a crucial stage. By doing so, the author allows her or
|
||
> his work to interface with a system inside which it can be freely
|
||
> exchanged, modified and distributed. The freedom of this work is not
|
||
> to be misunderstood with gratis and free of charge access to the
|
||
> creation, it means that once such a freedom is granted to a work of
|
||
> art, anyone is free to redistribute and modify it according to the
|
||
> rules provided by its license. There is no turning back once this
|
||
> choice is made public.
|
||
|
||
This is IMHO pure nonsense. IMHO nothing can stop a pruducer from
|
||
changing his mind for the future. Why should it be the way you
|
||
imagine? What should be the reason for such a limitation ("no turning
|
||
back") of his freedom? Can you show me, sorry, ONE case where a court
|
||
has decided in your way?
|
||
This artist is a lawyer,
|
||
very best,
|
||
H.
|
||
> The licensed work will then have a life of its own, an autonomy
|
||
> granted by a specific freedom of use, not defined by its author, but
|
||
> by the license she or he chose.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.5</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>David Griffiths</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 18:07:40 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
|
||
|
||
> Hi
|
||
>
|
||
> Am 11.11.2011 14:23, schrieb Aymeric Mansoux:
|
||
>
|
||
>> It is in fact a crucial stage. By doing so, the author allows her or
|
||
>> his work to interface with a system inside which it can be freely
|
||
>> exchanged, modified and distributed. The freedom of this work is not
|
||
>> to be misunderstood with gratis and free of charge access to the
|
||
>> creation, it means that once such a freedom is granted to a work of
|
||
>> art, anyone is free to redistribute and modify it according to the
|
||
>> rules provided by its license. There is no turning back once this
|
||
>> choice is made public.
|
||
>
|
||
> This is IMHO pure nonsense. IMHO nothing can stop a pruducer from
|
||
> changing his mind for the future. Why should it be the way you
|
||
> imagine? What should be the reason for such a limitation ("no turning
|
||
> back") of his freedom? Can you show me, sorry, ONE case where a court
|
||
> has decided in your way?
|
||
|
||
With a licence such as the GPL my understanding was that the "no-turning
|
||
back point" happens whenever someone else contributes or forks the work
|
||
- from this point on agreement has to be reached from all authors before
|
||
the licence can be changed - in practice this is not generally possible.
|
||
|
||
In terms of software, the freedom considered important by the GPL is
|
||
that of the users of the work, not the developers (i.e. it should remain
|
||
free/open for the users benefit).
|
||
|
||
cheers,
|
||
|
||
dave</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.6</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Rob Myers</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 15 Nov 2011 19:01:26 +0000</date>
|
||
<content>On 15/11/11 10:15, Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
|
||
|
||
> IMHO nothing can stop a pruducer from
|
||
> changing his mind for the future.
|
||
|
||
They cannot however prevent the people who have received copies of their
|
||
work under a licence offering that work to other people under the same
|
||
licence.
|
||
|
||
So yes the artist can stop offering the work under that licence, but
|
||
they'll have a hard time suppressing it.
|
||
|
||
- Rob.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.7</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 16 Nov 2011 17:03:10 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am 15.11.2011 20:01, schrieb Rob Myers:
|
||
|
||
> On 15/11/11 10:15, Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
|
||
>
|
||
>> IMHO nothing can stop a pruducer from changing his mind for the future.
|
||
>
|
||
> They cannot however prevent the people who have received copies of their
|
||
> work under a licence offering that work to other people under the same
|
||
> licence.
|
||
|
||
This is what I am asking myself. I dont think the GPL produces any
|
||
obligation, it is just the actual consent of the author that matters and
|
||
may change.
|
||
|
||
IMHO,
|
||
|
||
best, H.
|
||
|
||
<...></content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.9</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Message not available</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 17 Nov 2011 02:24:35 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Dear Florian,
|
||
|
||
Am 16.11.2011 19:07, schrieb Florian Cramer:
|
||
|
||
>>> It is in fact a crucial stage. By doing so, the author allows her or
|
||
>>> his work to interface with a system inside which it can be freely
|
||
>>> exchanged, modified and distributed. The freedom of this work is not
|
||
>>> to be misunderstood with gratis and free of charge access to the
|
||
>>> creation, it means that once such a freedom is granted to a work of
|
||
>>> art, anyone is free to redistribute and modify it according to the
|
||
>>> rules provided by its license. There is no turning back once this
|
||
>>> choice is made public.
|
||
>>>
|
||
>> This is IMHO pure nonsense. IMHO nothing can stop a pruducer from
|
||
>> changing his mind for the future. Why should it be the way you
|
||
>> imagine? What should be the reason for such a limitation ("no turning
|
||
>> back") of his freedom? Can you show me, sorry, ONE case where a court
|
||
>> has decided in your way?
|
||
>>
|
||
> A producer/copyright owner can change their mind about the license of
|
||
> a work in the future, but cannot retroactively change a license
|
||
> granted in the past if it was an indefinite license.
|
||
|
||
This is a beautifull idea but is it true?
|
||
|
||
What is "a licence"?
|
||
|
||
Is it a thing that you get? No, it is a set of rules on what you can do
|
||
with something else, some code or whatever.
|
||
|
||
And all rules have to be interpreted. Transfers of the code accordiing
|
||
to the words of the licence have to be valid.
|
||
|
||
I would make a difference between the relation between creator A and
|
||
user B and the relation between user B and C.
|
||
|
||
Even if creator A would OWE something to user B, he would owe nothing to
|
||
user C.
|
||
|
||
But I doubt that there is any DUTY of creator A against anybody in those
|
||
licences in any legal sense and think that there is nothing but a poem
|
||
and actual consent on creator A, that can change.
|
||
|
||
Best, H.
|
||
|
||
<...></content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.11</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Rob Myers</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 20 Nov 2011 12:26:24 +0000</date>
|
||
<content>
|
||
On 17/11/11 01:24, Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
|
||
|
||
>> A producer/copyright owner can change their mind about the license
|
||
>> of a work in the future, but cannot retroactively change a license
|
||
>> granted in the past if it was an indefinite license.
|
||
>
|
||
> This is a beautifull idea but is it true?
|
||
|
||
Yes.
|
||
|
||
> What is "a licence"?
|
||
|
||
A legal grant of permission. In some jurisdictions it is a form of
|
||
legal contract.
|
||
|
||
> Is it a thing that you get? No, it is a set of rules on what you can
|
||
> do with something else, some code or whatever.
|
||
|
||
Which affect whether you get a particular thing or not.
|
||
|
||
> And all rules have to be interpreted. Transfers of the code
|
||
> accordiing to the words of the licence have to be valid.
|
||
|
||
All legal documents have to be interpreted. The GPL and various
|
||
Creative Commons licences have been interpreted and upheld by the
|
||
courts.
|
||
|
||
> I would make a difference between the relation between creator A and
|
||
> user B and the relation between user B and C.
|
||
>
|
||
> Even if creator A would OWE something to user B, he would owe
|
||
> nothing to user C.
|
||
|
||
B owes something to C, though, and B got it from A. A cannot change
|
||
B's ability to give A's work to C. What A "owes" C depends on how
|
||
Romantically we view A's work. But C will certainly end up with A's
|
||
work.
|
||
|
||
You are right that A and B have different relationships to C: under
|
||
copyleft A can relicence adaptations of the work, B can't. But that's
|
||
very different from being able to prevent C from receiving the
|
||
original work from B.
|
||
|
||
> But I doubt that there is any DUTY of creator A against anybody in
|
||
> those licences in any legal sense and think that there is nothing
|
||
> but a poem and actual consent on creator A, that can change.
|
||
|
||
As I say, the courts have upheld these "poems". A has no power to
|
||
prevent C receiving the work from A. We can phrase this as a duty not
|
||
to prevent C from receiving the work if we really want to.
|
||
|
||
- Rob.
|
||
</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>0.12</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> My Lawyer is an Artist</subject>
|
||
<from>Aymeric Mansoux</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Mon, 21 Nov 2011 22:54:26 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Rob Myers said :
|
||
|
||
> On 17/11/11 01:24, Heiko Recktenwald wrote:
|
||
> > I would make a difference between the relation between creator A and
|
||
> > user B and the relation between user B and C.
|
||
> >
|
||
> > Even if creator A would OWE something to user B, he would owe nothing
|
||
> > to user C.
|
||
>
|
||
> B owes something to C, though, and B got it from A. A cannot change B's
|
||
> ability to give A's work to C. What A "owes" C depends on how
|
||
> Romantically we view A's work. But C will certainly end up with A's work.
|
||
<...>
|
||
|
||
Just to add to what Rob and the others have already said, I think there
|
||
is also a confusion between copyright, moral rights and the
|
||
effectiveness of the latter within copyleft practices. In theory A can
|
||
still stop C to keep on making a particular usage of A's work if there
|
||
is a way to demonstrate that this particular usage, even though
|
||
fully respecting the terms of the license, is damaging for A's honor and
|
||
reputation.
|
||
|
||
That's the simplified general idea. In practice every juridiction has
|
||
its own way to define moral rights and by extension its own cases of
|
||
what is considered "damaging". To make things worse the very concept of
|
||
moral rights does not exist in all juridictions. Overall, whether it is
|
||
defined or not, the whole idea is difficult to put in practice, if not
|
||
hard to make relevant to a specific context.
|
||
|
||
In the end, this only concerns very specific situations that will only
|
||
change the nature and possibly terminate the license or the contract
|
||
between A and C. B's rights will remain unchanged, as well as the ones
|
||
from D, E, F, ..., Z because free culture licenses are irrevocable. The
|
||
GPLv3 and CC licenses are very explicit in that regard. A good
|
||
illustration of the difficulty to deal with moral right issues is by
|
||
checking all the mechanisms in CC licenses to make sure A is not wrongly
|
||
credited for changes that were not endorsed.
|
||
|
||
So, as stated previously, once the decision is made, is public and that
|
||
the licensed work has been already copied/distributed, there is no
|
||
turning back.
|
||
|
||
a.
|
||
--
|
||
http://su.kuri.mu</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>1.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Keith Hart</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 04:32:30 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>It appears we cant even agree that one major difference between Free
|
||
Software and Open Source/Linux is the attitude to money and hence to
|
||
capitalism. Jaromil (below) thinks a statement posted on the net by the
|
||
politburo settles the issue. But read Florian's 'in it for the money' and
|
||
even more Stefan Merten's interview, where he imagines a society 'beyond
|
||
labour, money and exchange' (both below).
|
||
|
||
Jaromil:
|
||
|
||
>Free software is a matter of freedom, not price; the word "free"
|
||
>has to be intended in this way here. Furthermore, referring to the
|
||
>wrong assumption by Keith Hart in this thread:
|
||
>> The open source movement is split on the issue of exchange and money
|
||
>> payment. Those who follow the Free Software Foundation appear to
|
||
>> consider that any hint of money and exchange, even of reciprocity,
|
||
>> leads directly to unacceptable compromise with capitalism.
|
||
>refer to http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html to have a clear
|
||
>point about the free-speech / free-beer issue.
|
||
|
||
Florian Cramer:
|
||
|
||
>The real amount of altruism in Free Software
|
||
>development may be debated, but any programmer who's mostly or even only
|
||
>in it for the money would be stupid to program anything but proprietary
|
||
>software (which, no doubt, is more profitable).
|
||
|
||
Interview with Stefan Merten, Oekonux, nettime, 7/12/01:
|
||
|
||
>But whereas Free Software
|
||
>emphasizes the freedom Free Software gives the users,
|
||
>Open Source does not care about freedom. The Open
|
||
>Source Initiative (OSI) was founded exactly for the
|
||
>reason to make Free Software compatible with business
|
||
>people's thinking, and the word "freedom" has been
|
||
>considered harmful for that purpose.
|
||
|
||
>I had the idea that Free Software is something very
|
||
>special and may have a real potential for a different
|
||
>society beyond labor, money, exchange - in short:
|
||
>capitalism - in 1998.
|
||
|
||
As it happens, I had come across the free speech/free beer distinction
|
||
without having to consult the gnu website. It still seems to me that the
|
||
freedom of Free Software is largely, but not exclusively tied up with the
|
||
normative absence of money. This allows the purists to insist that those
|
||
who wish to work across the divide 'do not care about freedom' or are 'only
|
||
in it for the money'. And behind that, of course, is a desire to preserve
|
||
the mystique of a hacker elite.
|
||
|
||
Keith Hart</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>1.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 10:22:41 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>>As it happens, I had come across the free speech/free beer distinction
|
||
>without having to consult the gnu website.
|
||
|
||
I think the free speech / free beer distinction is really
|
||
counterproductive at this point. I understand its historical value in
|
||
rallying US hackers in the context of a culture that fetishes "individual
|
||
freedom" to a degree that it's something that one has no longer to explain
|
||
or argue for. Free speech = good, in all circumstances. I'm not arguing
|
||
against free speech, what I'm arguing against is the idea that free speech
|
||
offers a good metaphor to understand the value of free software / open
|
||
source.
|
||
|
||
Lessig, in his new book The Future of Ideas, offers a much better
|
||
definition for what "free" in this context means. He writes, "a resource
|
||
is 'free' if (1) one can use it without permission of anyone else; or (2)
|
||
the permission one needs is granted neutrally" (p.12). Our roads, for
|
||
example, are free in Lessig's sense. This is the case even if a toll
|
||
charge is levied because the charge is imposed neutrally. Everyone pays
|
||
the same price independent of the purpose of driving on the road. A road
|
||
would no longer be free if, say, Coke had sponsored its construction and
|
||
therefore could prohibit Pepsi trucks from using it.
|
||
|
||
In this definition, there is no difference in the freedom created by open
|
||
source or free software.
|
||
>It still seems to me that the
|
||
>freedom of Free Software is largely, but not exclusively tied up with the
|
||
>normative absence of money. This allows the purists to insist that those
|
||
>who wish to work across the divide 'do not care about freedom' or are 'only
|
||
>in it for the money'. And behind that, of course, is a desire to preserve
|
||
>the mystique of a hacker elite.
|
||
|
||
I agree with Keith, the absence of money per se is not a virtue. Insisting
|
||
on the evils of money in all contexts, is the simple inversion of the
|
||
capitalist logic which says making money per se is good. The
|
||
transformation of resources and their impact is what really matters. And
|
||
so far, I haven't seen anyone who could show the open source approach
|
||
transfers time and money (or donated hardware if you prefer) into worse
|
||
code or less code than the FSF approach.
|
||
|
||
Felix
|
||
|
||
|
||
--------------------++-----
|
||
Les faits sont faits.
|
||
http://felix.openflows.org</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>1.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 19:31:43 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Wed, 19.Dec.2001 um 10:22:41 -0500 schrieb Felix Stalder:
|
||
|
||
> capitalist logic which says making money per se is good. The
|
||
> transformation of resources and their impact is what really matters. And
|
||
> so far, I haven't seen anyone who could show the open source approach
|
||
> transfers time and money (or donated hardware if you prefer) into worse
|
||
> code or less code than the FSF approach.
|
||
|
||
By all probability not, because Free Software and Open Source are
|
||
technically the same - the "Open Source Definition" is almost identical to
|
||
the "Debian Free Software Guidelines" [and was drafted by the very same
|
||
author, Bruce Perens]. The both terms don't even describe differences in
|
||
development methodology. They are diverge in philosophical and political
|
||
terms: "Open Source" is, according to those who launched the term, about
|
||
technically better software ("software that sucks less"), "Free Software"
|
||
is about old-hacker-school freedom of information. -
|
||
|
||
It's quite ironical that other net cultures - such as this one here - has
|
||
gotten it the other way round.
|
||
|
||
Felix, one may of course say that the "Free Software" notion of freedom is
|
||
naive, but on the other hand the GNU-style "Free Software" movement
|
||
remains the only one to date that had a consistent agenda and politics
|
||
against the proprietarization of code and knowledge. (And many of those
|
||
who dismissed the FSF positions as obnoxious hippie fundamentalistm have
|
||
changed their mind since DMCA, DCSS and Sklyarov.)
|
||
|
||
The point is not that, say, "Linux" would stand (as "Open Source") against
|
||
"GNU" (as "Free Software"). The term "Open Source" was coined and
|
||
disseminated by Eric S. Raymond very late, in 1998, as a rebranding for
|
||
code that preceded the term for ears or even decades (including GNU,
|
||
Linux, BSD, Apache, Perl, sendmail etc.) and which had simply been called
|
||
Free Software before.
|
||
|
||
Florian
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>1.3</nbr>
|
||
<subject>RE: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Kermit Snelson</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 22:21:08 -0800</date>
|
||
<content>Florian Cramer:
|
||
|
||
> By all probability not, because Free Software and Open Source are
|
||
> technically the same
|
||
|
||
This is true, and the fact may be demonstrated by examining the two lists of
|
||
licenses evaluated by the Open Source Initiative [1] and the Free Software
|
||
Foundation [2] respectively. Of the dozens of software licenses that may be
|
||
clearly identified as being on both lists, only the Apple Public Source
|
||
License is considered "open source" by the OSI but "Non-Free" by the FSF.
|
||
That one exception may, moreover, be due more to political than technical
|
||
reasons. The FSF accepts the rest as "free software" licenses, although it
|
||
nonetheless deprecates many of these as "GPL-Incompatible."
|
||
|
||
Keith Hart:
|
||
|
||
> It appears we cant even agree that one major difference between Free
|
||
> Software and Open Source/Linux is the attitude to money and hence to
|
||
> capitalism.
|
||
|
||
The two camps have indeed taken very different rhetorical paths to what are
|
||
demonstrably identical conclusions. I am less optimistic than Felix, who
|
||
interprets this as evidence of a great movement that is capable of absorbing
|
||
"very different, even contradictory ideas." I see it the other way around,
|
||
namely as a single idea that has been absorbing different movements.
|
||
|
||
There's no other explanation, I think, for the fact that we're hearing so
|
||
much group singing lately between left-leaning communitarians and the
|
||
libertarian right, and not only on the finer points of software license
|
||
agreements. Keith's recent proposal in this thread to vacate the legal
|
||
monopoly of central banks on the issue of legal tender certainly has the
|
||
potential to throw yet another log on this cozy campfire.
|
||
|
||
Kermit Snelson
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
[1] http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.html
|
||
[2] http://www.fsf.org/licenses/license-list.html</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>1.4</nbr>
|
||
<subject>RE: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 20 Dec 2001 17:15:55 +0100 (CET)</date>
|
||
<content>> This is true, and the fact may be demonstrated by examining the two lists of
|
||
> licenses evaluated by the Open Source Initiative [1] and the Free Software
|
||
> Foundation [2] respectively. Of the dozens of software licenses that may be
|
||
|
||
You take this blabla much to serious. "Open Source" for example isnt just
|
||
an idea, a good idea like BSD licences, GNU etc, but first of all it is a
|
||
label. Something for the "No logo" book. This labelism of the different
|
||
initiatives has nothing to do with the central concept. Maybe this is why
|
||
I dont like Linux. So much chaos and desktop cosmetics. I stay with
|
||
FreeBSD. And I like GNU.
|
||
H.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>2.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject><nettime> Interview with Stefan Merten, Nov 2001</subject>
|
||
<from>kadian antal</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 5 Dec 2001 13:44:14 -0800 (PST)</date>
|
||
<content>Preview of next issue of subsol, online Dec 15
|
||
http://subsol.c3.hu
|
||
// FREE SOFTWARE & G P L SOCIETY //
|
||
|
||
<< Interview with Stefan Merten, Oekonux, Germany
|
||
>> by Joanne Richardson, November 2001
|
||
|
||
>> Q: Oekonux - an abbreviation of "OEKOnomie" and
|
||
"liNUX" - is a German mailing list discussing the
|
||
revolutionary possibilities of Free Software. Many
|
||
people speak of Free Software and Open Source Software
|
||
interchangeably - could you explain how you understand
|
||
the differences between them?
|
||
|
||
The term "Free Software" is older than "Open Source".
|
||
"Free Software" is used by the Free Software
|
||
Foundation [http://www.fsf.org/] founded by Richard
|
||
Stallman in 1985. The term "Open Source" has been
|
||
developed by Eric S. Raymond and others, who, in 1998,
|
||
founded the Open Source Initiative
|
||
[http://www.opensource.org/]. It's not so much a
|
||
question of definition as of the philosophy behind the
|
||
two parts of the movement - the differences between
|
||
the definition of Open Source Software and Free
|
||
Software are relatively few. But whereas Free Software
|
||
emphasizes the freedom Free Software gives the users,
|
||
Open Source does not care about freedom. The Open
|
||
Source Initiative (OSI) was founded exactly for the
|
||
reason to make Free Software compatible with business
|
||
people's thinking, and the word "freedom" has been
|
||
considered harmful for that purpose.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: Free software means the freedom to run, copy,
|
||
distribute, study, change and improve the software,
|
||
and these freedoms are protected by the GNU General
|
||
Public License. The definition presupposes open
|
||
sources as the necessary condition for studying how
|
||
the software works and for making changes, but it also
|
||
implies more. The definition of Open Source is quite
|
||
close: it means the ability to read, redistribute, and
|
||
modify the source code - but because this is a better,
|
||
faster way to improve software. Openess = speed = more
|
||
profit. The Open Source Initiative proclaims quite
|
||
proudly that it exists in order to persuade the
|
||
"commercial world" of the superiority of open sources
|
||
on "the same pragmatic, business-case grounds that
|
||
motivated Netscape." But recently, it is the term
|
||
"Open Source" that has gained popularity
and by
|
||
analogy everything has become "Open"--open source
|
||
society, open source money, open source schooling (to
|
||
echo some of the titles of panels of the last Wizards
|
||
of OS conference in Berlin.)
|
||
|
||
Indeed the Open Source Initiative has been extremely
|
||
successful in pushing the freedom-subtracted term into
|
||
people's heads. Today people from the Free Software
|
||
Foundation always feel the need to emphasize that it's
|
||
the freedom that is important - more important than
|
||
the efficiency of production, which is the primary aim
|
||
behind open source. Of course open sources are a
|
||
precondition for most of this freedom, but open
|
||
sources are not the core idea of Free Software and so
|
||
Open Source is at least a misnomer.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: How do you mean it's a "misnomer"? The two
|
||
movements exist and the names correspond to the
|
||
different ideas behind them. And "Open Source" is the
|
||
name the people from this initiative chose for
|
||
themselves, and seems quite an accurate
|
||
characterization of their focus.
|
||
|
||
Free Software and Open Source Software are not two
|
||
movements, but a single movement with two factions,
|
||
and as far as I can see the distinction plays a major
|
||
role mostly in the more ideological discussions
|
||
between members of the two factions. They are
|
||
collaborating on projects, and sometimes unite, for
|
||
instance, when it is a question of defending against
|
||
the attacks of Micro$oft
|
||
[http://perens.com/Articles/StandTogether.html].
|
||
|
||
And, no, "Open Source" is not an accurate
|
||
characterization of this faction, since their focus
|
||
has been making Free Software compatible with business
|
||
people's thinking. A more correct name would have been
|
||
"Free Software for Business" - or something like that.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: What seems misleading to me is that the leftist
|
||
intelligentsia has begun to use "Open Source" as a
|
||
cause to promote without realizing the pro-capitalist
|
||
connotations behind the term.
|
||
|
||
Today the widespread inflation of the term "Open
|
||
Source" has a deep negative impact. Often the core
|
||
idea behind Free Software - establishing the freedom
|
||
of the user - is not known to people who are only
|
||
talking of Open Source - be it leftist intelligentsia
|
||
or other people. I think this is a pity and would
|
||
recommend using only the term Free Software because
|
||
this is the correct term for the phenomenon. You don't
|
||
call "green" "red" if "green" is the right term - do
|
||
you? After all, even "Open Source" software would not
|
||
be successful if the practical aspect of freedom was
|
||
not inherent in its production and use. Interestingly,
|
||
in an article entitled "Its Time to Talk about Free
|
||
Software Again," one of the founders of the Open
|
||
Source Initiative also considers the current
|
||
development as wrong.
|
||
[http://www.perens.com/perens_com/Articles/ItsTimeToTalkAboutFreeSoftwareAgain.html]
|
||
|
||
>> Q: The idea behind Oekonux began, in kernel form at
|
||
the first Wizards of OS conference in Berlin in 1999.
|
||
How did the motivation to begin Oekonux develop from
|
||
this context?
|
||
|
||
I had the idea that Free Software is something very
|
||
special and may have a real potential for a different
|
||
society beyond labor, money, exchange - in short:
|
||
capitalism - in 1998. In September 1998, I tried to
|
||
make that a topic on the Krisis mailing list. However,
|
||
next to nobody was interested. In July 1999, I
|
||
attended the first "Wizard of Open Source"
|
||
[http://www.mikro.org/Events/OS] conference organized
|
||
by mikro in Berlin, and was especially interested in
|
||
the topic "New economy?". However, in the context of
|
||
the idea I mentioned above - the potential to
|
||
transform society - I found the ideas presented there
|
||
not very interesting. After the talks I took the
|
||
opportunity to organize a spontaneous BOF (Birds Of a
|
||
Feather) session and luckily it worked well. So we sat
|
||
there with about 20 people and discussed the ideas
|
||
presented in the talks. At the end I asked all the
|
||
people to give me their e-mail address.
|
||
|
||
After the WOS conference, mikro created a mailing list
|
||
for us - and that was the birth of the Oekonux mailing
|
||
list which is the core of the project. In December
|
||
1999 I created the web site [www.oekonux.de]. Its main
|
||
purpose is to archive the mailing list. Texts and
|
||
other material created in the context of the project
|
||
is presented there as well as links to web sites and
|
||
pages relevant to our discussion in some way. There is
|
||
also an English/international part of the project
|
||
([www.oekonux.org] archiving [list-en {AT} oekonux.org]),
|
||
which, however, is still nearly non-existent. I find
|
||
this a pity but unfortunately until now there is
|
||
nobody with enough free time and energy to give this
|
||
part of the project a real start. So until today all
|
||
the material is in German and there are only a few
|
||
translations of the texts. In June 2000 I created
|
||
another mailing list ([projekt {AT} oekonux.de]) which is
|
||
concerned with the organization of the project.
|
||
|
||
During April 28-30, 2001 in Dortmund we had the first
|
||
Oekonux conference
|
||
([http://www.oekonux-konferenz.de/]), which brought
|
||
together people from different areas who were
|
||
interested in the principles of Free Software and the
|
||
possible consequences of these principles on their
|
||
particular field. The conference was attended by about
|
||
170 persons from a very broad range of ages and
|
||
backgrounds, from software developers, to political
|
||
theorists and scientists. It was a very exciting
|
||
conference with a perfect atmosphere and another
|
||
milestone in the way we and - if we're not completely
|
||
wrong - the whole world is going. The next conference
|
||
is planned to take place in Nov 1-3, 2002.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: How active and large is the list?
|
||
|
||
>From the start we have had very interesting
|
||
discussions with some silent periods but usually an
|
||
average of 6-8 mails a day. The atmosphere on the list
|
||
is very pleasant and flames are nearly unknown.
|
||
Fortunately it has not been necessary to moderate the
|
||
list, as it regulates itself very well. The
|
||
discussions are very contentful and this interview
|
||
would not have been possible without them. They cover
|
||
a wide number of details but nearly always stay on the
|
||
central topic of the list: the possible impacts of
|
||
Free Software on society. At the moment we have about
|
||
200 subscribers at [liste {AT} oekonux.de], who come from a
|
||
wide range of intellectual traditions and areas of
|
||
interest. Though of course they all share a common
|
||
interest in political thought, there are people from
|
||
the Free Software and Hardware areas as well as
|
||
engineers of different brands, hard core political
|
||
people as well as people with a main interest in
|
||
culture and so on. Though the traffic is quite high we
|
||
have nearly no unsubscriptions which I think is a
|
||
proof for the quality of the list.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: In a previous interview with Geert Lovink
|
||
[http://www.nettime.org/cgi-bin/wilma_hiliter/nettime/200104/msg00127.html?line=8]
|
||
you mentioned that the relationship between free
|
||
software and Marxism is one of the central topics
|
||
debated on the list ... Do you think Marx is still
|
||
relevant for an analysis of contemporary society?
|
||
Could you give an idea of the scope of this debate on
|
||
the list?
|
||
|
||
First of all we recognize the difference between Marx'
|
||
views and the views of the different Marxist currents.
|
||
Although different brands of Marxism have distorted
|
||
Marx' thought to the point where it has become
|
||
unrecognizable, I tend to think that only Marx'
|
||
analysis gives us the chance to understand what is
|
||
going on today. The decline of the labor society we
|
||
are all witnessing in various ways cannot be
|
||
understood without that analysis. The Krisis group
|
||
[http://www.krisis.org] has offered a contemporary
|
||
reading of Marx, claiming that capitalism is in decay
|
||
because the basic movement of making money from labor
|
||
works less and less. This doesn't mean that capitalism
|
||
must end soon, but it won't ever be able to hold its
|
||
old promises of wealth for all. A number of people on
|
||
the Oekonux mailing list have built upon the Krisis
|
||
theories and carried them onto new ground. On the list
|
||
among other things we try to interpret Marx in the
|
||
context of Free Software. It's very interesting that
|
||
much of what Marx said about the final development of
|
||
capitalism can be seen in Free Software. In a sense,
|
||
we try to re-think Marx from a contemporary
|
||
perspective, and interpret current capitalism as
|
||
containing a germ form of a new society.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: According to many circles, Marx is obsolete - he
|
||
was already obsolete in the sixties, when the mass
|
||
social upheavals and the so-called new social
|
||
movements showed that not class but other forms of
|
||
oppressive power had become determining instances and
|
||
that the economic base was not the motor that moved
|
||
contradictions.
|
||
|
||
I think that at that time the economic base was not as
|
||
mature as it has become today. In the last ten to
|
||
twenty years Western societies started to base their
|
||
material production and all of society more and more
|
||
on information goods. The development of computers as
|
||
universal information processors with ever increasing
|
||
capacity is shifting the focal point of production
|
||
from the material side to the immaterial, information
|
||
side. I think that today the development of the means
|
||
of production in capitalism has entered a new
|
||
historical phase.
|
||
|
||
The most important thing in this shift in the means of
|
||
production is that information has very different
|
||
features than matter. First of all, information may be
|
||
copied without loss - at least digital information
|
||
using computers. Second and equally important, the
|
||
most effective way to produce interesting information
|
||
is to foster creativity. Free Software combines these
|
||
two aspects, resulting in a new form of production.
|
||
Obviously Free Software uses the digital copy as a
|
||
technical basis. Thus Free Software, like any digital
|
||
information, is not a scarce good; contrary to the IPR
|
||
(intellectual property rights) people, the Free
|
||
Software movement explicitly prevents making Free
|
||
Software scarce. So, scarcity, which has always been a
|
||
fundamental basis for capitalism, is not present in
|
||
Free Software: Existing Free Software is available for
|
||
next to zero price.
|
||
|
||
More importantly, however, the organization of the
|
||
production of Free Software differs widely from that
|
||
of commodities produced for maximizing profit. For
|
||
most Free Software producers there is no other reason
|
||
than their own desire to develop that software. So the
|
||
development of Free Software is based on the
|
||
self-unfolding or self-actualization of the single
|
||
individual. This form of non-alienated production
|
||
results in better software because the use of the
|
||
product is the first and most important aim of the
|
||
developer - there simply is no profit which could be
|
||
maximized. The self-unfolding of the single person is
|
||
present in the process of production, and the
|
||
self-unfolding of the many is ensured by the
|
||
availability of high quality Free Software.
|
||
|
||
Another important factor is that capitalism is in deep
|
||
crisis.Until the 1970s capitalism promised a better
|
||
world to people in the Western countries, to people in
|
||
the former Soviet bloc and to the
|
||
Third World. It stopped doing it starting in the 1980s
|
||
and dismissed it completely in the 1990s. Today the
|
||
capitalist leaders are glad if they are able to fix
|
||
the biggest leaks in the sinking
|
||
ship. The resources used for that repair are
|
||
permanently increasing- be it financial operations to
|
||
protect Third World states from the inability to pay
|
||
their debt, or the kind of military operations we see
|
||
in Afghanistan today.
|
||
|
||
These processes were not mature in the 1960s but they
|
||
are today. Maybe today for the first time in history
|
||
we are able to overcome capitalism on the bases it has
|
||
provided, by transcending it into a new society that
|
||
is less harmful than the one we have.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: How can Free Software "overcome" capitalism from
|
||
the bases it has provided? The idea of a dialectical
|
||
negation of capitalism (an immanent critique from the
|
||
inside that takes over the same presuppositions of the
|
||
system it negates) has frequently been discredited.
|
||
Both Marx and Lenin's ideas of a dialectical negation
|
||
of capitalism preserved the imperative of
|
||
productivity, the utility of instrumental technology,
|
||
the repressive apparatus of the State, police and
|
||
standing army, as a necessary "first stage." And if
|
||
you start from the inside, you will never get anywhere
|
||
else . . . the argument goes.
|
||
|
||
Free Software is both inside and outside capitalism.
|
||
On the one hand, the social basis for Free Software
|
||
clearly would not exist without a flourishing
|
||
capitalism. Only a flourishing capitalism can provide
|
||
the opportunity to develop something that is not for
|
||
exchange. On the other hand, Free Software is outside
|
||
of capitalism for the reasons I mentioned above:
|
||
absence of scarcity and self-unfolding instead of the
|
||
alienation of labor in a command economy. This kind of
|
||
relationship between the old and the new system is
|
||
typical for germ forms - for instance you can see it
|
||
in the early stage of capitalist development, when
|
||
feudalism was still strong.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: In what sense is the production of Free Software
|
||
not "alienated"? One of the reasons that labor is
|
||
alienated is because the workers sells a living thing
|
||
- qualitatively different forms of productive activity
|
||
which in principle can't be measured - in exchange for
|
||
a general measure, money. As Marx said somewhere, the
|
||
worker does not care about the shitty commodities he
|
||
is producing, he just does it for this abstract
|
||
equivalent, the money he receives as compensation.
|
||
|
||
It seems you're talking about the difference between
|
||
use value - the use of goods or labor - and exchange
|
||
value - reflected in the price of the commodities that
|
||
goods or labor are transformed into by being sold on
|
||
the market. It's true that the use value of goods as
|
||
well as labor is qualitatively different. It's also
|
||
true that the exchange value of a commodity - be it a
|
||
commodity or wage labor - is a common measure, an
|
||
abstraction of the qualitative features of a product.
|
||
But after all you need a common measure to base an
|
||
exchange on. One of the problems of capitalism is that
|
||
this abstraction is the central motor of society. The
|
||
use of something - which would be the important thing
|
||
in a society focusing on living well - is only loosely
|
||
bound to that abstraction. That is the basis of the
|
||
alienation of work performed for a wage. In Free
|
||
Software because the product can be taken with only
|
||
marginal cost and, more importantly, is not created
|
||
for being exchanged, the exchange value of the product
|
||
is zero. Free Software is worthless in the dominant
|
||
sense of exchange.
|
||
|
||
Free Software may be produced for numerous reasons -
|
||
but not for exchange. If there is no external
|
||
motivation - like making money - there must be
|
||
internal motivations for the developers. These
|
||
internal motivations, which are individually very
|
||
different, are what we call self-unfolding (from the
|
||
German term "Selbstentfaltung", similar but not
|
||
completly the same as "self-development"). Without
|
||
external motivations, there is not much room for
|
||
alienation.
|
||
|
||
Of course self-unfolding is a common phenomenon in
|
||
other areas, such as art or hobbies. However, Free
|
||
Software surpasses the older forms of self-unfolding
|
||
in several ways and this is what makes it interesting
|
||
on the level of social change:
|
||
|
||
* Most products of self-unfolding may be useful for
|
||
some persons, but this use is relatively limited. Free
|
||
Software, however, delivers goods which are useful for
|
||
a large number of persons - virtually everybody with a
|
||
computer.
|
||
|
||
* Most products of self-unfolding are the results of
|
||
outmoded forms of production, like craft-work. Free
|
||
Software is produced using the most advanced means of
|
||
production mankind has available.
|
||
|
||
* Most products of self-unfolding are the fruits of
|
||
the work of one individual. Free Software depends on
|
||
collaborative work - it is usually developed by
|
||
international teams and with help from the users of
|
||
the product.
|
||
|
||
* All products of self-unfolding I can think of have
|
||
been pushed away once the same product becomes
|
||
available on the market. By contrast, Free Software
|
||
has already started to push away software developed
|
||
for maximizing profit in some areas, and currently
|
||
there seems to be no general limit to this process.
|
||
|
||
So contrary to older forms of self-unfolding Free
|
||
Software provides a model in which self-unfolding
|
||
becomes relevant on a social level. The products of
|
||
this sort of self-unfolding can even be interesting
|
||
for commercial use.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: Some theorists have analyzed the internet as a
|
||
kind of "gift" economy. In other words, it is not
|
||
subject to measure and exchange. Things are freely
|
||
produced and freely taken. And unlike exchange, which
|
||
has a kind of finality (I pay one dollar I buy one
|
||
bottle of Coca Cola, and it's over), the gift, since
|
||
it cannot be measured, is a kind of infinite
|
||
reciprocity. Gifts are not about calculation of value,
|
||
but about building social relationships. Do you see
|
||
Free Software as a gift "economy"?
|
||
|
||
I don't like talking about gifts in Free Software or
|
||
in terms of the Internet in general. There is no
|
||
reciprocity in Free Software as, similarly, there is
|
||
no reciprocity on the Internet. I have used thousands
|
||
of web pages and millions of lines of code contained
|
||
in Free Software without giving anything back. There
|
||
simply is no reciprocity and even better: there is no
|
||
need for reciprocity. You simply take what you need
|
||
and you provide what you like. It's not by chance,
|
||
that this reflects the old demand of "Everybody
|
||
according to his/her needs".
|
||
|
||
Indeed there are several attempts, which are at best
|
||
misleading, to understand the Internet and/or Free
|
||
Software in terms of capitalist dogmas. The talk about
|
||
"gift economies" is one of them, because it focuses on
|
||
gifts as some sort of - non-capitalist but nonetheless
|
||
- exchange. Even worse is the talk of an "attention
|
||
economy" which defines attention as a kind of
|
||
currency. The Internet, and especially Free Software
|
||
are new phenomena which can't be understood adequately
|
||
by using the familiar thought patterns of capitalism.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: In what sense is "GPL Society" beyond the
|
||
familiar thought patterns of capitalism?
|
||
|
||
With the term "GPL Society" we named a society based
|
||
on the principles of production of Free Software.
|
||
These principles are:
|
||
|
||
* self-unfolding as the main motivation for
|
||
production,
|
||
* irrelevance of exchange value, so the focus is on
|
||
the use value,
|
||
* free cooperation between people,
|
||
* international teams.
|
||
|
||
Though the term has been controversial for some time,
|
||
today it is widely accepted in Oekonux. I like the
|
||
term particularly *because* you can't associate
|
||
anything with it that you already know. GPL Society
|
||
describes something new, which we try to discover,
|
||
explore and understand in the Oekonux project.
|
||
Ironically, part of this process of understanding has
|
||
reached the conclusion that a GPL Society would no
|
||
longer need General Public License because there won't
|
||
be any copyright. So at least at this time maybe it
|
||
should be renamed ;-) .
|
||
|
||
As I tried to explain Free Software is not based on
|
||
exchange so neither is a GPL Society. How a GPL
|
||
Society may look like concretely can't be determined
|
||
fully today. However, at present there are many
|
||
developments which already point in that direction.
|
||
|
||
* One development is the increasing obsolescence of
|
||
human labor. The more production is done by machines
|
||
the less human labor is needed in the production
|
||
process. If freed from the chains of capitalism this
|
||
development would mean freedom from more and more
|
||
necessities, making room for more processes of
|
||
self-unfolding - be it productive processes like Free
|
||
Software or non-productive ones like many hobbies. So
|
||
contrary to capitalism, in which increasing automation
|
||
always destroys the work places for people and thus
|
||
their means to live, in a GPL Society maximum
|
||
automation would be an important aim of the whole
|
||
society.
|
||
|
||
* In every society based on exchange - which includes
|
||
the former Soviet bloc - making money is the dominant
|
||
aim. Because a GPL Society would not be based on
|
||
exchange, there would be no need for money anymore.
|
||
Instead of the abstract goal of maximizing profit, the
|
||
human oriented goal of fulfilling the needs of
|
||
individuals as well as of mankind as a whole would be
|
||
the focus of all activities.
|
||
|
||
* The increased communication possibilities of the
|
||
Internet will become even more important than today.
|
||
An ever increasing part of production and development
|
||
will take place on the Internet or will be based on
|
||
it. The B2B (business to business) concept, which is
|
||
about improving the information flow between
|
||
businesses producing commodities, shows us that the
|
||
integration of production into information has just
|
||
started. On the other hand the already visible
|
||
phenomenon of people interested in a particular area
|
||
finding each other on the Internet will become central
|
||
for the development of self-unfolding groups.
|
||
|
||
* The difference between consumers and producers will
|
||
vanish more and more. Already today the user can
|
||
configure complex commodities like cars or furniture
|
||
to some degree, which makes virtually each product an
|
||
individual one, fully customized to the needs of the
|
||
consumer. This increasing configurability of products
|
||
is a result of the always increasing flexibility of
|
||
the production machines. If this is combined with good
|
||
software you could initiate the production of highly
|
||
customized material goods allowing a maximum of
|
||
self-unfolding - from your web browser up to the point
|
||
of delivery.
|
||
|
||
* Machines will become even more flexible. New type of
|
||
machines available for some years now (fabbers,
|
||
[http://www.ennex.com/fabbers/index.sht]) are already
|
||
more universal in some areas than modern industrial
|
||
robots - not to mention stupid machines like a punch.
|
||
The flexibility of the machines is a result of the
|
||
fact that material production is increasingly based
|
||
on information. At the same time the increasing
|
||
flexibility of the machines gives the users more room
|
||
for creativity and thus for self-unfolding.
|
||
|
||
* In a GPL society there is no more reason for a
|
||
competition beyond the type of competition we see in
|
||
sports. Instead various kinds of fruitful cooperation
|
||
will take place. You can see that today not only in
|
||
Free Software but also (partly) in science and for
|
||
instance in cooking recipes: Imagine your daily meal
|
||
if cooking recipes would be proprietary and available
|
||
only after paying a license fee instead of being the
|
||
result of a world-wide cooperation of cooks.
|
||
|
||
>> Q: This sounds very utopian: Free Software as the
|
||
sign of the end of capitalism and the transformation
|
||
of the new society? How do you predict this
|
||
transformation coming about - spontaneously, as the
|
||
economic basis of capitalist production just withers
|
||
away?
|
||
|
||
I hope these more or less utopian thoughts give an
|
||
idea of the notion of a GPL Society as it is currently
|
||
discussed within the Oekonux project. And it's not
|
||
Free Software in itself which may transform
|
||
capitalism. Instead, the principles of the production
|
||
of Free Software - which have developed within
|
||
capitalism! - provide a more effective way of
|
||
production on the one hand and more freedom on the
|
||
other. The main question is how is it possible to
|
||
translate these principles to other areas.
|
||
|
||
I tried to explain how Free Software - as a germ form
|
||
of the GPL society - is inside as well as outside of
|
||
capitalism. I think Free Software is only the most
|
||
visible of the new forms which together have the
|
||
potential to lead us into a different society.
|
||
Capitalism has developed the means of production to
|
||
such an extent that people can use them for something
|
||
new. Of course, the transformation also requires a
|
||
political process and although historically the
|
||
preconditions now are better than ever before there is
|
||
no automatic step that will lead to the GPL society.
|
||
People have to want this process. However, I'm quite
|
||
optimistic that they will, because Free Software shows
|
||
us, in microcosm, how a better life would look, so the
|
||
GPL Society is in the best interest of people. And
|
||
Oekonux is there to understand the process of this
|
||
change, and perhaps at some point our thoughts may
|
||
help to push the development forward :-) .</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>3.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: [graham@seul.org: Re: [ox-en] Threads "The Fading Altruism of Open Source" on <nettime>]</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Fri, 18 Jan 2002 14:15:21 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Mon, 14.Jan.2002 um 23:51:38 +0100x schrieb jaromil:
|
||
|
||
[quoting Graham Seaman from seul.org:]
|
||
|
||
> 3. They've provided a prediction as to what should happen as the recession
|
||
> in technology hits in America - the number of people writing free software
|
||
> should go through the roof. I don't think there's going to be any such
|
||
> event - but it should be something perfectly testable (just watch
|
||
> freshmeat and compare the number of entries from Stefan Merten with the
|
||
> number from Americans ;-).
|
||
|
||
In an interview on <http://kerneltrap.com/article.php?sid=459>, Matt
|
||
Dillon, a major developer of the FreeBSD operating system (and former
|
||
Linux kernel hacker), has its own answer on whether Free Software is
|
||
altruistic or not. It is, without knowing it, quite a good response to
|
||
the recent on the economy of Free Software in Nettime (and, apparently,
|
||
Oekonux):
|
||
|
||
Matt Dillon: Well, I could say something about open-source in
|
||
general. Specifically I would like to say something about open-source
|
||
and making money. There are two kinds of open-source programmers
|
||
in the world. No, make that three kinds: There is the open-source
|
||
programmer who is still in school, the open-source programmer who has
|
||
a real job, and the open-source programmer who tries to make a living
|
||
out of his open-source programming.
|
||
|
||
In many respects, each individual goes through ALL of the above
|
||
phases. We've all been in (or are in) school, we all must eventually
|
||
make a living, and having been somewhat disillusioned by real
|
||
work we have all either tried or will try to make a living from
|
||
our open-source endevours. This last item -- making a living from
|
||
open-source, has been over-stressed by the open source community
|
||
(mainly Linux related developers) over the last few years. Guys, if
|
||
you haven't figured it out by now it is mostly an illusion! The hype
|
||
made it possible. The crazy stock market made it possible, but it
|
||
didn't last now did it? If I take a hundred people I know only two or
|
||
three can make a living from their open-source work (and I'm not one
|
||
of them today!).
|
||
|
||
The open-source community has to come to terms with this. Don't let
|
||
it get you down! I read LWN.NET (Linux Weekly News) every week and I
|
||
see a definite trend towards mass depression as the internet craze
|
||
settles down into something a bit more sustainable. Don't let it get
|
||
to you! Face the issue squarely and come to terms with what it means
|
||
for your own work. If an older generation (that's me! At 35! God I
|
||
feel old!) can teach the younger generation of programmers/hackers
|
||
anything it is that the character of open-source will always be with
|
||
us, with or without wall-street, and that we open-source programmers
|
||
do not do these things for a 5-minute spot on CNN, we do these things
|
||
because they are cool, and interesting, and make the world a better
|
||
place for everyone. That is our legacy. We are not an anarchy, we are
|
||
a charity. A very *LARGE* charity I might add!
|
||
Florian
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Keith Hart</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 04:32:30 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>It appears we cant even agree that one major difference between Free
|
||
Software and Open Source/Linux is the attitude to money and hence to
|
||
capitalism. Jaromil (below) thinks a statement posted on the net by the
|
||
politburo settles the issue. But read Florian's 'in it for the money' and
|
||
even more Stefan Merten's interview, where he imagines a society 'beyond
|
||
labour, money and exchange' (both below).
|
||
|
||
Jaromil:
|
||
|
||
>Free software is a matter of freedom, not price; the word "free"
|
||
>has to be intended in this way here. Furthermore, referring to the
|
||
>wrong assumption by Keith Hart in this thread:
|
||
>> The open source movement is split on the issue of exchange and money
|
||
>> payment. Those who follow the Free Software Foundation appear to
|
||
>> consider that any hint of money and exchange, even of reciprocity,
|
||
>> leads directly to unacceptable compromise with capitalism.
|
||
>refer to http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html to have a clear
|
||
>point about the free-speech / free-beer issue.
|
||
|
||
Florian Cramer:
|
||
|
||
>The real amount of altruism in Free Software
|
||
>development may be debated, but any programmer who's mostly or even only
|
||
>in it for the money would be stupid to program anything but proprietary
|
||
>software (which, no doubt, is more profitable).
|
||
|
||
Interview with Stefan Merten, Oekonux, nettime, 7/12/01:
|
||
|
||
>But whereas Free Software
|
||
>emphasizes the freedom Free Software gives the users,
|
||
>Open Source does not care about freedom. The Open
|
||
>Source Initiative (OSI) was founded exactly for the
|
||
>reason to make Free Software compatible with business
|
||
>people's thinking, and the word "freedom" has been
|
||
>considered harmful for that purpose.
|
||
|
||
>I had the idea that Free Software is something very
|
||
>special and may have a real potential for a different
|
||
>society beyond labor, money, exchange - in short:
|
||
>capitalism - in 1998.
|
||
|
||
As it happens, I had come across the free speech/free beer distinction
|
||
without having to consult the gnu website. It still seems to me that the
|
||
freedom of Free Software is largely, but not exclusively tied up with the
|
||
normative absence of money. This allows the purists to insist that those
|
||
who wish to work across the divide 'do not care about freedom' or are 'only
|
||
in it for the money'. And behind that, of course, is a desire to preserve
|
||
the mystique of a hacker elite.
|
||
|
||
Keith Hart</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 10:22:41 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>>As it happens, I had come across the free speech/free beer distinction
|
||
>without having to consult the gnu website.
|
||
|
||
I think the free speech / free beer distinction is really counterproductive
|
||
at this point. I understand it's historical value in rallying US hackers in
|
||
the context of a culture that fetishes "individual freedom" to a degree
|
||
that it's something that one has no longer to explain or argue for. Free
|
||
speech = good, in all circumstances. I'm not arguing against free speech,
|
||
what I'm arguing against is the idea that free speech offers a good
|
||
metaphor to understand the value of free software / open source.
|
||
|
||
Lessig, in his new book The Future of Ideas, offers a much better
|
||
definition for what "free" in this context means. He writes: "a resource is
|
||
'free' if (1) one can use it without permission of anyone else; or (2) the
|
||
permission one needs is granted neutrally" (p.12). Our roads, for example,
|
||
are free in Lessig's sense. This is the case even if a toll charge is
|
||
levied because the charge is imposed neutrally. Everyone pays the same
|
||
price independent of the purpose of driving on the road. A road would no
|
||
longer be free if, say, Coke had sponsored its construction and therefore
|
||
could prohibit Pepsi trucks from using it.
|
||
|
||
In this definition, there is no difference in the freedom created by open
|
||
source or free software.
|
||
>It still seems to me that the
|
||
>freedom of Free Software is largely, but not exclusively tied up with the
|
||
>normative absence of money. This allows the purists to insist that those
|
||
>who wish to work across the divide 'do not care about freedom' or are 'only
|
||
>in it for the money'. And behind that, of course, is a desire to preserve
|
||
>the mystique of a hacker elite.
|
||
|
||
I agree with Keith, the absence of money per se is not a virtue. Insisting
|
||
on the evils of money in all contexts, is the simple inversion of the
|
||
capitalist logic which says making money per se is good. The
|
||
transformation of resources and their impact is what really matters. And so
|
||
far, I haven't seen anyone who could show the open source approach
|
||
transfers time and money (or donated hardware if you prefer) into worse
|
||
code or less code than the FSF approach.
|
||
|
||
Felix
|
||
|
||
--------------------++-----
|
||
Les faits sont faits.
|
||
http://felix.openflows.org</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 19:31:43 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Wed, 19.Dec.2001 um 10:22:41 -0500 schrieb Felix Stalder:
|
||
|
||
> capitalist logic which says making money per se is good. The
|
||
> transformation of resources and their impact is what really matters. And
|
||
> so far, I haven't seen anyone who could show the open source approach
|
||
> transfers time and money (or donated hardware if you prefer) into worse
|
||
> code or less code than the FSF approach.
|
||
|
||
By all probability not, because Free Software and Open Source are
|
||
technically the same - the "Open Source Definition" is almost identical
|
||
to the "Debian Free Software Guidelines" [and was drafted by the very
|
||
same author, Bruce Perens]. The both terms don't even describe
|
||
differences in development methodology. They are diverge in
|
||
philosophical and political terms: "Open Source" is, according to those
|
||
who launched the term, about technically better software ("software that
|
||
sucks less"), "Free Software" is about old-hacker-school freedom of
|
||
information. -
|
||
|
||
It's quite ironical that other net cultures - such as this one here -
|
||
has gotten it the other way round.
|
||
|
||
Felix, one may of course say that the "Free Software" notion of freedom
|
||
is naive, but on the other hand the GNU-style "Free Software" movement
|
||
remains the only one to date that had a consistent agenda and politics
|
||
against the proprietarization of code and knowledge. (And many of those
|
||
who dismissed the FSF positions as obnoxious hippie fundamentalistm have
|
||
changed their mind since DMCA, DCSS and Sklyarov.)
|
||
|
||
The point is not that, say, "Linux" would stand (as "Open Source")
|
||
against "GNU" (as "Free Software"). The term "Open Source" was coined
|
||
and disseminated by Eric S. Raymond very late, in 1998, as a rebranding
|
||
for code that preceded the term for ears or even decades (including GNU,
|
||
Linux, BSD, Apache, Perl, sendmail etc.) and which had simply been
|
||
called Free Software before.
|
||
|
||
Florian
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.3</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Kermit Snelson</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 19 Dec 2001 22:21:08 -0800</date>
|
||
<content>Florian Cramer:
|
||
|
||
> By all probability not, because Free Software and Open Source are
|
||
> technically the same
|
||
|
||
This is true, and the fact may be demonstrated by examining the two lists of
|
||
licenses evaluated by the Open Source Initiative [1] and the Free Software
|
||
Foundation [2] respectively. Of the dozens of software licenses that may be
|
||
clearly identified as being on both lists, only the Apple Public Source
|
||
License is considered "open source" by the OSI but "Non-Free" by the FSF.
|
||
That one exception may, moreover, be due more to political than technical
|
||
reasons. The FSF accepts the rest as "free software" licenses, although it
|
||
nonetheless deprecates many of these as "GPL-Incompatible."
|
||
|
||
Keith Hart:
|
||
|
||
> It appears we cant even agree that one major difference between Free
|
||
> Software and Open Source/Linux is the attitude to money and hence to
|
||
> capitalism.
|
||
|
||
The two camps have indeed taken very different rhetorical paths to what are
|
||
demonstrably identical conclusions. I am less optimistic than Felix, who
|
||
interprets this as evidence of a great movement that is capable of absorbing
|
||
"very different, even contradictory ideas." I see it the other way around,
|
||
namely as a single idea that has been absorbing different movements.
|
||
|
||
There's no other explanation, I think, for the fact that we're hearing so
|
||
much group singing lately between left-leaning communitarians and the
|
||
libertarian right, and not only on the finer points of software license
|
||
agreements. Keith's recent proposal in this thread to vacate the legal
|
||
monopoly of central banks on the issue of legal tender certainly has the
|
||
potential to throw yet another log on this cozy campfire.
|
||
|
||
Kermit Snelson
|
||
|
||
Notes:
|
||
[1] http://www.opensource.org/licenses/index.html
|
||
[2] http://www.fsf.org/licenses/license-list.html</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.4</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 20 Dec 2001 17:15:55 +0100 (CET)</date>
|
||
<content>> This is true, and the fact may be demonstrated by examining the two lists of
|
||
> licenses evaluated by the Open Source Initiative [1] and the Free Software
|
||
> Foundation [2] respectively. Of the dozens of software licenses that may be
|
||
|
||
You take this blabla much to serious. "Open Source" for example isnt just
|
||
an idea, a good idea like BSD licences, GNU etc, but first of all it is a
|
||
label. Something for the "No logo" book. This labelism of the different
|
||
initiatives has nothing to do with the central concept. Maybe this is why
|
||
I dont like Linux. So much chaos and desktop cosmetics. I stay with
|
||
FreeBSD. And I like GNU.
|
||
H.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.5</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Talan Memmott</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 20 Dec 2001 13:51:21 -0800</date>
|
||
<content>> The point is not that, say, "Linux" would stand (as "Open Source") against
|
||
> "GNU" (as "Free Software"). The term "Open Source" was coined and
|
||
> disseminated by Eric S. Raymond very late, in 1998, as a rebranding for
|
||
> code that preceded the term for ears or even decades (including GNU,
|
||
> Linux, BSD, Apache, Perl, sendmail etc.) and which had simply been called
|
||
> Free Software before.
|
||
|
||
Just thinking about this a bit.....
|
||
|
||
The Open Source examples, seem almost like 'terra' for the net... BSD,
|
||
Aplache, Perl, sendmail....
|
||
Something like 'Open Source' becomes 'Open Space'...
|
||
Overgrown from some feudal practice of power... Beyond Governance... Great
|
||
Plains...</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>4.6</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime>The Fading Altruism of Open Sour</subject>
|
||
<from>Harald Hillgärtner</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Fri, 21 Dec 2001 19:49:16 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Donnerstag, 20. Dezember 2001 17:15 schrieb Heiko Recktenwald:
|
||
|
||
> > This is true, and the fact may be demonstrated by examining the two lists
|
||
> > of licenses evaluated by the Open Source Initiative [1] and the Free
|
||
> > Software Foundation [2] respectively. Of the dozens of software licenses
|
||
> > that may be
|
||
>
|
||
> You take this blabla much to serious. "Open Source" for example isnt just
|
||
> an idea, a good idea like BSD licences, GNU etc, but first of all it is a
|
||
> label. Something for the "No logo" book. This labelism of the different
|
||
> initiatives has nothing to do with the central concept. Maybe this is why
|
||
> I dont like Linux. So much chaos and desktop cosmetics. I stay with
|
||
> FreeBSD. And I like GNU.
|
||
|
||
... And I do like GNU/Linux, cause it's both Free Software, and I really like
|
||
plurality (or "chaos" in other words). In addition I like "dektop cosmetics"
|
||
and a commando line interface on the same time on the same machine, cause I
|
||
can use both on specific tasks and I like the idea of "non-proprietarization
|
||
of code and knowledge", which is the main difference between Open Source and
|
||
Free Software and which is one of the most valid argument in this debate
|
||
(thanks to Florian Cramer). And this idea of non-proprietarization is the
|
||
lesson, which has to be learned by the proprietarization of Unix in the 80s.
|
||
Harald.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 12 Dec 2001 15:43:05 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Wed, 12.Dec.2001 um 00:56:27 +0100 schrieb oliver frommel:
|
||
|
||
> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Development by David Lancashire
|
||
> First Monday, volume 6, number 12 (December 2001),
|
||
> URL: http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_12/lancashire/index.html
|
||
|
||
Thanks for providing the link!
|
||
|
||
To quote from the article and attempt some answers:
|
||
|
||
>> The most fundamental question of all: why does open source
|
||
>> development occur in the first place?
|
||
|
||
This question applies as well to, say, Nettime (where people freely give
|
||
away their some of their intellectual work) and all other non-profit
|
||
volunteer projects. The work of Free Software may just be more pervasive
|
||
and hence visible to scholars than other volunteer projects because (a)
|
||
it translates very immediately into everyday use value, (b) its products
|
||
are infinitely reproducible (also true for Nettime, but not true for all
|
||
non-Internet volunteer work). - And: Free Software may be the most
|
||
sophisticated non-profit volunteer project in the way it ensures the
|
||
free circulation of its products, through the copyleft.
|
||
|
||
David Lancashire's article is an interesting read about the regional
|
||
distribution of Free Software development, yet as I think problematic or
|
||
even wrong in many of its core assumptions. But, after of all, I do not
|
||
see the claim the title makes, "The Fading Altruism of Open Source
|
||
Development" backed up or elaborated anywhere in the text.
|
||
|
||
While the First Monday article recognizes the entanglement of Free
|
||
Software development with academia to some degree, it fails, in my view,
|
||
to interpret this entanglement in cultural and economical terms. Free
|
||
Software development grew and continues to grow out of student projects
|
||
at university computer science departments (MIT: GNU project and X11, UC
|
||
Berkeley: BSD Unix, University of Helsinki: Linux, Universität Tübingen:
|
||
KDE), and the Free Software copyleft was invented to preserve the
|
||
traditional academic freedom of information for computer code.
|
||
|
||
Other points:
|
||
|
||
>> The combination of highly-complex and anti-proprietary projects offers
|
||
>> the only quadrant in which the tension - between economic and cultural
|
||
>> assumptions about underlying human behavior can meaningfully be
|
||
>> compared. It is an unfortunate fact then, if a somewhat revealing one on
|
||
>> its own, that there are so few successful projects which fall into this
|
||
>> category.
|
||
|
||
To me it rather seems an unfortunate, if a somewhat revealing fact what
|
||
the author David Lancashire thinks are facts of Free Software:
|
||
|
||
>> Linux, an operating system begun in 1991 in order to provide a
|
||
>> free alternative to commercial UNIX systems, is the most prominent
|
||
>> example. The second-most so is undoubtedly GNOME, a free graphical-user
|
||
>> interface (GUI) for UNIX-compatible systems begun in 1996 to compete
|
||
>> with the partly privately-owned K-Desktop Environment (KDE) suite for
|
||
>> UNIX and the completely proprietary Microsoft Windows.
|
||
|
||
- Linux is an operating system kernel started in 1991 which, by itself
|
||
(i.e. without a compiler, linker, bootloader and core system
|
||
libraries, init and login daemons and userspace operating system
|
||
tools), is a non-functional piece of software. As a matter of fact, it
|
||
was started not to provide a free alternative to proprietary Unices,
|
||
but a POSIX-compliant (i.e. more functionally more complete)
|
||
alternative to Andrew Tanenbaum's free Minix operating system.
|
||
|
||
- Not Linux, but GNU was started (in 1984) in order to provide the free
|
||
alternative to commercial (proprietary) Unix systems. It ended up
|
||
creating fully functional free equivalents of all core Unix
|
||
components(compiler, linker, system libraries, userspace operating
|
||
system tools - the contents of /bin, /sbin and /lib on any "Linux
|
||
distribution" is almost 100% GNU) except the kernel.
|
||
|
||
It's easy to claim, as in the above quote, there is a lack of
|
||
"highly-complex and anti-proprietary" Free Software if one doesn't seem
|
||
to know GNU, the free BSD operating systems (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD),
|
||
the X Window System, Mozilla, the Debian GNU/Linux distribution - and
|
||
wilfully excludes gcc, Perl, Python, PHP, PostgreSQL, Emacs, Apache,
|
||
sendmail and other highly complex Free Software projects from one's
|
||
consideration.
|
||
|
||
What's more, Lancashire makes questionable assumptions about Gnome, KDE
|
||
and Windows;
|
||
|
||
- KDE is not "privately owned" in any way, but one of the most
|
||
decentralized and non-corporate Free Software projects. Its code is
|
||
released under the GNU General Public License (GPL); it relies on a
|
||
library ("Qt") which is developed by a company, but equally available
|
||
under two Free Software licenses including the GPL since a couple of
|
||
time. (The fact that Qt was proprietary is history; and Qt never was a
|
||
part of KDE itself.)
|
||
|
||
- Quite on the contrary to the assumptions of the article, Gnome
|
||
development is much more in corporate hands: The core developers are
|
||
employed by Ximian and RedHat (with Ximian, the company of Gnome's
|
||
founder and project leader Miguel de Icaza, being the major driving
|
||
force).
|
||
|
||
In addition, Gnome development is supervised by the "Gnome Foundation"
|
||
whose function is to, official quote, "coordinate releases of GNOME
|
||
and determine which projects are part of GNOME" and "act as an
|
||
official voice for the GNOME project" <http://foundation.gnome.org>.
|
||
Members of the Gnome Foundation include, next to free developers,
|
||
Ximian, RedHat, Hewlett-Packard and Sun. (Sun also made Gnome the new
|
||
desktop interface of its proprietary Unix "Solaris".)
|
||
|
||
- The comparison of KDE and Gnome to Windows is mismatched. Both KDE and
|
||
Gnome are only sets of (a) high-level libraries and component models
|
||
and (b) basic graphical desktop user components (menus, window
|
||
manager, file managers, configuration panels, utilities); they are not
|
||
desktop operating systems on their own, but operate on top of "third
|
||
party" graphical user interface libraries (Qt and GTK respectively)
|
||
which in turn operate on top of a "third party" graphical display
|
||
engine (= the X Window System) which in turn operates on top of "third
|
||
party" core operating systems (GNU/Linux, *BSD, proprietary Unices
|
||
etc.).
|
||
|
||
Windows, on the other hand, has always been a unit of a graphical
|
||
display engine (GDI), graphical user interfaces libraries (MFC),
|
||
high-level desktop components (OLE/Com) and basic graphical desktop
|
||
user components (Explorer, Start menu etc.) on top of a core operating
|
||
system (DOS) and has become a fully self-contained operating system
|
||
including kernel, OS userspace, graphical display engine at least
|
||
since Windows NT 3.51.
|
||
|
||
>> With a combined total of over 430 developers, no other two projects
|
||
>> approach the "authority" of these cases as benchmark examples of
|
||
>> their kind,
|
||
|
||
This is wrong, and so I doubt the study has a good empirical base. The
|
||
(truly non-corporate) Debian project <http://www.debian.org> alone has
|
||
908 regular developers. In the case of Gnome, the results concerning
|
||
US-American and non-US-American involvement are likely to be distorted
|
||
by the fact that it is largely an American project with US-American
|
||
companies involved - while the (more or less competing) KDE project is
|
||
largely a project of European developers. (This interesting cultural
|
||
split has been noted several times on Slashdot.org, an American forum
|
||
which, sincle a couple of months, shifted its own bias from Gnome to
|
||
KDE).
|
||
|
||
After all, the study's _economical_ analysis seems questionable to me
|
||
becaiuse it does not - but should - differentiate between "private"/
|
||
"privately owned"/"commercial" on the one hand and "proprietary" one the
|
||
other (as in the second-last quote). As many Free Software projects -
|
||
like the RedHat GPL Edition, RedHat's/Cygnus' GNU C compiler, GNU
|
||
ghostscript, Ximian Gnome, Ximian Evolution, Trolltech's Qt -
|
||
demonstrate, "commercial" doesn't have to mean "proprietary". In fact,
|
||
the GNU project involved commercial operations from the beginning on.
|
||
Richard Stallman financed the Free Software Foundation (and kept himself
|
||
alive) by expensively selling GNU software on streamer tapes.
|
||
Interviewed in 1984, the BSD project leader and inventor of the "vi"
|
||
editor Bill Joy said about GNU Emacs that it was "a nice editor too, but
|
||
because it costs hundreds of dollars, there will always be people who
|
||
won't buy it." <http://www.cs.pdx.edu/~kirkenda/joy84.html>
|
||
|
||
Some other quotes:
|
||
|
||
>> Mexico contributes three times as many developers to Gnome as Linux,
|
||
>> and Finland (perhaps understandably considering its status as the
|
||
>> homeland of Linus Torvalds) appears unwaveringly in the Linux camp.
|
||
|
||
The high involvement of Mexicans in Gnome would probably have surprised
|
||
the author as little as the high involvement of Finns in Linux if he
|
||
knew that the Gnome project was founded in Mexico by a Mexican, Miguel
|
||
de Icaza, who continues to be its chief developer.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps another proof for the problematic empirics of the study:
|
||
|
||
>> If this simplified model can explain the relative erosion of open
|
||
>> source production in the United States, can it explain the rise of it
|
||
>> Europe? Primarily, it should be clear that if the opportunity cost of
|
||
>> working on open source projects is lower for European developers than
|
||
>> their American counterparts, the potential benefits Europeans gain
|
||
>> from working on them are much greater as well. In a global economy
|
||
>> lacking perfect labor mobility and characterized by wage-inequality
|
||
>> across countries, we expect individuals to produce free software if
|
||
>> doing so can help them shift to a higher wage-level. This
|
||
>> "fixed-cost" analysis implies (as Lerner and Tirole suggest in their
|
||
>> paper) that developers may embrace open source work as a way to
|
||
>> tap-into lucrative corporate networks abroad. This may explain why
|
||
>> open source development is more popular in Canada than the United
|
||
>> States, although the data from Europe is inconclusive on this
|
||
>> question. This also helps to explain why the majority of open source
|
||
>> developers are relatively young. Older, settled programmers have less
|
||
>> need to establish a monetizable reputation than their younger, more
|
||
>> mobile counterparts, given less time in which to amortize its
|
||
>> immediate costs.
|
||
|
||
My own casual insight into free software hacking rather suggests that
|
||
|
||
(a) free software developers are younger because they are typically
|
||
students or freshly graduated - and probably more idealistic than older
|
||
people,
|
||
|
||
(b) free software developers are disproportionally located in Europe
|
||
because the public acceptance and deployment of free software is higher
|
||
(in relative terms) in Europe than in the US, resulting in a condition
|
||
where
|
||
|
||
- many computer science departments make Free Software development part
|
||
of their curriculum and encourage to write Free Software as C.S.
|
||
diploma projects. (Linux, for example, was Linus Torvald's diploma
|
||
project at the C.S. department of the University of Helsinki.) After
|
||
all, C.S. departments and university computing centers had a pressing
|
||
need for a free Unix-compatible operating system. (AT&T Unix used to
|
||
be almost free for universities in the 1970s but was relicensed after
|
||
the AT&T breakup.)
|
||
|
||
When I first visited meeting of my local Linux User Group in 1996,
|
||
they took place in the C.S. department of a local university whose
|
||
department white board proposed several Linux kernel hacks as diploma
|
||
projects.
|
||
|
||
- Because of the higher deployment of Free Software in Europe, European
|
||
C.S. graduates may have a higher chance to work in Free Software
|
||
environments on in-house projects (databases and network
|
||
infrastructures, embedded controllers etc.). Even if these projects
|
||
are not for public release, they typically generate free code (or free
|
||
documentation) on the side, because other free software had to be
|
||
bugfixed/extended for the project purpose or simply because a certain
|
||
tool had to be written to accomplish a certain task within a project.
|
||
|
||
While Linus Torvalds and Miguel de Icaza used their reputation to go
|
||
abroad and work in the U.S., proving that this indeed may be a
|
||
motivation to write Free Software, this certainly fails as a general
|
||
model and explanation. - Why, then, is it that Indian and Russian
|
||
programmers hardly contribute to Free Software development at all?
|
||
|
||
Many Free Software developers I know have left-wing political views
|
||
though and see work on Free Software as unalienated labour for which
|
||
they are willing to make economical sacrifices.
|
||
|
||
- A motivation and lifestyle that I guess everyone who works in the
|
||
arts, academia or media (and probably everyone on Nettime) knows quite
|
||
well...
|
||
|
||
Florian
|
||
P.S.: While I have great sympathy for the conclusion that...
|
||
|
||
>> the insights political economists can shed on these movements allow
|
||
>> for a much more nuanced view of development than is made by advocates
|
||
>> of post-scarcity gift cultures.
|
||
|
||
...and think it is necessary
|
||
|
||
(a) to revise Raymond's enthusiastic distortion of the (quite nonideal)
|
||
gift cultures described by Marcel Mauss
|
||
|
||
(b) not to speak of "post-scarcity economics" by falsly drawing from
|
||
non-scarce immaterial goods (=software and information which is scarce
|
||
only in its dependence on material carriers/hardware) to scarce material
|
||
goods (energy, food, clothing, housing, etc.),
|
||
|
||
it still remains true that, since the 1980s, the software industry has
|
||
made software artificially scarce by declaring it a material commodity.
|
||
A questionable and, via the enforcement of "intellectual property" laws,
|
||
increasingly totalitarian commodification to which Free Software
|
||
provides an alternative. (- An alternative with the well-known downsides
|
||
of economic self-exploitation of its producers, although they [still]
|
||
are in an economically more comfortable position than those working in
|
||
other fields of culture.)
|
||
P.P.S.: The fact that the Debian GNU/Linux distribution, probably the
|
||
largest high-quality collection of Free Software, has grown to six full
|
||
CD-ROMs/4 GB of compiled binaries (from two CD-ROMs back in 1997) is my
|
||
empirical evidence against any claim about "the fading altruism in Free
|
||
Software development".
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Craig Brozefsky</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>12 Dec 2001 10:42:10 -0600</date>
|
||
<content>oliver frommel <oliver@firstfloor.org> writes:
|
||
|
||
> hello,
|
||
>
|
||
> i don't know if this has already passed the nettime mailing list but i
|
||
> could not find anything in the archive .. it is a fairly interesting
|
||
> article about the economic and cultural background of free software
|
||
> development. it is long and has a lot of images so i only post the url ..
|
||
>
|
||
> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Development by David Lancashire
|
||
> First Monday, volume 6, number 12 (December 2001),
|
||
> URL: http://firstmonday.org/issues/issue6_12/lancashire/index.html
|
||
|
||
I started reading this and then I got to the outline of their analysis
|
||
was immediately turned off. It's like the guy looking for his car
|
||
keys under the street lamp cause that is where it's brightest.
|
||
--
|
||
Craig Brozefsky <craig@red-bean.com>
|
||
http://www.red-bean.com/~craig
|
||
Ask me about Common Lisp Enterprise Eggplants at Red Bean!</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 12 Dec 2001 12:39:49 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>I never understood why people think of Open Source in terms of _altruism_.
|
||
Perhaps, it's due to some confusion related to the "saintly" image of
|
||
Richard Stallman, but it's the completely wrong approach and shows a very
|
||
limited understanding of economic relationships where things are more
|
||
varied than than selling things vs giving them away.
|
||
|
||
To make a long argument short, altruism is, if anything, the effect of Open
|
||
Source but not its cause. For Open Source to work, people do not need to be
|
||
altruistic, or at least not all of them. As far as I can see, many of the
|
||
developers who contribute to Open Source do so in the context of their
|
||
professional work, be it as members of academic institutions -- where
|
||
publishing and visibility has nothing to do with altruism but is a
|
||
necessity of survival -- or in the context of companies who use and extend
|
||
Open Source software in the work they do for clients.
|
||
|
||
But let's forget for a moment software and look at another great Open
|
||
Source project: the law. Nobody would claim lawyers as a profession to be
|
||
altruistic, even though there are certainly individuals with altruistic
|
||
motives. Many of them are highly paid and some are very much motivated by
|
||
money. Nevertheless, they all contribute to a great Open Source project.
|
||
The law and the court proceedings (ie. the code) are public and if you
|
||
want, you can use an argument made in one case by someone else in your own
|
||
case. In fact, this is standard practice and crucial to the efficient
|
||
working of the legal system. This is how the system learns and evolves and
|
||
how it avoids to be clogged with an endless numbers of identical cases. If
|
||
lawyers could copyright their arguments (i.e. restrict other lawyers from
|
||
using them), the system would break down, particularly the Anglo-American
|
||
system of common law.
|
||
|
||
In some ways, creating the law is similar to creating software. The first
|
||
copy (i.e. deciding the first case in a new area) tends to be very
|
||
expensive, but subsequent copies (i.e. deciding further similar cases) are
|
||
much cheaper.
|
||
|
||
The problem -- and the reason why lawyers make a good living -- is that
|
||
there are rarely identical cases, or, at the very least, it is very hard to
|
||
tell if a case is identical to one that has already passed through system.
|
||
What you pay a lawyer for is her knowlegde of the relevant cases and her
|
||
work to take whatever necessary from them and then customize it for your
|
||
own context and needs. Sometimes this "customization" is relatively
|
||
trivial, sometime this includes a significant contribution to the evolving
|
||
public knowledge base.
|
||
|
||
To some degree, the same model applies to Open Source Software development.
|
||
What you pay, say, IBM for when they install a new server with Linux on it,
|
||
is the service they provide to you for customizing what is out there (Linux
|
||
etc.) to your own ideosynractic needs. And rarely, your needs are exactly
|
||
the same than other people's needs.
|
||
|
||
Many people who contribute to Open Source Software work in contexts that
|
||
produce software but don't sell it. Be it that they are academics/students
|
||
or be it that they sell services. Taking from and contributing to free code
|
||
is in both cases a strategy that makes sense for very "selfish" reasons,
|
||
even though they also contribute to the free knowledge base.
|
||
|
||
--------------------++-----
|
||
Les faits sont faits.
|
||
http://felix.openflows.org</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.3</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>oliver frommel</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 12 Dec 2001 22:38:52 +0100 (CET)</date>
|
||
<content>
|
||
On Wed, 12 Dec 2001, Florian Cramer wrote:
|
||
|
||
> ..
|
||
> It's easy to claim, as in the above quote, there is a lack of
|
||
> "highly-complex and anti-proprietary" Free Software if one doesn't seem to
|
||
> know GNU, the free BSD operating systems (FreeBSD, NetBSD, OpenBSD), the X
|
||
> Window System, Mozilla, the Debian GNU/Linux distribution - and wilfully
|
||
> excludes gcc, Perl, Python, PHP, PostgreSQL, Emacs, Apache, sendmail and
|
||
> other highly complex Free Software projects from one's consideration.
|
||
>
|
||
|
||
this is true but there are a lot of "parallel projects" trying to make
|
||
money from free software (through consulting mainly, in accordance with
|
||
stallman's views, or customization of free software).
|
||
|
||
e.g. activestate tries to make money from perl, python, mozilla, php ..
|
||
(www.activestate.com)
|
||
"Sendmail, Inc. develops commercial products and services
|
||
that simplify the deployment of sendmail" (www.sendmail.org)
|
||
|
||
postgresql offers commercial support
|
||
http://www.ca.postgresql.org/users-lounge/commercial-support.html
|
||
|
||
a lot of development on the gnu c (and others) compiler system was
|
||
traditionally done by the cygnus corporation (now integrated into redhat)
|
||
|
||
when you look at a lot of recent projects like e.g. JBOSS (www.jboss.org)
|
||
that use "industry standards" like the j2ee (java2 enterprise edition) it
|
||
is clearly not the fun that is the primary motivation for the free
|
||
software programmers in this field.
|
||
|
||
I do not criticize people making money through consulting etc. but it I
|
||
think you need to take that into consideration as the author of the
|
||
article does.
|
||
|
||
I think you are right in stressing the difference between commercial
|
||
(what? software? enterprises? ..) and proprietery software. But if you
|
||
take into consideration that "free" software does create complex
|
||
relationships I find it hard to accept a synthetic seperation between the
|
||
software product "as such" and the dependencies it creates. Think of the
|
||
creation of industry standards making users and developers somehow
|
||
dependent on the original creator. complex software makes its users
|
||
dependent in the developers.
|
||
|
||
|
||
>
|
||
> While Linus Torvalds and Miguel de Icaza used their reputation to go
|
||
> abroad and work in the U.S., proving that this indeed may be a motivation
|
||
> to write Free Software, this certainly fails as a general model and
|
||
> explanation. - Why, then, is it that Indian and Russian programmers
|
||
> hardly contribute to Free Software development at all?
|
||
>
|
||
|
||
There are some developers from Russia. E.g. Alexey Kuznetsov has done a
|
||
lot of work on the networking code. This shows a weakness of Lancashire's
|
||
empirical research: it neglects the quality of contributions to free
|
||
software, even the quantity of contributions per developer.
|
||
|
||
|
||
> Many Free Software developers I know have left-wing political views though
|
||
> and see work on Free Software as unalienated labour for which they are
|
||
> willing to make economical sacrifices.
|
||
>
|
||
|
||
many software developers I know have right-wing libertarian views, with a
|
||
strong disregard for what any possible end user might want. usually a lot
|
||
of free software developers don't even regard other human beings as equal
|
||
to any degree (this is what Lancashire decribes in the paragraph about
|
||
Neuromancer, Turkle etc.). You might recognize a certain misogynous
|
||
attitude in hacker culture in general ("GUIs are for girls", "real men use
|
||
command line", "real men use linux", you could go on like this for quite
|
||
a while). The same goes for "gay operating systems" and so on. It would be
|
||
interesting to analyze the composition of the "free software community" in
|
||
terms of race for this matter (I remember irc sessions with about 100
|
||
people doing free software development with participants mainly from the
|
||
US, among all one african american, having to fight permanent harassment).
|
||
For me this shows that any explanations in terms of gift or even GPL
|
||
culture are less plausible than Lancashire's analysis which still might
|
||
have its own flaws.
|
||
|
||
Oliver</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.4</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>scotartt</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 13 Dec 2001 13:15:13 +1100</date>
|
||
<content>On Wed, Dec 12, 2001 at 10:38:52PM +0100, oliver frommel wrote:
|
||
|
||
> when you look at a lot of recent projects like e.g. JBOSS (www.jboss.org)
|
||
> that use \"industry standards\" like the j2ee (java2 enterprise edition) it
|
||
> is clearly not the fun that is the primary motivation for the free
|
||
> software programmers in this field.
|
||
|
||
|
||
Well, look at the Jakarta Tomcat servlet engine, which is *the* standard
|
||
servlet engine, not just *a* standard servlet engine. Tomcat is the
|
||
\"reference implementation\" of the Servlet specification of Sun
|
||
Microsystems' J2EE standard.
|
||
|
||
And IBM gave away a big chunk of it's IDE code to the Eclipse project; the
|
||
idea is an open source development environment that is modular and can
|
||
be extended with both proprietry _and_ open source solutions. Also part of
|
||
IBM's Websphere use the Jakarta ANT product in it, as well as the fact
|
||
that their webserver technology is based on Apache. IBM, and lots of other
|
||
big IT corporates like Oracle, have embraced both Java (ultimately owned
|
||
by their competitor, Sun Microsystems, although now opened to a 'community
|
||
process'), and indeed, Linux and Open Source.
|
||
|
||
The open source paradigm has been well embraced by many large IT
|
||
corporations. Jakarta project products are found in widespread use
|
||
throughout corporate development.
|
||
|
||
regards
|
||
scot.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.5</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Heiko Recktenwald</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 13 Dec 2001 04:10:28 +0100 (CET)</date>
|
||
<content>Hi,
|
||
|
||
On Wed, 12 Dec 2001, Felix Stalder wrote:
|
||
|
||
> I never understood why people think of Open Source in terms of _altruism_.
|
||
|
||
> But let's forget for a moment software and look at another great Open
|
||
> Source project: the law. Nobody would claim lawyers as a profession to be
|
||
> altruistic, even though there are certainly individuals with altruistic
|
||
> motives. Many of them are highly paid and some are very much motivated by
|
||
|
||
Isnt the legal system in some form "altruistic" per se ?
|
||
|
||
But I wouldnt call it "Open Source". Casebooks are books. Ideas are free
|
||
anyway. At least outside of the world of patents for gifs etc..
|
||
|
||
|
||
H.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.6</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Keith Hart</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 13 Dec 2001 13:51:18 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>This message is triggered by Felix Stalder's of the above header. Felix and
|
||
I appeared together on a panel he organised from the wos2 conference in
|
||
Berlin during October. It was entitled open_money, a subject I will return
|
||
to below, as a way of introducing my own writing. But first I want to
|
||
comment on his remarks about altruism and the law in relation to open
|
||
source. I should say that I find us in broad agreement on the general issue
|
||
of open source, the internet and democracy.
|
||
|
||
The opposition selfish/altruistic is depressing because it speaks of a huge
|
||
gap between the individual and society. This corresponds to our experience,
|
||
where we are told on the one hand that each of us is a unique subjective
|
||
personality, while society is a mass of remote objects governed by forces
|
||
we neither understand nor can influence. The task of personal development
|
||
and social organisation is rather to find way ways of integrating the two,
|
||
the individual and the collective, self-in-the-world. And the most
|
||
longlasting human arrangements do precisely that. We have to be
|
||
self-reliant to a high degree and we have to learn to belong to others, to
|
||
be connected at the same time. This is the human predicament and few
|
||
entirely succeed. The issue therefore is not to be either selfish or
|
||
altruistic -- each position is childish -- but to aim for what I think of
|
||
as the human idea, to combine self-interest with recogniton that the
|
||
interest of everyone else in society affects us too, thereby dissolving the
|
||
contradiction between the individual and the collective. I would claim that
|
||
this principle was independently invented twice, by Gautama and John Locke.
|
||
But that would take us a bit far from what I want to say.
|
||
|
||
I wish to take issue with Felix's argument that the law in contemporary
|
||
western societies offers an unambiguous point of reference for assessing
|
||
the value of open source software development. It is true that English
|
||
common law is unusual in making public law the normative outcome of
|
||
individual citizens exercising their rights, with a heavy reliance on
|
||
judicial precedent over statutary law. It is also true that the body of
|
||
case law is available to lawyers as a basis for their arguments. But I
|
||
think it would be wrong to say that the law is therefore open in the sense
|
||
that all citizens have free access to it. First, as Felix implies, the law
|
||
in many cultures is dualistic in a way that English common law was intended
|
||
not to be. In most European languages there are two words for law, not one
|
||
(eg loi/droit), reflecting a sharp division between public and private law,
|
||
between the state and the people. Second, for centuries the judges and the
|
||
legal profession have operated with a jargon that is closed to the general
|
||
public. Third, access to the law, never mind justice, has been highly
|
||
stratified. I could go on. Michael Lewis's recent book on the astonishing
|
||
achievements of kids using the internet (The Future Just Happened, 2001)
|
||
includes the case of a 15 year old who became the most highly ranked legal
|
||
adviser on an internet site heavily populated by professional lawyers.The
|
||
medical profession likewise once offered little hope that people might win
|
||
some measure of control over their own minds and bodies, a situation that
|
||
th einternet may be changing. And surely one test of a civilisation is
|
||
whether or not it helps its individual members to be self-reliant or
|
||
autonomous. Ours does not. The law then is a bad example for arguing that
|
||
open source software development can safely cross the border separating
|
||
sharing without payment from commerce.
|
||
|
||
The open source movement is split on the issue of exchange and money
|
||
payment. Those who follow the Free Software Foundation appear consider that
|
||
any hint of money and exchange, even of reciprocity, leads directly to
|
||
unacceptable compromise with capitalism. Linux, on the other hand, is
|
||
rapidly being integrated with big business. Feelings run high on both
|
||
sides, but especially on the first, which I would call purist, if not
|
||
puritan. At the same time, the controversy over Microsoft's monopoly and
|
||
the attempts to break it have pushed the open source movement into the
|
||
mainstream of political debate. It raises interesting questions about
|
||
whether some software developers are at the cutting edge of a new
|
||
democratic politics or perhaps are little different from lawyers and
|
||
doctors, in that their arcane practices are beyond the grasp of the vast
|
||
body of citizens. Does it matter if some of them do it without money
|
||
payment?
|
||
|
||
Perhaps a much bigger and related issue is whether the internet is fast
|
||
losing the freedom of its early years. Here the case of writers like
|
||
Lawrence Lessig (The Future of Ideas) is that private copyright, pushed by
|
||
corproate capital and the legal profession, is breaking up the internet
|
||
commons. The example of software development remains central to this case.
|
||
It all seems to me an entirely healthy recasting of the political debate in
|
||
terms that invite each of us to interrogate what we may have taken for
|
||
granted. What is the commons and does it matter whether we lose free access
|
||
to it? It means that the long argument about the social effects of markets
|
||
and capitalism can be extended not just to software engineering, but to the
|
||
street and parks, to language and literary traditions, indeed to the whole
|
||
social infrastructure we live by. My interest is in exploring the
|
||
possibility that money itself might become a commons to which all of us
|
||
would have open access, open source money, if you like, a money that,
|
||
instead of being supplied remotely by central agencies as a scarce
|
||
commdity, might be something we could all make for ourselves.
|
||
|
||
To this end, I have been working on community currencies for over a year
|
||
now with Michael Linton and Ernie Yacub in British Columbia. We are writing
|
||
a book called Common Wealth. The subtitle is less stable than the title. At
|
||
present it is 'building community and economic democracy with open money';
|
||
but it might be 'open money as a commons' or something like that. I hope to
|
||
share some of this writing in progress with the nettime list. But at this
|
||
stage, I would point readers towards a website: www.openmoney.org.
|
||
|
||
This is the second book on money I written recently. The first is Money in
|
||
an Unequal World (Texere, 2001), first published as The Memory Bank
|
||
(Profile, 2000). There is more about the book, including various
|
||
downloadable items at www.thememorybank.co.uk. My concern there is with the
|
||
conseqences of the communications revolution for the forms of money and
|
||
exchange. i suggest that money and language are the two great vehicles of
|
||
communication we have and that their development is converging. I also set
|
||
out to disentangle the market from capitalism, in the belief that more
|
||
humane and equal forms of exchange involving money are both possible and
|
||
necessary. This is the broad basis for my underlying agreement with the
|
||
position outlined by Felix in his message to the list. There is a lot more
|
||
to be said, but this is my way of introducing myself to the conversation
|
||
constituted by nettime.
|
||
|
||
Keith Hart
|
||
|
||
I never understood why people think of Open Source in terms of _altruism_.
|
||
Perhaps, it's due to some confusion related to the "saintly" image of
|
||
Richard Stallman, but it's the completely wrong approach and shows a very
|
||
limited understanding of economic relationships where things are more
|
||
varied than than selling things vs giving them away.
|
||
|
||
To make a long argument short, altruism is, if anything, the effect of Open
|
||
Source but not its cause. For Open Source to work, people do not need to be
|
||
altruistic, or at least not all of them. As far as I can see, many of the
|
||
developers who contribute to Open Source do so in the context of their
|
||
professional work, be it as members of academic institutions -- where
|
||
publishing and visibility has nothing to do with altruism but is a
|
||
necessity of survival -- or in the context of companies who use and extend
|
||
Open Source software in the work they do for clients.
|
||
|
||
But let's forget for a moment software and look at another great Open
|
||
Source project: the law. Nobody would claim lawyers as a profession to be
|
||
altruistic, even though there are certainly individuals with altruistic
|
||
motives. Many of them are highly paid and some are very much motivated by
|
||
money. Nevertheless, they all contribute to a great Open Source project.
|
||
The law and the court proceedings (ie. the code) are public and if you
|
||
want, you can use an argument made in one case by someone else in your own
|
||
case. In fact, this is standard practice and crucial to the efficient
|
||
working of the legal system. This is how the system learns and evolves and
|
||
how it avoids to be clogged with an endless numbers of identical cases. If
|
||
lawyers could copyright their arguments (i.e. restrict other lawyers from
|
||
using them), the system would break down, particularly the Anglo-American
|
||
system of common law.
|
||
|
||
In some ways, creating the law is similar to creating software. The first
|
||
copy (i.e. deciding the first case in a new area) tends to be very
|
||
expensive, but subsequent copies (i.e. deciding further similar cases) are
|
||
much cheaper.
|
||
|
||
The problem -- and the reason why lawyers make a good living -- is that
|
||
there are rarely identical cases, or, at the very least, it is very hard to
|
||
tell if a case is identical to one that has already passed through system.
|
||
What you pay a lawyer for is her knowlegde of the relevant cases and her
|
||
work to take whatever necessary from them and then customize it for your
|
||
own context and needs. Sometimes this "customization" is relatively
|
||
trivial, sometime this includes a significant contribution to the evolving
|
||
public knowledge base.
|
||
|
||
To some degree, the same model applies to Open Source Software development.
|
||
What you pay, say, IBM for when they install a new server with Linux on it,
|
||
is the service they provide to you for customizing what is out there (Linux
|
||
etc.) to your own ideosynractic needs. And rarely, your needs are exactly
|
||
the same than other people's needs.
|
||
|
||
Many people who contribute to Open Source Software work in contexts that
|
||
produce software but don't sell it. Be it that they are academics/students
|
||
or be it that they sell services. Taking from and contributing to free code
|
||
is in both cases a strategy that makes sense for very "selfish" reasons,
|
||
even though they also contribute to the free knowledge base.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.7</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Kermit Snelson</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Fri, 14 Dec 2001 23:37:51 -0800</date>
|
||
<content>The open source paradigm should not be identified with altruism. This was
|
||
Felix's main point, and I very much agree. I also agree that software
|
||
developers, like lawyers, can make a good living by selling their time
|
||
rather than licensing their product. This is hardly news, however. (And the
|
||
example of US legal celebrities such as Alan Dershowitz and Melvin Belli
|
||
shows that the path to true riches in the law lies not on billable hours,
|
||
but on widely distributed and copyrighted product.)
|
||
|
||
But then Felix goes on to call the law "a great Open Source project."
|
||
Although it's clear to me that he intended this statement to serve only as a
|
||
qualified analogy, I think it's politically important for the record to show
|
||
that this is far from being the case in practice. The fact is that large
|
||
amounts of the legal apparatus and of the law itself are copyrighted and
|
||
commercially licensed.
|
||
|
||
As Felix points out, the common law system requires that prior court
|
||
decisions be published and indexed. This massive publishing task, however,
|
||
is carried out not primarily by governments, but for profit by large
|
||
commercial entities such as Thomson and Reed Elsevier. The actual practice
|
||
of precedent-based law today depends on case, statute and authority finders,
|
||
nearly all of which are the extremely expensive and copyrighted products of
|
||
commercial publishing empires.
|
||
|
||
Not only is the legal research apparatus licensed at great expense, but
|
||
sometimes so are the statutes themselves. Building codes, fire codes and
|
||
commercial codes provide many examples of laws that are written and
|
||
copyrighted by private organizations and then adopted as public law by the
|
||
legislatures. In the USA, this has resulted in counterintuitive (to say the
|
||
least) situations in which state governments cannot hold copies of their own
|
||
laws without paying large royalties to the private corporations that wrote
|
||
them. Needless to say, US citizens in such cases are also obliged to pay
|
||
these private organizations in order to learn the laws to which they are
|
||
subject.
|
||
|
||
In the UK the Crown asserts copyright on all laws, although it currently
|
||
waives its rights with respect to legislation. But with respect to other
|
||
public assets such as Ordnance Survey mapping, it vigorously exercises the
|
||
Crown copyright with the express purpose of commercial exploitation. The
|
||
assertion of Crown copyright on legislation makes it entirely legal for the
|
||
Crown to do the same with the public statutes should it so choose.
|
||
|
||
If the law holds a lesson for the open source software development paradigm,
|
||
it is that it is becoming extremely difficult even for governments to
|
||
finance the increasingly technical and massive task of creating and
|
||
administering the law without resorting to copyright and other restrictive
|
||
measures. Universities are in a similar situation with respect to research.
|
||
Any political response to the threats posed by these developments to
|
||
democracy, free inquiry and free software must be based upon an objective
|
||
and accurate understanding of the economic and technical realities upon
|
||
which this political situation is based.
|
||
|
||
Kermit Snelson</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.8</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>jaromil</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 16 Dec 2001 19:26:43 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>On Wed, Dec 12, 2001 at 12:39:49AM -0500, Felix Stalder wrote:
|
||
|
||
> I never understood why people think of Open Source in terms of
|
||
> _altruism_. Perhaps, it's due to some confusion related to the
|
||
> "saintly" image of Richard Stallman, but it's the completely wrong
|
||
> approach and shows a very limited understanding of economic
|
||
> relationships where things are more varied than than selling things
|
||
> vs giving them away.
|
||
|
||
On Fri, Dec 14, 2001 at 11:37:51PM -0800, Kermit Snelson wrote:
|
||
|
||
> The open source paradigm should not be identified with altruism.
|
||
> This was Felix's main point, and I very much agree. I also agree
|
||
> that software developers, like lawyers, can make a good living by
|
||
> selling their time rather than licensing their product. This is
|
||
> hardly news, however. (And the example of US legal celebrities such
|
||
> as Alan Dershowitz and Melvin Belli shows that the path to true
|
||
> riches in the law lies not on billable hours, but on widely
|
||
> distributed and copyrighted product.)
|
||
|
||
By reading David Lancashire's article and by following this thread i
|
||
still don't understand if you're voluntarily blurring differences
|
||
between "free software" and "open source" or you are simply ignorant:
|
||
in the latter case please refer to
|
||
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-software-for-freedom.html and
|
||
http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/drdobbs-letter.html ; to be sure you
|
||
have it clear, i quote here a brief statement from the second
|
||
document:
|
||
|
||
The GNU GPL embodies the firm philosophy of the free software
|
||
movement; it doesn't come from the open source movement. I am not a
|
||
supporter of the open source movement, and never have been.
|
||
(Richard Stallman)
|
||
|
||
Once cleared such a crucial difference for the discussion i'd like to
|
||
add my point of view about free software: _it is_ altruism, it has a
|
||
philosophical background which is a solid spark in a free software
|
||
developer's mind; furthermore motivation is given as well by the
|
||
possibility to learn from and reuse code of other experienced
|
||
programmers willing to share knowledge and much is done also by a
|
||
development framework which finally _works_ as it should (and it's
|
||
free[1]! anybody here knows about the costs a programmer had to
|
||
sustain to distribute bytecode produced with a reliable compiler,
|
||
about 10 years ago? anyone ever read about the industrial revolution
|
||
and the role property of production systems played into it?); it's
|
||
about the pleasure to research into a field one is sincerely
|
||
interested, about the craftmanship spirit of self production which is
|
||
dramatically disappearing IRL substituted by mass-production
|
||
omologation.
|
||
|
||
Free software is about solidarity, quoting Richard Stallman in one of
|
||
his first theorizations on free software:
|
||
|
||
Why I Must Write GNU
|
||
|
||
I consider that the golden rule requires that if I like a program I
|
||
must share it with other people who like it. Software sellers want to
|
||
divide the users and conquer them, making each user agree not to
|
||
share with others. I refuse to break solidarity with other users in
|
||
this way. I cannot in good conscience sign a nondisclosure agreement
|
||
or a software license agreement. For years I worked within the
|
||
Artificial Intelligence Lab to resist such tendencies and other
|
||
inhospitalities, but eventually they had gone too far: I could not
|
||
remain in an institution where such things are done for me against my
|
||
will.
|
||
|
||
So that I can continue to use computers without dishonor, I have
|
||
decided to put together a sufficient body of free software so that I
|
||
will be able to get along without any software that is not free. I
|
||
have resigned from the AI lab to deny MIT any legal excuse to prevent
|
||
me from giving GNU away.
|
||
|
||
[...]
|
||
|
||
"The GNU Manifesto", Richard Stallman
|
||
Copyright (C) 1985, 1993 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
|
||
Permission is granted to anyone to make or
|
||
distribute verbatim copies of this document.
|
||
|
||
and of course it's about reputation which i would'nt define
|
||
"ego-boost": i see such a phenomenon much more present in other
|
||
contexts which right here i see engaging the katartical exercise of
|
||
blurring a different philosophy to make it easier to reach.
|
||
|
||
enfin, to mark distances, i must state "je ne parle pas logique, je
|
||
parle generosite" : this answer Andre Breton gave in an analog
|
||
situation makes me once again comfortable in underlying the
|
||
differences i see in our languages, and approaches.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
[1] Free software is a matter of freedom, not price; the word "free"
|
||
has to be intended in this way here. Furthermore, referring to the
|
||
wrong assumption by Keith Hart in this thread:
|
||
> The open source movement is split on the issue of exchange and money
|
||
> payment. Those who follow the Free Software Foundation appear
|
||
> consider that any hint of money and exchange, even of reciprocity,
|
||
> leads directly to unacceptable compromise with capitalism.
|
||
refer to http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html to have a clear
|
||
point about the free-speech / free-beer issue.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
jaromil ][ http://dyne.org ][ GnuPG _key__id_
|
||
EDEE F1B9 DC92 76C0 6D46 D77A 58B0 82D6 (5B6E 6D97)</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.9</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] RE: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 16 Dec 2001 14:56:56 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>Kermit Snelson wrote:
|
||
|
||
>But then Felix goes on to call the law "a great Open Source project."
|
||
>Although it's clear to me that he intended this statement to serve only as a
|
||
>qualified analogy, I think it's politically important for the record to show
|
||
>that this is far from being the case in practice.
|
||
|
||
I entirely agree with your qualifications. Indeed, I intended the law
|
||
analogy as a very partial one. Besides the limitations that you point out,
|
||
there are obviously further aspects that make the legal system very
|
||
different from Open Source. Perhaps the most important is that in many
|
||
cases only members of a select group, e.g. barred lawyers, are allowed to
|
||
practice the law. There is a clear, and vigorously maintained, difference
|
||
between professionals and lay people. The same difference exists in closed
|
||
source software. In the open source community, however, the boundaries
|
||
between developers and users are sliding and primarily dependent on dynamic
|
||
knowledge and commitment, rather than on static certification. This, I
|
||
think, is a really important factor in the vitality of the movement.
|
||
|
||
The reason why I brought up the shaky analogy to law is to highlight that
|
||
there are other areas of our society that are based on a public knowledge
|
||
base (with the qualifications you added) and that this does not preclude,
|
||
for the better or worse, their inclusion into the main stream and nor their
|
||
economic viability.
|
||
|
||
Indeed, one could argue that many of the most sensitive aspects of a
|
||
democracy are based on publicly accessible knowledge (at least in theory)
|
||
and that it might be time to include the emerging information
|
||
infrastructure into this category. What a democracy needs is transparency,
|
||
accountability and participation, and open source can contribute to this on
|
||
a technical level.
|
||
Keith Hart wrote:
|
||
|
||
>The opposition selfish/altruistic is depressing because it speaks of a huge
|
||
>gap between the individual and society. This corresponds to our experience,
|
||
>where we are told on the one hand that each of us is a unique subjective
|
||
>personality, while society is a mass of remote objects governed by forces
|
||
>we neither understand nor can influence. The task of personal development
|
||
>and social organisation is rather to find way ways of integrating the two,
|
||
>the individual and the collective, self-in-the-world.
|
||
|
||
When I talked about 'selfish' versus 'altruistic' motivations of open
|
||
source contributors, I took them as opposites which are usually regarded
|
||
as mutually exclusive. What I meant was that the way the process is
|
||
currently organized there is no real difference between the two, or, to be
|
||
more precise, the difference is on the level of the personal input, rather
|
||
than in the systemic output. In other words, no matter why you produce open
|
||
source code, the result is always open source code, which someone else can
|
||
you to whatever purpose she sees fit. Because the code is open, it is
|
||
impossible to program a hidden agenda into open source code, in the way MS
|
||
software is rumored to have hidden backdoors and secret keys. This, to
|
||
some degree, keeps the software neutral and prevents personal motivations
|
||
to be translated into code that would conflict with the motivations of
|
||
other members of the community.
|
||
|
||
There is a long-standing discussion over whether Open Source is left wing
|
||
or a right wing movement which also crept up in this thread.
|
||
|
||
Florian Cramer wrote:
|
||
>Many Free Software developers I know have left-wing political views though
|
||
>and see work on Free Software as unalienated labour for which they are
|
||
>willing to make economical sacrifices.
|
||
|
||
To which oliver frommel replied:
|
||
> many software developers I know have right-wing libertarian views.
|
||
|
||
And I'm sure there are many open source developers who are totally
|
||
apolitical....
|
||
|
||
What I'm trying to understand is this: Does the shift from an impersonal
|
||
commodity to a personal service relationship (on the economic level)
|
||
combined with an abundant pool of resources and a task so complex that it
|
||
is managed most effectively in a collaborative way, does this to some
|
||
degree mitigate otherwise competing interests between the 'self' and the
|
||
'community'?
|
||
|
||
It is certainly not a given, but perhaps the open source experience shows a
|
||
way into this direction.
|
||
|
||
Felix
|
||
|
||
--------------------++-----
|
||
Les faits sont faits.
|
||
http://felix.openflows.org</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.10</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 18 Dec 2001 21:18:09 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Am Mon, 17.Dec.2001 um 02:59:32 -0500 schrieb jaromil:
|
||
|
||
> By reading David Lancashire's article and by following this thread i
|
||
> still don't understand if you're voluntarily blurring differences
|
||
> between "free software" and "open source" or you are simply ignorant:
|
||
|
||
Yes, it is indeed disappointed that a term that was (quite consciously)
|
||
coined as a depoliticized new economy marketing buzzword for Free
|
||
Software has so widely been adopted in "critical" net cultures.
|
||
|
||
The "Open Source FAQ" of the Open Source Initiave says:
|
||
|
||
The Open Source Initiative is a marketing program for free software.
|
||
It's a pitch for "free software" on solid pragmatic grounds rather
|
||
than ideological tub-thumping.
|
||
<http://www.opensource.org/advocacy/faq.html>
|
||
|
||
> Once cleared such a crucial difference for the discussion i'd like to
|
||
> add my point of view about free software: _it is_ altruism, it has a
|
||
|
||
In fact, I argued along similar lines in my initial response because I
|
||
had jaromil - a great hacker, btw. - in my mind, regardless the fact
|
||
that much if not all Free Software development is coupled with
|
||
commercial software enterprise or side-projects. The real amount of
|
||
altruism in Free Software development may be debated, but any programmer
|
||
who's mostly or even only in it for the money would be stupid to program
|
||
anything but proprietary software (which, no doubt, is more profitable).
|
||
|
||
Florian
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>5.11</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Re: <nettime> The Fading Altruism of Open Source Developmen</subject>
|
||
<from>Felix Stalder</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 18 Dec 2001 21:14:11 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>>> By reading David Lancashire's article and by following this thread i
|
||
>> still don't understand if you're voluntarily blurring differences
|
||
>> between "free software" and "open source" or you are simply ignorant:
|
||
>
|
||
>Yes, it is indeed disappointed that a term that was (quite consciously)
|
||
>coined as a depoliticized new economy marketing buzzword for Free Software
|
||
>has so widely been adopted in "critical" net cultures.
|
||
|
||
I quite deliberately (con)fuse the two, though I'm sure I'm also ignorant.
|
||
I think separating now FSF/GNU and Open Source/Linux is like trying to
|
||
separate the ingredients of a meal after it has been cooked. It's pretty
|
||
pointless. It's clear that Linux and other Open Source projects heavily
|
||
built on FSF work, however, I think it's also clear that without Linux (and
|
||
other projects) the great FSF would have remained a rather closed, albeit
|
||
pure, medium-sized club.
|
||
|
||
One of the most interesting aspects in this entire movement is the degree
|
||
to which it has been able to absorb very different, even contradictory
|
||
ideas. Any attempt to purify this heterogeneous beast (to use a
|
||
semi-Latourian term) is pedantic at best, destructive at worst.
|
||
|
||
So far, I think the politics are still in the code, not in the label, and I
|
||
cannot see much difference between Open Source/Linux GPL code and FSP GPL
|
||
code. But then again, I'm not a hacker.
|
||
|
||
> but any programmer who's mostly or even only
|
||
>in it for the money would be stupid to program anything but proprietary
|
||
>software (which, no doubt, is more profitable).
|
||
|
||
Which is not necessarily true. I guess John Gilmore is still quite wealthy
|
||
(good for the EFF). However, this is totally besides the point. Whether
|
||
someone makes money or not is not really the question, the question is the
|
||
quality of the output and its impact on others. The rest, from my point of
|
||
view, is a life-style question.
|
||
|
||
Felix
|
||
|
||
--------------------++-----
|
||
Les faits sont faits.
|
||
http://felix.openflows.org</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>6.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>[Nettime-bold] Free Software and the lack of cool artists and philosophers</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-bold@nettime.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 6 Dec 2001 13:14:03 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>>From Martin Schulze's writeup of the 8th Linux Kongress:
|
||
|
||
[Note: The Linux Kongress which this year took place in
|
||
Enschede/Netherlands is the traditional, hardcore-technical meeting of
|
||
Linux system developers. - Martin "Joey" Schulze is an important
|
||
developer of Debian GNU/Linux and guru in #LinuxGER (IRCNet) and #Debian
|
||
(LISC). -FC]
|
||
|
||
> Also, interesting discussions about Free Software versus proprietery
|
||
> Software came up ending in the question "Does Free Software actually
|
||
> use its power to come up with impressingly new ideas and use the
|
||
> freedom to implement and try them?"(*) An amazing (or depressing, for
|
||
> what it's worth) number of Free Software Projects target at
|
||
> reimplementing software that is already known in the commercial and
|
||
> proprietary market.
|
||
>
|
||
> Since Free Software isn't bound to marketing droids and company bosses
|
||
> dictating the goals and features of a particular software, it should
|
||
> be perfectly suited to implement new ideas and come up with drastical
|
||
> changes. However, looking at many Free Software projects this doesn't
|
||
> seem to be the case. New questions came ub as: Why are companies
|
||
> required to come up with new ideas so often? Why are special design
|
||
> centers needed for a new GUI to appear? Maybe the Free Software
|
||
> Community lacks a number of cool artists and philosophers?
|
||
|
||
[...]
|
||
|
||
> (*) Some new ideas that were invented through Free Software include
|
||
> BIND (internet nameserver, without it, the internet wouldn't be able
|
||
> to exist), c-news and INN (Usenet news servers, electronic bulletin
|
||
> boards etc.), themes (themable widget libraries, think of Gnome and
|
||
> KDE), Enlightenment (even though some people may miss some
|
||
> functionality, but it's look is definitively new), X11 (the ability to
|
||
> export displays over the network), xiafs (who of you does remember the
|
||
> filesystem Frank Xia designed?), HTML (of course, crediting Tim
|
||
> Berners-Lee), Emacs (ever saw a lisp interpreter that can actually
|
||
> edit files? Lacks a decent editor, but hey...), Languages like Perl,
|
||
> Python and Ruby.
|
||
|
||
[Full text at
|
||
<http://www.infodrom.org/Debian/events/LinuxKongress2001/report.html>]
|
||
|
||
Florian
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject><nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>biella</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sat, 15 Aug 2015 12:16:23 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>Hi,
|
||
|
||
I want to chime in but can only do so briefly as I am at CCC camp and
|
||
not online much. I found the essay provocative and it is undeniable that
|
||
these processes are under way but two things come to mind: this cycle has
|
||
long existed and in many quarters of the hacker community from the
|
||
security industry to hardware (the Homebrew club went from an informal
|
||
association of hackers building association to a capitalist gold mine).
|
||
These processes are deeply cyclical and on going and I don't really
|
||
expect them to go away given how central computing is to capitalism.
|
||
|
||
What was ommitted was the rather expanisive politicization of hacking we
|
||
have witnessed in the last five years thanks to the likes of Wikileaks
|
||
and Anonymous (or as Julian Assange put it " The political education of
|
||
apolitical technical people is extraordinary.") This is not to say we
|
||
should not worry about cooptation/gentrification/recuperation. But it is
|
||
as important to understand what has helped secure this flowering of
|
||
political activisity today so that we can protect it in the future.
|
||
|
||
I wrote a paper, Weapons of the Geek about the political turn in
|
||
hacking. It is under review but am happy to share for those who want to
|
||
see an early copy. I am also pasting a section of the introduction below.
|
||
|
||
Biella
|
||
|
||
Even as they attain to a social primacy alongside the global
|
||
communications technologies they have helped steward, entrenched
|
||
stereotypes have precluded serious studies of the contemporary politics
|
||
of hacking. Peering past the caricatures, we can see that hackers have
|
||
long used their skills for protest and overt political transformation
|
||
(Jordan and Taylor 2004). Hacking itself has long exhibited a powerful,
|
||
albeit latent, political sub-text (Soderberg 2012; Wark 2004).But in the
|
||
past five years, activist-motivated hacking has significantly enlarged
|
||
its scope and continues to demonstrate nuanced and diverse ideological
|
||
commitments. Many of these commitments cannot be reduced to
|
||
"libertarianism," that ideology universalized by many observers as the
|
||
crux of hacker politics. For one, civil disobedience has surged in a
|
||
varietyof formats and styles, often in relation to leaks and
|
||
exfiltration. We see lone leakers, like Chelsea Manning, and also
|
||
collectivist and leftist leaking endeavors, perhaps best exemplified by
|
||
Xnet in Spain. Other political engagements, similarly irreducible to
|
||
libertarian values alone, center around collective engagements at the
|
||
level of software: hackers have recently coded up protocols (like
|
||
BitTorrent) andtechnical platforms (like The Pirate Bay) to enable
|
||
peer-to-peer file sharing and anti-copyright piracy (Beyer 2014;
|
||
McKelvey, forthcoming); sincethe 1980s, free software hackers have
|
||
embedded their collectively produced programs with legal
|
||
stipulationsthat have powerfully tilted the politics of intellectual
|
||
property law in favor of access (Kelty 2008; Coleman 2013);
|
||
AcrossEurope, Latin America,and the United States, anti-capitalist
|
||
hackers run small but well-functioning collectives that
|
||
offerprivacy-enhancing technical support and services for leftist
|
||
crusaders;Anonymous, a worldwide protest ensemble specializing in
|
||
digital direct dissent, has established itself asone of the most
|
||
populist manifestations of contemporary geek politics -- requiring no
|
||
technical skills to contribute (Coleman 2014); and finally,on the more
|
||
liberal front, civic and open government hackers throughout North and
|
||
South Americahave sought to improve government transparency by creating
|
||
open standards andapplications thatfacilitate data access and sharing
|
||
(Gregg and DiSalvo 2013; Schrock, forthcoming). Julian Assange, one of
|
||
the most prominent activist hackers, has recently highlighted the rather
|
||
dramatic turn to activism and political engagement among geeky
|
||
technologists. "The political education of apolitical technical people
|
||
is extraordinary" (2014: 116), he noted during an interview.
|
||
|
||
There are no obvious, much less given, explanations as to why a group
|
||
once primarily defined by obscure tinkering and technical exploration
|
||
now engages so frequently in popular media advocacy, traditional policy
|
||
and lawmaking, and activism -- including forms of civil disobedience so
|
||
risky that some in the community are currently in prison or living in
|
||
exile.Working technologists are economically rewarded in*s*tep
|
||
withdoctors,lawyers,and academics -- and yet these professions produce far
|
||
fewer politically-active practitioners. Why and how have hackers who
|
||
enjoy a significant degree of social and economic privilege managed to
|
||
preserve pockets of autonomy? What historical, cultural, and
|
||
sociological conditions have facilitated their passage into the
|
||
political arena, especially in such large numbers? This does not mean
|
||
hackers should be blindly celebrated or denigrated, (as has often been
|
||
the case in the popular literature on hackers),but it does beg for
|
||
analysis andexplanation.
|
||
|
||
Ideally, thebeginnings of an answerwould deeply charthacker activity
|
||
along two distinct vectors: thehistoricalandthe socio-cultural.
|
||
However,an article of this lengthaffords only a single thread of
|
||
analysis. While my article will gesture at historical events and
|
||
circumstances, this article will foremost provide an introductory
|
||
inventorya basic outline of an explanation -- of thesociological and
|
||
cultural attributes most likely responsiblefor the unprecedented and
|
||
multitudinous intensification ofhacker politics duringthe last five
|
||
years. To begin, let's consider the idea of the "hacker" itself.
|
||
Dear Brett,
|
||
|
||
your essay is brilliant and obvious at the same time. I did enjoy
|
||
reading it, but still feels like scratching the surface as it does not
|
||
dig into other historical examples of cultural gentrification.
|
||
<...></content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>Brett Scott</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 16 Aug 2015 20:58:32 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>Thanks Biella,
|
||
|
||
You're much more of an expert on this than I am, so it's good to see
|
||
this. My main objective was to stir up debate a bit to keep people on
|
||
their toes, rather than necessarily believing in the 'death of the
|
||
hacker'. A lot of my writing has an ambiguous relationship to factual
|
||
reality, or I often deliberately mix together descriptive accounts of
|
||
things with normative accounts of things I'd like to see, and
|
||
sometimes they blend into one... well, perhaps this is a way of saying
|
||
that I am less an academic than I am a shit-stirrer, and sometimes I
|
||
will make things cruder than they actually are in order to push a
|
||
political agenda. I want the politicization to continue, and pointing
|
||
out the forces against politicization is one way I do that. Hope this
|
||
makes sense
|
||
|
||
Looking forward to seeing Weapons of the Geek when it comes out!
|
||
|
||
Hope CCC camp is fun
|
||
Cheers!
|
||
Brett
|
||
{AT} suitpossum
|
||
|
||
On 15/08/2015 12:16, biella wrote:
|
||
|
||
Hi,
|
||
|
||
I want to chime in but can only do so briefly as I am at CCC camp and
|
||
not online much. I found the essay provocative and it is undeniable that
|
||
these processes are under way but two things come to mind: this cycle has
|
||
long existed and in many quarters of the hacker community from the
|
||
security industry to hardware (the Homebrew club went from an informal
|
||
association of hackers building association to a capitalist gold mine).
|
||
These processes are deeply cyclical and on going and I don't really
|
||
expect them to go away given how central computing is to capitalism.
|
||
<...></content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>John Young</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 16 Aug 2015 15:40:24 -0400</date>
|
||
<content>Gentrification of hacking is by those studying, reporting, historicizing,
|
||
philosophizing, theorizing, aestheticing, curating (spit) it. As with
|
||
gentrification in general, it reifies the reification, a deft academic
|
||
opportunism, one might be so vulgar as to say the very product of
|
||
nettime and every growing crowd of cohorts. Amazon-ian in intent.
|
||
|
||
Gentrifiers dare not hack, but do inveigle their way into hacker havens,
|
||
publish about hackers, testify against hackers, consult with governments
|
||
about hackers, speechify hackerdom at security fora, advise film and
|
||
media about hackers, produce hacker-derived aesthetic objects, even
|
||
advise crude and obnoxious hackers about advancing careers as
|
||
hacker, ex-hacker, hacker informer, undercover cop, covert agent
|
||
academic with hacker cred, and if all goes well sign on to distinguished
|
||
institutions, cybersecurity corporations, and duplicitous NGOs like
|
||
In-tel-Q where PhDs are taxidermied for showboating at DefCons
|
||
and CCCs, then on to global appearances via speaker bureaus
|
||
and paid conferences,
|
||
|
||
Gentrifiers are allegeric to jail themselves but do exploit the few
|
||
hackers who get nabbed through the assistance provided to
|
||
law enforcement by gentrifiers, not least by celebrifying hackers
|
||
so that officials are induced to go after them for budget enhancement.
|
||
|
||
So goes gentrification in all its vile piggish manifestations. Behold the
|
||
origin of the term to cloak, deceive, defuse dissent, advance the
|
||
interests of property holders. White hat hacker cartels are making
|
||
a killling policing gentrification cyber real estate.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.3</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>Gabriella \"Biella\" Coleman</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Mon, 24 Aug 2015 09:03:59 -0700</date>
|
||
<content>
|
||
Hi,
|
||
|
||
Sorry for the delay. Post camp life turned out to be far more
|
||
complicated than expected but I managed to cobble together a bit of a
|
||
short reply below.. But given how these discussions tend to metabolize
|
||
rather rapidly, I realize I might be too late.
|
||
|
||
On 15-08-17 06:00 AM, [1]nettime-l-request {AT} mail.kein.org wrote:
|
||
|
||
|
||
Message: 1
|
||
Date: Sun, 16 Aug 2015 20:58:32 +0200
|
||
From: Brett Scott [2]<b.r.scott.06 {AT} cantab.net>
|
||
To: [3]nettime-l {AT} kein.org
|
||
Subject: Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking
|
||
Message-ID: [4]<mailman.6.1439805601.55365.nettime-l {AT} mail.kein.org>
|
||
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii
|
||
|
||
Thanks Biella,
|
||
|
||
You're much more of an expert on this than I am, so it's good to see
|
||
this. My main objective was to stir up debate a bit to keep people on
|
||
their toes, rather than necessarily believing in the 'death of the
|
||
hacker'. A lot of my writing has an ambiguous relationship to factual
|
||
reality, or I often deliberately mix together descriptive accounts of
|
||
things with normative accounts of things I'd like to see, and
|
||
sometimes they blend into one... well, perhaps this is a way of saying
|
||
that I am less an academic than I am a shit-stirrer, and sometimes I
|
||
will make things cruder than they actually are in order to push a
|
||
political agenda. I want the politicization to continue, and pointing
|
||
out the forces against politicization is one way I do that. Hope this
|
||
makes sense
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
It does, to a point. We clearly reside in the same camp: we want to
|
||
encourage the processes of radicalization among the technorati. And
|
||
your piece is provocative enough (and written well enough) so that
|
||
people read it in large numbers and it ricocheted far and wide across
|
||
many sites. You did stir the pot of conversation, which is a really
|
||
good thing.
|
||
Still as already stated, my worry, which is less academic and more
|
||
pragmatic, concerns precisely how to most productively push a political
|
||
agenda. The window of activist activity we are witnessing is both
|
||
remarkable (and remarkably robust) but completely fragile--and again
|
||
precisely due to the economic dynamics you lay out. Your piece may have
|
||
identified a problem (one again that is more cyclical, and on going
|
||
than new) but it also missed an opportunity to nudge those who harbor a
|
||
political/activist sensibility toward the site of struggle. These are
|
||
exciting times precisely because there is rich and active terrain of
|
||
struggle with large numbers of hackers and geeks willing to enter fully
|
||
into the political arena. A number of folks tweeting your piece made it
|
||
seem like there was once possibilities and now they have have slipped
|
||
through our fingers. That is a dangerous (and empirically wrong
|
||
message) to send to the public at large.
|
||
There is no need to belabor the point but I guess I raise it a final
|
||
time for the sake of future writings. I just think you could have been
|
||
more effective--as a shit-stirring provocateur--had you loudly and
|
||
proudly pointed to those who have decided not to accept the path of
|
||
gentrification for the sake of a better world so that others with a
|
||
activist sensibility could join they rabble rousing party ;)
|
||
|
||
Take care,
|
||
Biella
|
||
|
||
Biella
|
||
</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.4</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>John Hopkins</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Mon, 24 Aug 2015 10:57:58 -0700</date>
|
||
<content>Biella --
|
||
|
||
some musings on your note:</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.5</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 26 Aug 2015 15:42:03 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>When Stephen Levy wrote "Hackers" in 1984, his description of hacker
|
||
culture and his write-up of the hacker ethic were, to a considerable
|
||
part, based on Richard Stallman. Already in that year, Levy called
|
||
Stallman the "last of the true hackers". Stallman created the GNU
|
||
Project in the same year out of frustration of what had become - or how
|
||
little had remained - of the original M.I.T. hacker culture. Even the
|
||
GNU Project itself involves "gentrification" in the sense that
|
||
development of some of its subprojects (such as the GNU C Compiler, the
|
||
GNU C Library and the GNOME desktop) has become largely corporate. GNU
|
||
intentionally never imposed prohibitions on commercial and particular
|
||
political/military uses of software licensed under its terms. This
|
||
position continues to be criticized by other hackers, for example by
|
||
Felix von Leitner from Chaos Computer Club.
|
||
All this suggests that the "gentrification of hacking" is not a new
|
||
phenomenon, but that it has been a part of hacker culture since its
|
||
early days.
|
||
-F</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.6</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>Erich M.</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 27 Aug 2015 02:11:17 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>
|
||
On 2015-08-26 15:42, Florian Cramer wrote:
|
||
|
||
> When Stephen Levy wrote "Hackers" in 1984, his description of hacker
|
||
> culture and his write-up of the hacker ethic were, to a considerable
|
||
> part, based on Richard Stallman.
|
||
|
||
Right. And these hacker ethics are derived from the "ham spirit" of the
|
||
early 1920ies. That was right after the first ever machine centric war
|
||
"Gentrifiction?". Ladies and gents of nettime-list are you for real?
|
||
cccamp2015 was like an amateur radio fieldday, but futuristic and
|
||
steampunk as well.
|
||
Can you imagine a five days outdoor event of 4.800 people in the midst
|
||
of nowhere without any blue lights or uniforms ever visible? No fights
|
||
none stone drunk, nothing. But 40 GBit local, 10 GBit uplink. 8 GSM
|
||
stations, own SIMs, 2.700 fones on the DECT wireless network, all
|
||
interconnected. Not to forget the military field 4 KM telephone system
|
||
and the ham UHF repeater station. The latter technologies were really in
|
||
use, when the nets were run down and +2000 people had to be evacuated
|
||
temporarily because all these high tents, antenna masts were not
|
||
grounded adequatly any more. 5 days of 37 C and a sandy ground,
|
||
surrounded by water. An evil high power capacitor eye in the landscape
|
||
facing a another pole in the troposphere potentially VERY evil..
|
||
Here is a report what happened...
|
||
|
||
http://fm4.orf.at/stories/1761897/
|
||
|
||
This is all not about gentrification which is a ridiculously useless
|
||
because purely ideologic term btw.
|
||
cccamps have always been the breeding ground for projects presented at
|
||
congress thereafter.
|
||
You could not distinguish between hackers, hams or makers. Rather young
|
||
families, even singles or pairs in their 50ies or 60ies.
|
||
Wait what? gentrification? What about adding some field research to your
|
||
free flow of hypotheses?
|
||
73 de Erich M. OE3EMB
|
||
|
||
Post/scrypt: Jaromil, where the fuq are you when you are needed in a
|
||
discussion? LOL
|
||
|
||
<...>
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
https://moechel.com/kontakt PGP KEY 0x2440DE65
|
||
fingerprint A564 1457 71C3 E907 6D78 429E 76F3 C66E 2440 DE65
|
||
--... ...-- -.. . . .-. .. -.-. .... --- . ...-- . -- -...
|
||
</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>7.7</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> gentrification of hacking</subject>
|
||
<from>Antonio</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 27 Aug 2015 03:04:55 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>I am sure that many of your already read these articles or they know
|
||
them by heart
|
||
|
||
Nonetheless I feel like refreshing your memory:
|
||
|
||
http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-3-free-software-epistemics/peer-reviewed-papers/free-software-trajectories-from-organized-publics-to-formal-social-enterprises/
|
||
|
||
http://peerproduction.net/issues/issue-3-free-software-epistemics/debate/there-is-no-free-software/
|
||
|
||
Also, since "gentrification" is the key issue in here, I would like to
|
||
quote this passage from Blake in his review of Richard Smith (2003)
|
||
work which I think could fit the ongoing discussion:Â
|
||
|
||
"In actuality, networks may contain ubiquitous actants occupying fluid
|
||
positions, who like Deleuze and Guattari's (1987) 'journeymen' and
|
||
'monsters' operate in relation to mechanisms of control but also retain
|
||
lines of escape of their own. This can be illustrated by Neil Smith's
|
||
(1992) analysis of the position of artists in the gentrification
|
||
process. In the Lower East Side artists can be seen to have a
|
||
meditating influence in gentrification, since low rents and government
|
||
subsidy may attract them to an areas, raising its cultural image enough
|
||
to attract gentrification. Nevertheless they have a ubiquitous role in
|
||
this process, since rising prices may finally push many artists out of
|
||
the neighbourhoods and some may therefore support activities from
|
||
original residents resisting gentrification. At the same time however,
|
||
artists may benefit from new markets created by the gentrifiers,
|
||
leading to the presence of oppositional art in mainstream galleries. In
|
||
this sense artists can be seen to occupy a fluid position in the
|
||
networks linking gentrifiers with the established community. Thus they
|
||
may be seen as an example of the non-conforming identities described by
|
||
Star (1991: 39), in that they operate "between the categories, yet in
|
||
relationship to them"."
|
||
|
||
a.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>8.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> [Fwd: Re: [ox-en] Felix Stalder: Six Limitations to the Current Open Source Development Methodology]</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 2 Sep 2003 17:06:03 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>Am Dienstag, 26. August 2003 um 17:07:02 Uhr (+0200) schrieb Felix
|
||
Stalder:
|
||
|
||
> These limitations refer to the kind of problems that can be addressed
|
||
> through the current form of social organization developed in the Open
|
||
> Source Movement. The way Open Source Projects are organized reflects
|
||
> the specifics of problem -- developing software -- and thus they
|
||
> cannot serve as a model to address problem with very different
|
||
> characteristics.
|
||
>
|
||
> This does not mean that other problems, for example, the development
|
||
> of drugs, cannot be organized in an open way, but this 'open way' will
|
||
> have to look very different from the way Open Source Software projects
|
||
> are organized because the problem of creating drugs is very different
|
||
> from the problem of creating software. In other words, there is an
|
||
> intimate relationship between the characteristics of the problem and
|
||
> the social organization of its solution.
|
||
|
||
A good example are "Open Content" licenses. They have departed
|
||
significantly from Free Software/Open Source licenses wherever they allow
|
||
to restrict modification and commercial distribution of a work. Therefore,
|
||
the two major "Open Content" licenses, the GNU Free Documentation License
|
||
(used by, among others, the Wikipedia) and the Open Publication License,
|
||
are non-free or non-Open Source. As a consequence, the Debian project
|
||
recently considered moving software documentation released under the GNU
|
||
GDL into its non-free section. - The same is true, btw., for the 12
|
||
licenses "Creative Commons" <http://www.creativecommons.org> offers of
|
||
which only 4 qualify as "Free" or "Open Source" according to the Debian
|
||
Free Software Guidelines and the Open Source Definition. If "Open Content"
|
||
needs other legal regulations than Free Software, then obviously because
|
||
of the different social issues of writing, for example, books as opposed
|
||
to writing software. (Which doesn't mean that these fields couldn't
|
||
converge very soon - for example through the need for authors to write
|
||
complex XML markup, use revision control and content management systems
|
||
etc., so that the traditional distinction will get more and more blurred.)
|
||
|
||
Nevertheless, this is a good opportunity to question the venerable
|
||
copyright statement of Nettime:
|
||
|
||
"distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission".
|
||
|
||
In order to turn Nettime into a truly public and free resource, I suggest
|
||
to change this line into
|
||
|
||
"distributed via <nettime>; unless stated otherwise by the author,
|
||
permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document
|
||
under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.1"
|
||
-F
|
||
--
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/homepage/
|
||
http://www.complit.fu-berlin.de/institut/lehrpersonal/cramer.html
|
||
GnuPG/PGP public key ID 3200C7BA, finger cantsin {AT} mail.zedat.fu-berlin.de</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>9.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject><nettime> Free Software as Collaborative Tex</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Tue, 19 Sep 2000 11:39:31 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>(This is the manuscript of a lecture I held on the panel "Minor Media
|
||
Operations" at the Interface 5 conference in Hamburg. I hope it's of some
|
||
interest to Nettime subscribers. The text is also available in PDF and
|
||
html format from my homepage <http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin> -FC)
|
||
Free Software as Collaborative Text
|
||
|
||
Florian Cramer
|
||
<cantsin {AT} zedat.fu-berlin.de>
|
||
|
||
September 15, 2000 [1]
|
||
|
||
|
||
What is Free Software?
|
||
|
||
Why discuss Free Software in the context of net arts and net
|
||
cultures?
|
||
|
||
Since about two years, Free Software--or "Open Source"--has
|
||
drawn increasing attention from artistic net cultures. The
|
||
Wizards of OS conference, first held in Berlin in 1999, was
|
||
the most prolific event to bridge the gap between the arts,
|
||
humanities and social sciences on the one hand and Free
|
||
Software culture on the other. The politics of copyleft and
|
||
free distribution of code and knowledge soon turned out to be
|
||
a common ground of discourse. In this paper, I will take a
|
||
different aspect into consideration by reading Free Software
|
||
as a net culture and its code as a multi-layered,
|
||
collaborative text. Seen as a literary practice, Free Software
|
||
development is an avant-garde of writing in digital networks,
|
||
and even more: Since Free Software is at the heart of the
|
||
technical infrastructure of the Internet, it has--to a large
|
||
extent--written its own digital network.
|
||
|
||
Definition of Free Software
|
||
|
||
In this paper, "Free Software" does not refer to
|
||
"Freeware", "Shareware" or other proprietary software
|
||
given away at no cost--like Microsoft Internet Explorer,
|
||
QuickTime and Real Player--, but is understood in accordance
|
||
with the definitions of Free Software Foundation
|
||
http://www.fsf.org as software which is "free as free speech,
|
||
not as free beer". Among the best-known examples of Free
|
||
Software are the Linux kernel, the GNU tools and the Apache
|
||
web server.
|
||
|
||
Since 1998, the term "Free Software" competes with "Open
|
||
Source", a term launched by a group around the writer and
|
||
programmer Eric S. Raymond. According to this group, "Open
|
||
Source" is only a different name for the same thing to gain
|
||
more mainstream acceptance in the world of computing.[2] The
|
||
Open Source Definition [Opeb] therefore draws upon the older
|
||
Free Software Guidelines [Deb] of Debian, a non-commercial
|
||
GNU/Linux distribution made by volunteers.[3] The guidelines
|
||
can be summarized as follows:
|
||
|
||
1. Free Software may be freely copied.
|
||
2. Not only the executable binary code, but also the program
|
||
source code are freely available.
|
||
3. The source code may be modified and used for other
|
||
programs by anyone.
|
||
4. There are no restrictions on the use of Free Software.
|
||
Even if Free Software is used for commercial purposes, no
|
||
license fees have to be paid.
|
||
5. There are no restrictions on the distribution of Free
|
||
Software. Free Software may be sold for money even without
|
||
paying the programmers.
|
||
|
||
Since the same criteria apply to "Open Source", the two
|
||
concepts indeed do not differ in technical terms. Yet each of
|
||
both terms has its ambiguities: While "Free Software" tends
|
||
to get confused with Freeware and Shareware,[4] "Open Source"
|
||
is easy to be mixed up with "open standards"--like the HTML
|
||
format and the http protocol--and with software like Sun's Java
|
||
whose source code is publicly available, but only under a
|
||
restrictive license. It is particularly important to
|
||
differentiate "Open Source" and "Free Software" from open
|
||
standards. While open standards are unified technical
|
||
specifications set up by committees like the Internet
|
||
Engineering Taskforce (IETF) and the World Wide Web Consortium
|
||
(W3C), "Open Source" or "Free Software" developers code
|
||
whatever they like for their own fun, and they are free to
|
||
split their projects and develop the code into separate
|
||
directions if a consensus can no longer be reached.[5]
|
||
|
||
Since misconceptions of "Open Source" are so common, I will
|
||
stick with the less popular, but somewhat clearer term "Free
|
||
Software".
|
||
|
||
Free Software History
|
||
|
||
It is not accidental that history of Free Software runs
|
||
parallel to the history of the Internet. The Internet is built
|
||
on Unix networking technology. Unix used to be free for
|
||
academic institutions in the 1970s, and it has been either the
|
||
base or model of the common Free Software operating systems
|
||
BSD and GNU/Linux.
|
||
|
||
Any ordinary E-Mail message still reveals the affinity of the
|
||
Internet and Unix technology: E-Mail itself is nothing but the
|
||
Unix mail command. An E-Mail address of the form xy {AT} z.com is
|
||
made up of what's historically a user name on a multiuser Unix
|
||
system and, following the " {AT} ", the system's host name. This
|
||
host name is resolved via the free Unix software bind
|
||
according to the Internet domain name system (DNS); DNS itself
|
||
is nothing but a networked extension of the Unix system file
|
||
/etc/hosts. Since the Internet has marginalized or even
|
||
replaced proprietary computer networks like IBM's EARN/Bitnet,
|
||
Compuserve, the German Btx and the French Minitel, Unix
|
||
networking technology is standard on all computing platforms.
|
||
|
||
In the 1970, Unix particularly attracted student hacker
|
||
communities at the MIT and at the University of California at
|
||
Berkeley. The concepts of open, decentralized computer
|
||
networks and free Unix-like operating systems originated in
|
||
the computer science labs of these institutions. By
|
||
the early 1990s, the "hacker" software written there had
|
||
evolved into
|
||
|
||
1. the BSD family of operating systems with the free versions
|
||
FreeBSD, NetBSD and OpenBSD. All of them use a codebase
|
||
that was originally developed in Berkeley under the
|
||
project leadership of Bill Joy.
|
||
|
||
2. the GNU/Linux operating system. All major Linux-based
|
||
operating system distributions--RedHat Linux, SuSE Linux,
|
||
Turbo Linux, Debian GNU/Linux, Mandrake Linux, Corel Linux
|
||
OS and Caldera OpenLinux, to name only a few--build on the
|
||
GNU software written since 1984 by the Free Software
|
||
Foundation (FSF) and on the Linux kernel written since
|
||
1991 under the project leadership of Linus Torvalds.[6]
|
||
The FSF was founded and is still being led by former MIT
|
||
hacker Richard M. Stallman.
|
||
|
||
Open technology has been a key factor for the acceptance of
|
||
computers and networking: The open architecture of the IBM
|
||
Personal Computer made computers cheap and popular since the
|
||
1980s, and with the open architecture of the Internet,
|
||
networking became popular in the early 1990s. Lately, Free
|
||
Software has made high-end Unix server computing available to
|
||
anyone willing to learn the technical details. Whether Free
|
||
Software can become as popular on mainstream desktop computers
|
||
and eventually de-commoditize all computer software, remains
|
||
to be seen, but is not the question I want to investigate
|
||
here.
|
||
|
||
Free Software as a Net Culture
|
||
|
||
In the middle of the 1990s, "net culture" became the keyword
|
||
for artistic, art-critical and political discourse in the
|
||
Internet. The term was closely identified with mailing lists
|
||
like Nettime http://www.nettime.org and Rhizome
|
||
http://www.rhizome.org, conferences like the one where I
|
||
present this paper and print publications like the Nettime
|
||
anthology [BMBB^+99]. "Net culture" used to be pronounced as
|
||
a singular noun in these forums and media referring only to
|
||
the discourse they created.
|
||
|
||
Free Software is an outstanding example that there is not one,
|
||
but many net cultures. It predates artistic net cultures in
|
||
the Internet by roughly twenty years. The Free Software
|
||
copyleft can be seen as the quintessential reflection of this
|
||
long experience. Invented to preserve the traditional
|
||
academic-artistic freedom of speech and citation in the
|
||
digital realm, the copyleft has radically rewritten it
|
||
nevertheless. The concept that code, i.e. text, may not only
|
||
be freely copied, but even modified ("patched"), willfully
|
||
recycled and commercially redistributed by anyone without the
|
||
author's permit is foreign to the post-medieval Western arts
|
||
and sciences. In print culture, such practices are considered
|
||
plagiarism and theft.
|
||
|
||
Even for the digital net arts, the copyleft remains an
|
||
unresolved challenge. Many, if not most net artworks depend on
|
||
proprietary authoring and display software,[7] and the
|
||
distribution terms of their code are rarely clarified.[8] Yet
|
||
Free Software has as subtly as significantly influenced the
|
||
digitally networked arts. Without free E-mail server software
|
||
like Majordomo http://www.greatcircle.com/majordomo/ and
|
||
Sendmail http://www.sendmail.org--and the overall possibility
|
||
to set up inexpensive servers using the GNU/Linux and BSD
|
||
operating systems on stock PC hardware--, the artistic net
|
||
cultures of Nettime et.al. hardly could have operated
|
||
non-commercially and with free participation.[9] Friedrich
|
||
Kittler's observation that artistic tools conceptually shape
|
||
what is made with them [Kit85] also applies to the net arts.
|
||
The fact that Majordomo and Sendmail became major tools of
|
||
artistic net activity is an important--but of course not the
|
||
sole--explanation why contemporary Net.art tends towards
|
||
conceptual, discursive and text-heavy work instead of the
|
||
immersive "virtual reality" environments many critics had
|
||
expected them to deliver. The latter would have required
|
||
expensive proprietary software for design and display, closed
|
||
high-speed networks and, as a result, dependence on highly
|
||
funded institutional infrastructures, limited community
|
||
participation and top-down instead of bottom-up organization
|
||
of this particular net culture.
|
||
|
||
Free Software as Writing
|
||
|
||
The relevance of Free Software for other net cultures is not
|
||
limited to the tools it has created and the infrastructures it
|
||
has made possible, simply because those tools themselves are
|
||
the very object of Free Software culture: they are text,
|
||
results of complex textual processing. Moreover, this text is
|
||
being produced with tools which themselves are free code.
|
||
|
||
While the phenomenon that text is being built with tools which
|
||
are source text themselves applies to the proprietary software
|
||
as well, there is an important difference: Free Software
|
||
source text is not withdrawn from the public. It cannot be
|
||
abandoned by company management and does not disappear when
|
||
development has ceased. All Free Software builds up to a
|
||
public repository of text-coded, free-to-use knowledge. It
|
||
accumulates to an archive. Instead of being written from
|
||
scratch, new Free Software can be built from whatsoever is in
|
||
that archive. Free Software therefore is highly intertextual.
|
||
Free Software development is the earliest and still most
|
||
successful practice of collaborative writing in computer
|
||
networks. With its system of textual production and politics
|
||
of code, Free Software is by far the more advanced net
|
||
literature than what is commonly understood as net poetry and
|
||
net fiction.[10] Free Software may be seen simultaneously as
|
||
|
||
* a freely accessible, ever-growing body of code--a text
|
||
archive;
|
||
* recursive (i.e. self-applied) text processing, since
|
||
available text is used both as a source and as a building
|
||
tool to create new code;
|
||
* text processing even through the medium of text, because
|
||
Free Software development infrastructures mostly depend on
|
||
mailing lists and command-based version control systems.
|
||
* a "hacker" culture which advocates freedom of
|
||
information and codes its politics into the legal texts of
|
||
the copyleft.
|
||
|
||
The coded copyleft might be the clearest interstice between
|
||
Free Software as a net culture and Free Software as net text.
|
||
Both these aspects already come into play when Free Software
|
||
is being written. Free Software development is typically
|
||
achieved by self-organized volunteer projects whose members
|
||
communicate and collaborate via the Internet. The development
|
||
work consists of:
|
||
|
||
1. Writing program source text
|
||
This involves evaluting of available Free Software source
|
||
code for possible inclusion and adaption. It also involves
|
||
picking--and compiling--the coding tools which themselves
|
||
are Free Software source text.
|
||
To accomodate its own needs, Free Software has developed
|
||
the arguably most sophisticated writing tools for the
|
||
distributed authoring of text. Particularly outstanding is
|
||
the Concurrent Versioning System (CVS) [Ced99] which
|
||
allows authors to take portions of text--regardless whether
|
||
it is written in programming language or in natural
|
||
language--over the Internet, work on them at home, and
|
||
synchronize the changes with the revisions of other
|
||
collaborators any time. CVS-based writing might be the
|
||
technically most radical departure from the
|
||
typewriter-and-mail paradigm in text editing to date.
|
||
2. Writing documentation text
|
||
Documentation is both internal and external to the program
|
||
source text when the latter contains annotations and
|
||
separate reference documentation is being written.
|
||
Free manuals remain a political issue within Free Software
|
||
development. A number of companies base their business
|
||
model on giving away the software under free licenses and
|
||
charging for documentation and support.[11] In the ideal
|
||
case however, a second textual recursion occurs within in
|
||
Free Software which is common in all modern knowledge
|
||
systems since Diderot's and d'Alembert's Encyclopédie:[12]
|
||
The text teaches the reader all steps which were necessary
|
||
for its creation so that all the information it contains
|
||
may be re-applied to itself.
|
||
3. Communication over mailing lists, bugtracking systems and
|
||
IRC
|
||
Free Software development teams almost exclusively
|
||
constitute themselves and communicate over the Internet,
|
||
in mailing lists and on IRC servers. Interpersonal
|
||
communication therefore is a third layer of text which
|
||
regulates the design of both program and documentation
|
||
source text. It operates as a cybernetic feedback loop for
|
||
the development process.
|
||
4. Writing legal text
|
||
Free Software is legally defined. It is software under
|
||
certain licenses, i.e. legal documents. The most common
|
||
types of copyleft include the GNU General Public License
|
||
http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/gpl.html, the BSD License and
|
||
the Perl Artistic License. Whether program source text is
|
||
free solely depends on whether it is copylefted. Legal
|
||
text therefore is the fourth layer of text regulating the
|
||
entire flow of text generated in Free Software projects.
|
||
|
||
Free Software is thus a highly sophisticated system of
|
||
recursive text generation for a public pool of knowledge. It
|
||
is text code created from text code with text-coded tools and
|
||
textual communication over networks. The types of texts
|
||
processed in Free Software are extremely diverse: They include
|
||
executable binaries,[13] text written in programming languages,
|
||
text written in natural languages for documentation, text
|
||
written in natural languages for communicating and steering
|
||
development, and legal texts defining the fair-play rules of
|
||
the recursive textual processing.
|
||
|
||
Objections
|
||
|
||
Both the Free Software engineering and the net artistic camps
|
||
are traditionally skeptical about attempts to read Free
|
||
Software in terms of the net arts. The objections were
|
||
particularly voiced when the Linux kernel was awarded the
|
||
Golden Nica in the "net" category of Ars Electronica 1999.
|
||
At the Wizards of OS conference in the same year, the net
|
||
artist Alexej Shulgin argued that Free Software is
|
||
"functional" while Net.art is "non-functional",
|
||
self-sufficient code.[14]
|
||
|
||
I do not find this point viable from an analytical
|
||
perspective, since the division between "functional" and
|
||
"non-functional" is purely arbitrary and subjective. I/O/D's
|
||
Web Stalker [I/O97], an experimental Web browser and
|
||
well-known Net.art work, is arguably more "functional" than
|
||
the teddy bear desktop emblem xteddy which is contained in all
|
||
major GNU/Linux distributions. Moreover, the dinstiction
|
||
between "functional" Free Software and "non-functional"
|
||
Net.art falls back into late-romanticist notions of the
|
||
absolute artwork versus lower craftsmanship. It also neglects
|
||
that with its multiple self-applications of text, the
|
||
development and use of Free Software is to a large extent its
|
||
own purpose. No other operating system is as open and
|
||
seductive to be used as an end to itself as GNU/Linux.
|
||
|
||
Just as arbitrary as the distinction between "functional"
|
||
and "non-functional" software is that between program source
|
||
code and poetry. To date, all attempts to formally define
|
||
poetry and poetic language have failed. The decision whether a
|
||
text is poetry will always be up to the reader. The notion of
|
||
"program code" versus "poetry" was first put into question
|
||
by the French poet and mathematician François le Lionnais, who
|
||
co-founded the Oulipo group with Raymond Queneau. In 1973, le
|
||
Lionnais released a volume of poetry written in the
|
||
programming language Algol. The practice has been revived in
|
||
the 1990s by people who write poems in the Perl scripting
|
||
language.
|
||
|
||
Conclusion
|
||
|
||
Read as a net literature and a net culture, Free Software is a
|
||
highly sophisticated system of self-applied text and social
|
||
interactions. No other net culture has invented its computer
|
||
code as thoroughly, and no other net culture has acquired a
|
||
similar awareness of the culture and politics of the digital
|
||
text.
|
||
|
||
Much Net.art, net literature and critical discourse about them
|
||
has focused on the aesthetics and politics of desktop user
|
||
interfaces. In its focus on code, Free Software shows that net
|
||
cultures are about more than just what is between people and
|
||
the network. To date, it remains a rare example of electronic
|
||
literature which does not confuse the Internet with web
|
||
browsers.
|
||
|
||
(Acknowledgement: This paper was written using the Free
|
||
Software programs LyX, LaTeX, bibtex, bibtools, pdflatex,
|
||
latex2html, lynx, XEmacs and GNU Ghostscript on an office and
|
||
a home PC running Debian GNU/Linux with reiserfs, XFree86 and
|
||
larswm.)
|
||
|
||
References
|
||
|
||
[BMBB^+99]
|
||
Josephine Bosma, Pauline van Mourik Broekman, Ted
|
||
Byfield, Matthew Fuller, Geert Lovink, Diana McCarthy,
|
||
Pit Schultz, Felix Stalder, McKenzie Wark, and Faith
|
||
Wilding, editors. Readme! Filtered by Nettime.
|
||
Autonomedia, Brooklyn, 1999.
|
||
[Bos98]
|
||
Josephine Bosma. Is It a Commercial? Nooo... Is It
|
||
Spam? ... Nooo - It's Net Art. Mute, 10:73-74, 1998.
|
||
[Ced99]
|
||
Per Cederqvist. Version Management with CVS. Signum
|
||
Support AB, Link oping, 1992-1999.
|
||
http://www.lorai.fr/~molli/cvs-index.html.
|
||
[Cra00]
|
||
Florian Cramer. Warum es zuwenig interessante
|
||
Netzdichtung gibt: Neun Thesen, 2000.
|
||
http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/aufsaetze/netzlit
|
||
eratur/karlsruher_thesen.pdf.
|
||
[Deb]
|
||
Debian Project. The Debian Free Software Guidelines.
|
||
http://www.debian.org/social_contract.html
|
||
[Hof99]
|
||
Jeanette Hofmann. Der Erfolg offener Standards und
|
||
seine Nebenwirkungen. Telepolis, 7 1999.
|
||
http://www.heise.de/tp/deutsch/special/wos/6453/1.html.
|
||
[I/O97]
|
||
I/O/D. I/O/D 4: The Web Stalker, 1997.
|
||
http://bak.spc.org/iod/.
|
||
[Kit85]
|
||
Friedrich Kittler. Aufschreibesysteme 1800 1900. Fink,
|
||
München, 1985.
|
||
[Opea]
|
||
The Open Source Initiative. Frequently asked questions
|
||
about open source. http://www.opensource.org/faq.html.
|
||
[Opeb]
|
||
The Open Source Initiative. Open Source Definition.
|
||
http://www.opensource.org/osd.html.
|
||
_________________________________________________________
|
||
|
||
Footnotes:
|
||
|
||
1 This paper was presented at the conference Interface 5 on the
|
||
panel Minor Media Operations, Hamburg, Warburg-Haus, September
|
||
15, 2000
|
||
|
||
2 To quote from Raymond's Frequently Asked Questions about Open
|
||
Source: "The Open Source Initiative is a marketing program
|
||
for free software. It's a pitch for free software on solid
|
||
pragmatic grounds rather than ideological tub-thumping. The
|
||
winning substance has not changed, the losing attitude and
|
||
symbolism have." [Opea]
|
||
|
||
3 Both the Debian Free Software Guidelines and the Open Source
|
||
Definition were originally drafted by Bruce Perens, a Free
|
||
Software developer and editor of the website technocrat.net
|
||
http://www.technocrat.net.
|
||
|
||
4 I.e. binary-only software which can be downloaded freely and
|
||
used without licenses fees (Freeware) or by paying
|
||
comparatively small licenses fees (Shareware).
|
||
|
||
5 A prominent example is the XEmacs http://www.xemacs.orgtext
|
||
editor which "forked" its codebase from GNU Emacs
|
||
http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/emacs.htm. The same would be
|
||
impossible in open standards development. The social dynamics
|
||
and institutional control of open standards development is
|
||
excellently described in Jeanette Hofmanns (German) essay Der
|
||
Erfolg offener Standards und seine Nebenwirkungen [Hof99].
|
||
|
||
6 There is an ongoing debate in Free Software culture whether
|
||
operating systems based on the Linux kernel should be called
|
||
"Linux" or rather "GNU/Linux". In order to be functional
|
||
at all, a "Linux" setup relies upon the GNU C Compiler (gcc)
|
||
to translate all program sourcecode into machine-executable
|
||
binary software, the GNU C Library (glibc) as the interface
|
||
between the Linux kernel and userspace applications, and the
|
||
GNU tools for the basic user commands. Although it is possible
|
||
to replace at least the GNU tools and the glibc with non-GNU
|
||
workalikes, all common "Linux" distributions use the Linux +
|
||
GNU software setup. I will therefore stick with the name
|
||
"GNU/Linux" where I refer not only to the kernel, but to the
|
||
whole operating system.
|
||
|
||
7 Such as Macromedia's Shockwave and Flash in "Net.art",
|
||
Opcode's MAX in electronic music and Eastgate's Storyspace in
|
||
hypertext fictions.
|
||
|
||
8 The artist group 0100101110101101.ORG
|
||
http://www.0100101110101101.org put this issue up front when
|
||
it mirrored and partially modified well-known Net.art web
|
||
sites on its own web site.
|
||
|
||
9 Early artistic computer networks like the Thing BBS
|
||
http://www.thing.net charged their subscribers (at least in
|
||
Berlin) before they migrated into the Internet.
|
||
|
||
10 How net literature--"hyperfiction" and "new media
|
||
poetry"--relates to poetic practices rooted in programmer's
|
||
cultures is discussed in more detail in my (German) paper
|
||
[Cra00].
|
||
|
||
11 Among those companies are O'Reilly publishers, Sendmail
|
||
Inc., VA Linux, Scriptics, Helix Code and Eazel. All of them
|
||
are involved in the development or documentation of critical
|
||
components of GNU/Linux operating systems.
|
||
|
||
12 I thank Wau Holland for pointing this out to me in a
|
||
prepatory meeting for the first Wizards of OS conference.
|
||
|
||
13 Which can be read as "text" if text is linguistically and
|
||
semiotically defined as a finite number of discrete signs
|
||
chosen from a finite set of signs. In computing, "text" is
|
||
rather colloquially understood as code from natural-language
|
||
alphabets as opposed to binary code. Being a philologist, I
|
||
refer to the prior concept of "text".
|
||
|
||
14 According to [Bos98], the label "Net.art" was coined in 1996
|
||
by the net artist Vuk Cosic. It has been associated with a
|
||
particular generation of net artists since (involving, among
|
||
others, Cosic himself, Heath Bunting, Olia Lialina, Alexej
|
||
Shulgin, jodi and I/O/D).
|
||
c/o Freie Universität Berlin, Seminar für Allgemeine und
|
||
Vergleichende Literaturwissenschaft, Hüttenweg 9, 14195 Berlin
|
||
--
|
||
Florian Cramer, PGP public key ID 6440BA05
|
||
<http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~cantsin/></content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>9.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> Free Software as Collaborative Tex</subject>
|
||
<from>Ronda Hauben</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Wed, 20 Sep 2000 12:56:05 -0400 (EDT)</date>
|
||
<content>Florian Cramer <paragram {AT} gmx.net> wrote:
|
||
|
||
> Free Software History
|
||
|
||
Good to see an effort to look at the history of the Internet and the
|
||
connection with Free Software.
|
||
|
||
> It is not accidental that history of Free Software runs
|
||
> parallel to the history of the Internet. The Internet is built
|
||
> on Unix networking technology. Unix used to be free for
|
||
> academic institutions in the 1970s, and it has been either the
|
||
|
||
Actually Unix wasn't free in its earliest days, when John Lion in
|
||
Australia and Robert Fabry wrote and asked for the sources from AT&T. It
|
||
was available at a "nominal fee". It was a token payment, I think $110
|
||
Australian ($150 US).
|
||
|
||
That was in the 1974 period.
|
||
|
||
I don't know what the situation when the Australians or the folks sending
|
||
their tapes or Berkleley began sending out the BDS tapes.
|
||
|
||
(There is some discussion of all this in chapter 9 of Netizens.
|
||
http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook)
|
||
|
||
> base or model of the common Free Software operating systems
|
||
> BSD and GNU/Linux.
|
||
|
||
> Any ordinary E-Mail message still reveals the affinity of the
|
||
> Internet and Unix technology: E-Mail itself is nothing but the
|
||
> Unix mail command. An E-Mail address of the form xy {AT} z.com is
|
||
> made up of what's historically a user name on a multiuser Unix
|
||
> system and, following the " {AT} ", the system's host name. This
|
||
> host name is resolved via the free Unix software bind
|
||
> according to the Internet domain name system (DNS); DNS itself
|
||
> is nothing but a networked extension of the Unix system file
|
||
> /etc/hosts. Since the Internet has marginalized or even
|
||
> replaced proprietary computer networks like IBM's EARN/Bitnet,
|
||
> Compuserve, the German Btx and the French Minitel, Unix
|
||
> networking technology is standard on all computing platforms.
|
||
|
||
Actually the Unix networking character was the bang symbol ! and an
|
||
address might look something like utzoo!utcsrgv!peterr That was the path
|
||
for the address on uucp.
|
||
|
||
The agreement to use " {AT} " which was the Internet meeting came at a meeting
|
||
in I thought the 1980's where people like Mark Horton and Jon Postel and
|
||
others were there to figure out a common addressing mechanism.
|
||
|
||
So the " {AT} " doesn't come historically from the UNIX side of all this
|
||
|
||
Bernard Lang has an interesting article in the Feb 2000 issue of La
|
||
Recherche which describes in a bit of a different way the connection
|
||
between early Unix and the ARPANET, and he refers
|
||
|
||
> In the 1970, Unix particularly attracted student hacker
|
||
> communities at the MIT and at the University of California at
|
||
> Berkeley. The concepts of open, decentralized computer
|
||
> networks and free Unix-like operating systems originated in
|
||
> the computer science labs of these institutions. By
|
||
> the early 1990s, the "hacker" software written there had
|
||
> evolved into
|
||
|
||
Actually at MIT it was the AI labs and they used the pdp 10 machines --
|
||
one was the ITS (Incompatible Time Sharing).
|
||
|
||
I didn't think these were UNIX machines at this period.
|
||
|
||
Actually UNIX was only created at Bell Labs in 1969-1970's and announced
|
||
in 1974. Chapter 9 in Netizens gives this background.
|
||
|
||
(...)
|
||
|
||
Also it is interesting to see your references to "open architecture".
|
||
|
||
I recently wrote something for an encyclopedia on computers and computer
|
||
history about open architecture and found very little has been written
|
||
about it even though it is indeed the basis for the Internet's
|
||
architecture.
|
||
|
||
> Open technology has been a key factor for the acceptance of
|
||
> computers and networking: The open architecture of the IBM
|
||
> Personal Computer made computers cheap and popular since the
|
||
> 1980s, and with the open architecture of the Internet,
|
||
> networking became popular in the early 1990s.
|
||
|
||
I thoguht the bbs culture also supported the spread of a free software in
|
||
the 1980s.
|
||
|
||
Perhaps also looking at the ARPANET tradition of the free spread of
|
||
software would be of interest. And on early Usenet there were newsgroups
|
||
dedicated to spreading software.
|
||
|
||
Usenet was an early means of not only spreading Unix software but also
|
||
dicussion about how to deal with the bugs. Chapter 10 in Netizens
|
||
describes this evolution.
|
||
|
||
That's all I have time to comment on now. Good to see the effort to take
|
||
on such topics, and it is important to put them in their historical
|
||
context as that gives an idea of what is being built on and hence helps
|
||
provide a sense of direction forward and of the progress being made.
|
||
|
||
Cheers
|
||
|
||
Ronda
|
||
ronda {AT} panix.com
|
||
http://www.ais.org/~ronda/
|
||
http://www.columbia.edu/~hauben/netbook/</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>9.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> Free Software as Collaborative Tex</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@bbs.thing.net</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 21 Sep 2000 13:24:25 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>Am Wed, 20.Sep.2000 um 12:56:05 -0400 schrieb Ronda Hauben:
|
||
|
||
> Good to see an effort to look at the history of the Internet and
|
||
> the connection with Free Software.
|
||
|
||
And thank you very much for your valuable corrections! I will apply your
|
||
bugfixes ASAP.
|
||
|
||
> I thoguht the bbs culture also supported the spread of a free software
|
||
> in the 1980s.
|
||
|
||
The BBS culture I know from here (Germany) was rather commercial and
|
||
inclined towards Warez. Most BBSs were run against subscription fees and
|
||
frequently charged additional fees for their download areas. The software
|
||
available on them were DOS, Amiga or Atari Shareware/Freeware binaries.
|
||
Still in the early 1990s (i.e. between 1990 and 1993), the GNU, BSD
|
||
&c. software was available in the academic computer networks
|
||
(EARN/Bitnet w/ Internet gateway at the university where I first went
|
||
online).
|
||
|
||
Florian</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>10.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject><nettime> the ?Cathedral? and the ?Bazaar??</subject>
|
||
<from>Holford-Lovell, Donna</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 1 Feb 2009 13:46:55 -0000</date>
|
||
<content>Dear All
|
||
|
||
It would be great to get you opinion on the following:
|
||
|
||
I am looking at open source and implementing this metaphor to a curatorial
|
||
practice. What effect would this have on exhibiting artists? Would the
|
||
audience benefit?
|
||
|
||
Also anyone with an interest in Eric S. Raymond?s free software development
|
||
model. I would like to know the following:
|
||
|
||
1. What are your personal views about the ?Cathedral? and the ?Bazaar??
|
||
|
||
2. If you subscribe to one of these models how much of it applies to the
|
||
whole of your life?
|
||
|
||
3. Do you jump from one to another to suit your needs?
|
||
|
||
4. Besides in a software engineering world, can the Cathedral and the
|
||
Bazaar be seen any where else? or could it be applied to something else?
|
||
|
||
I believe we need to get art out of its Cathedral ? could this metaphor
|
||
work?
|
||
|
||
Many thanks
|
||
Donna
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
|
||
The University of Abertay Dundee is a charity registered in Scotland, No:SC016040</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>10.1</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> the ?Cathedral? and the ?Bazaar??</subject>
|
||
<from>Florian Cramer</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sat, 7 Feb 2009 17:17:42 +0100</date>
|
||
<content>Hello Donna,
|
||
|
||
> I am looking at open source and implementing this metaphor to a curatorial
|
||
> practice. What effect would this have on exhibiting artists? Would the
|
||
> audience benefit?
|
||
|
||
There already is a rich tradition of applying Open Source/free software
|
||
principles to art; "curatorship" seems a bit problematic as a term
|
||
(which it is not only in this context), self-organization may be more
|
||
appropriate. Examples can be found in the hack meetings which,
|
||
particularly in Italy, were hybrids of activist and artistic events, and
|
||
many related Internet art projects. But actually, the tradition is older
|
||
than even the terms "Open Source" and "free software". Since Ray
|
||
Johnson's New York Correspondance School in the 1960s, the Mail Art
|
||
network had its own codified system of decentralized, international,
|
||
open participation art exhibitions, events and publications, with
|
||
the festivals and non-juried exhibitions of older avant-garde movements
|
||
forming yet another historical pretext.
|
||
|
||
> Also anyone with an interest in Eric S. Raymond?s free software development
|
||
> model.
|
||
|
||
He pitched it "Open Source" as a more business-friendly term, against
|
||
the older, more activist term "free software".
|
||
|
||
> I would like to know the following:
|
||
>
|
||
> 1. What are your personal views about the ?Cathedral? and the ?Bazaar??
|
||
|
||
Again, a lot has already been written about this (for example, in "First
|
||
Monday" shortly after the Raymond's text appeared). Retrospectively, I
|
||
think there have been many confusions and urban myths about this essay.
|
||
Like Roland Barthes' "The Death of Author", it is a text that,
|
||
polemically speaking, nobody seems to have read yet everybody has an
|
||
opinion about. Among those urban myths are:
|
||
|
||
- that Raymond pitches an Open Source "bazaar" model against a
|
||
proprietary Microsoft-ish "cathedral" model of software development.
|
||
But in fact, it is about the decentralized development of Linux, the
|
||
operating system kernel supervised by Linus Torvalds [and not what
|
||
is commonly referred to as the whole Linux operating system], versus
|
||
the classical small, closed committee style of development that had
|
||
been characteristic for GNU software, the free BSDs and the X Window
|
||
System. On top of that, the text is not even literally about Open
|
||
Source because the term did not yet exist when it was first published.
|
||
|
||
- Looking back at the above point more than ten years later, it is
|
||
probably fair to say that a clear-cut division of "bazaar"- and
|
||
"cathedral"-style development methods no longer exists in Free
|
||
Software development. The development of the Linux kernel has become
|
||
more hierarchical, with several layers of developer hierarchies that
|
||
a patch needs to go through in order to be accepted into the main line
|
||
kernel, while on the other hand the development culture of GNU and BSD
|
||
software has adapted itself better towards the Internet than in the
|
||
1990s. (The now-standard use of networked version control systems like
|
||
Subversion and git is a clear empirical indicator.)
|
||
|
||
- While not using the term "Open Source" in its initial version, the essay
|
||
fully preempts the later Open Source-vs.-Free Software controversy by
|
||
discussing open, distributed development processes as technically
|
||
superior to closed processes. [There are striking similarities to
|
||
Bertalanffy's earlier General Systems Theory with its claim that
|
||
in nature and society, only open systems survive while closed ones die
|
||
of entropy, and of course to Popper's theory of the open society as
|
||
the counter-model to societies founded on philosophical idealism.]
|
||
|
||
I remember an article from the German IT journal iX that, ten years
|
||
after the manifesto, checked those claims and soundly disputed their
|
||
black-and-white rhetoric. For example, Open Source and distributed
|
||
development are clearly not a 100% cure against software bugs and
|
||
security leaks (as opposed to Raymond's statement that "given enough
|
||
eyes, all bugs are shallow). There have been terrible bugs and
|
||
security nightmares - such as the recent Debian OpenSSL bug - even
|
||
in high profile FLOSS software projects. And the dialectics is also
|
||
true: If there are not enough eyes, bugs can be annoying, for example
|
||
in FLOSS multimedia authoring software from Cinelerra to PD that
|
||
thrive on very small and often amateur programmer communities (as
|
||
opposed to the OS kernels, file systems, network stacks, database
|
||
servers etc.).
|
||
|
||
It is probably fair to put Raymond's essay into the context of other
|
||
optimistic late-1990s Internet theories of "crowd wisdom", "smart
|
||
mobs" etc., that promote a similar cybernetic vision of a
|
||
self-organizing critical mass that is the magic solution to all
|
||
problems. Linux and, more recently, Wikipedia show that these theories
|
||
are not completely off and that networked collaboration can amount
|
||
to critical mass. But none of these projects are without their own
|
||
issues (such as conservatism: Linux reimplemented Unix
|
||
instead of the arguably more advanced and interesting Plan9 or Lisp
|
||
Machine kernel architectures because Unix kernel architecture is
|
||
the textbook knowledge of every computer science student; Wikipedia
|
||
nowadays insists, in its angst-ridden compliance to culturally
|
||
conservative Wikipedia-bashing, on print publication references for
|
||
everything that is claimed in a Wikipedia article), and "open
|
||
collaboration" is not a magic bullet.
|
||
|
||
Mail Art may again serve as a good example, because it was so obsessed
|
||
with egalitarianism that participation implied to never reject other
|
||
people's project contributions although the phenomenon of "junk mail"
|
||
was common and deplored even in the 1970s and 80s.
|
||
|
||
|
||
It should be noted, in case you're not familiar yet with Raymond's ultra
|
||
right-wing libertarian political background, that he chose metaphors of
|
||
the "bazaar" versus the "cathedral" quite on purpose - referring to a
|
||
free market model versus regulated production.
|
||
|
||
> I believe we need to get art out of its Cathedral ?
|
||
|
||
It is certainly true that art, inasmuch we speak of the contemporary
|
||
(visual) art system, is still feudalist in its structure. It is the only
|
||
of the modern arts whose economy is firmly based on the notion of one
|
||
material fetish object, with reproduction (unlike in books, music
|
||
records, films, software) being merely a second-rate, plebeian
|
||
illustration of the "original". Its sponsors are the modern successors
|
||
to the old feudal authorities; back then, the church and the courts,
|
||
nowadays rich people as the new aristocrats and, through its grants and
|
||
subsidies, the state as the authority that has replaced the church.
|
||
|
||
-F
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
blog: http://en.pleintekst.nl
|
||
homepage: http://cramer.pleintekst.nl:70
|
||
gopher://cramer.pleintekst.nl</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>10.2</nbr>
|
||
<subject>Re: <nettime> the ?Cathedral? and the ?Bazaar??</subject>
|
||
<from>John Young</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Sun, 08 Feb 2009 11:33:05 -0500</date>
|
||
<content>It should be noted that "open source" has been appropriated by
|
||
the spy-media-education industry as an asymmetrical method
|
||
for taking from open sources but not giving back, instead
|
||
classifying putting within password-gated campuses the open
|
||
source material in order to obscure that the filchers have a
|
||
pecuniary interest in freely cultivated goodies.
|
||
|
||
So say the SMEs and their beneficiary contractors in their openly
|
||
proclaimed suck-you fuck-you policy to advertise for adjunct-academic
|
||
and edu-start-ups to participate in (get bribe money for) in national
|
||
security (spit) national patriomny (spit) endeavors, hand out a few
|
||
contracts to the willingly witting desperately-seeking down but not
|
||
out bazaarists, and shut-out the disfavored with cathredral-like
|
||
secrecy (tenure) orders, learning from the churches and banks
|
||
to profess unction for believers and tithers while gathering wealth
|
||
for the belly laughers of TARP for the top.
|
||
|
||
Bill Gates himself did that, preached that, as did Steve Jobs.
|
||
It is the golden egg luring millions to the openly promise
|
||
medals of freedom from merciless religion of higher pecking order
|
||
education then reap the profits when the bloodsucked students
|
||
are dunned for ursurous loan-repayments into the skyhigh-paid
|
||
admins' baskets. Consider Wikipedia and a host of like openers
|
||
savaging of contributed labor, abetted by herds of martinets
|
||
enforcing just what can be reputably (spit) published.
|
||
|
||
Net non-profits (spit) are no different than the others in bait and
|
||
switch via oh so weary rules of engagement for the unruly. Extreme
|
||
unctuousity is bedevilment with strapped-on angel wings.
|
||
|
||
Now, for free my gang offers surefire immortality and depthless
|
||
wisdom, PayPal us $100 for the top secret URL at golden-egg.
|
||
domain. Don't believe anything else, motley fool.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
<mail>
|
||
<nbr>11.0</nbr>
|
||
<subject><nettime> Open letter to the Free Software Movement</subject>
|
||
<from>Jaromil</from>
|
||
<to>nettime-l@kein.org</to>
|
||
<date>Thu, 26 Sep 2019 17:02:33 +0200</date>
|
||
<content>This is an open letter to all the people who, in their good faith, are
|
||
concerned about the recent events which have shaken the long-standing
|
||
leadership of the Free Software Movement and the GNU project.
|
||
|
||
Online:
|
||
https://www.dyne.org/open-letter-to-the-free-software-movement/
|
||
|
||
RT: https://twitter.com/DyneOrg/status/1177233578771591168
|
||
|
||
Context:
|
||
https://www.wired.com/story/richard-stallmans-exit-heralds-a-new-era-in-tech/
|
||
|
||
Dear hackers, first and foremost let us say that, as a collective and
|
||
in the true uncompromising spirit of the teachings of Free/Libre
|
||
Software/Society, we are capable of doing much better than what has
|
||
just happened.
|
||
|
||
Many of us work everyday towards ensuring that everyone, regardless of
|
||
their ethniticy, religion, gender, or neurotypicality, can
|
||
participate, learn and share in our communities. We do not claim we
|
||
are perfect, we sometimes make mistakes, some of them guided by
|
||
systemic patterns and structures of power still entangling us, and
|
||
some of them just due to our human nature . But we claim our right to
|
||
learn every day how to become better at including all contributions
|
||
and opinions, and this implies the ability of making mistakes without
|
||
being destroyed by them.
|
||
|
||
In the past years it has become clear that our movement and our ethos
|
||
has transformed the world as we know it, with all the courage and all
|
||
the mistakes considered; some of us rose to fame, while some others
|
||
wore masks, both as a message and as a protection from the regime of
|
||
global espionage. In any case, many of us have sacrificed a great
|
||
deal of comfort in life to change what needed to be changed.
|
||
|
||
Let us not be mistaken about the cause that brought us here and let us
|
||
not forget where the injustice comes from.
|
||
|
||
Let us not forget then what we, the people, have successfully built so
|
||
far, resisting to the incredible pressure that corporate corruption
|
||
and military regimes have put on us. Let us not forget that the battle
|
||
is still raging and we are losing sight and positioning.
|
||
|
||
Open Source, as an economic model based on knowledge acquisition by
|
||
corporate powers, is part of the problem.
|
||
|
||
Free/Libre Software, as an uncompromising philosophy and ethics
|
||
focused on knowledge sharing and participation, is an important part
|
||
of the solution.
|
||
|
||
The era of benevolent dictators for life in Free software projects is
|
||
probably coming to an end. And we shall be relieved as well as
|
||
empowered by that: it is now our turn to stand strong, united as a
|
||
movement, to defend our values without compromise and to improve the
|
||
quality of our interactions. It is now our turn to look beyond
|
||
personal responsibilities, to acknowledge that if a context is
|
||
poisoned by bullying, machism and sexist behavior, it is not just the
|
||
fault of a single person, but of all those who tolerate and support
|
||
those conducts. We have now the opportunity to point to the problem
|
||
and to solve it and this will improve our movement, the Free Software
|
||
movement.
|
||
|
||
What we really don't need to do is to ignore, denigrate or disown the
|
||
values of the Free Software movement.
|
||
|
||
We need to honour the pride of the people of India who had the courage
|
||
to stand up against the "free basic" campaign. We need to support the
|
||
courage of all those defending network neutrality from attacks capable
|
||
of putting under control the political integrity of entire continents.
|
||
We need to facilitate the synergy between community networks in Oaxaca
|
||
enabled by software written by activists all around the World. We
|
||
need to empower the self-determination of entire populations in an age
|
||
in which computing is as pervasive as our own social relationships.
|
||
|
||
We need to reclaim our freedom from an ever-watching system of control
|
||
and prediction that judges us from the algorithmic projection of our
|
||
own intentions. We need to defend our freedom to be able to denounce
|
||
all of this and speak freely by means that connect us, all over the
|
||
world, without borders, intermediaries and censorship.
|
||
|
||
We need to be conscious of where we are standing in this fight.
|
||
|
||
As a trans-national movement, united by solidarity, awareness and
|
||
ethics, we shall not negotiate the motivations we fight for.
|
||
|
||
We would not publish this letter if we would not think it was
|
||
extremely urgent to do so. The Free Software movement is losing
|
||
ground, grip and resources, and the scarce resources available to the
|
||
movement are not even shared equally. Global meetings that are vital
|
||
to our legacy and development are at risk of being shut down or
|
||
assimilated by corporate corruption: the Free Society Conference and
|
||
Nordic Summit (FSCONS) will not take place this year, after many
|
||
iterations that have hosted outstanding standards of diversity. The
|
||
biggest community-based event for free software developers in the
|
||
world, FOSDEM, is at risk of violating many of its foundational
|
||
principles by welcoming corporate sponsors, who contribute to the
|
||
dilution of meaning and ethical urgency of Free Software by supporting
|
||
corporate Openwashing campaigns.
|
||
|
||
And this is just a small account from Europe. We know that, wherever
|
||
you are in the world, if you have been in this movement, you are
|
||
probably struggling as well. Believe us now when we say that it will
|
||
not help to burn the Man, to obliterate the memory of our cause, to
|
||
expunge someone's contributions to it by means of an angry mob; that
|
||
would be an act of harassment we cannot be able to accept.
|
||
|
||
We will start improving as a movement when we show the highest notion
|
||
of what a movement can be: capable of reflection, understanding and
|
||
healing its wounds, ready to evolve and progress while maintaining the
|
||
integrity of its aims.
|
||
|
||
We are not the problem, we are part of the solution.
|
||
|
||
The Free World needs the Free Software movement.</content>
|
||
</mail>
|
||
</mails>
|
||
</chapter> |