On Thu Apr 15, 2021 at 9:51 PM BST, Ian Lance Taylor via Gcc wrote: > On Thu, Apr 15, 2021 at 1:26 PM Chris Punches via Gcc <gcc@gcc.gnu.org> > wrote: > > > > Every single proponent of this argument that I have seen so far is > > employed by one of the same 5 companies and "really isn't doing it on > > behalf of my company I swear". > > > > Why is it almost exclusively that specific crowd saying it here, then? > > For better or for worse, since the early '90s the majority of people > who do serious work on GCC have been hired by companies that want to > do serious work on GCC. After all, it's a win-win: the company gets > work done, the GCC programmer gets well paid. The effect is that most > of the major GCC contributors work for a relatively small number of > companies. There are of course many exceptions, but that is the > general rule. > > Ian
In my view, if people employed by a small number of American companies succeed in disassociating GCC from GNU/FSF, which is representative of the free software grassroots community, this is not a win-win. This is powerful US corporations removing something our community created from our community's oversight and moving it into a space where it's governed by representatives of Silicon Valley rather than a membership-based non profit. Whilst everyone's contributions to the software should be welcomed, I don't think you'll find many FSF members celebrating the impact of paid Corporate engineers on GCC if this sorry state of affairs comes to be. >>= %frosku = { os => 'gnu+linux', editor => 'emacs', coffee => 1 } =<<