Hi,

On 2024-06-20 08:36, MSavoritias wrote:
On Wed, 19 Jun 2024 17:46:08 +0200
Ekaitz Zarraga <eka...@elenq.tech> wrote:

On 2024-06-19 12:25, raingl...@riseup.net wrote:
On 2024-06-19 11:54, Efraim Flashner wrote:
On Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 12:13:38PM +0300, MSavoritias wrote:
...
One of our packages, dbxfs, left Github a while ago and continued
development on a different forge. They adjusted their README to
disallow hosting of their code on Github. Based on this
restriction we have labeled later versions of the software as
non-free and have not updated the package. IMO saying that source
code cannot be uploaded to SWH would fall into the same category.

No wonder more and more people are growing dissatisfied with the
free software movement.

Hey Ekaitz,

Please remember two things in the context of all of this:
1. Guix is not a software entity but it is made of people that want a
safer, collaborative space to create things. These things may be code,
a blog post or anything else as part of guix. Even a social network
account. I am saying this because you only talked about Free Software
in your message and not about people or different contexts.
And we are talking about people here. Not code. Code is not alive.

I was specifically talking about the Free Software issue raised by Efraim and the message by Raingloom. And exactly what you point out is what I wanted separate as you very well did. Now we are talking about the people and about how things affect people, and that's a different matter I'm going to tackle below.

2. You seem to imply that Free Software or code is apolitical. (in the
sense of social or state politics not) Which it is not. Nothing is.
For example Free Software is explicitly pro-capitalist and
pro-Google/big companies. I am not saying I disagree, but its good
to keep in mind that politics exist and do exist always. And in the case

I'm not one of those people that think everything is politics but that's not a debate I want to open. Free Software can be understood from many ways. I don't think it's pro-capitalist, but pro-freedom, but that freedom affects the capitalists too, and it's a *value* they have. But freedom is also an anarchist value, and it can be an anti-capitalist value too it becomes more politic when you put more things around it. The issue I was trying to point is Free Software attracts many people from many different backgrounds and politics, and trying to push for one side defeats its purpose: making people stay together because they have some shared value.

There are many valid reasons why someone might criticize the Free
Software movement and people behind it, but making free software only
has 4 simple rules. If you don't comply with them you are not free
software anymore. It's as simple as that, and that simple it should
be.

Free Software gives me the FREEDOM to print the code, make a roll
with it and shove it up my ass if I want to (and even distribute my
modified copies for other people to do so). The same freedom I have
to upload it to github. If you prevent me from doing one or the other
you are restricting my freedom and that's defeating the purpose of
free software and we cannot consider your code free software anymore.
The line is clear, and trying to pretend to be free software while
restricting people's freedoms (regardless of what they are) is absurd.

This is missing the context that GPL does indeed restrict people's
freedom to license code as the see fit. Because it was written to
further the political goals of FSF. It is on purpose. So we are already
restricting the freedom of people to do what they want on purpose.

It does restrict your freedom but only if your goal is restrict other people's software freedom. I'd say the argument here was that GPL provides more absolute freedom in the current world than other licenses but I don't think the GPL was a very easy decision to make for the radical freedom fighters. That's why some people don't like it.

And lets not forget
"your freedom ends where the other persons freedom begins"
and consent of course in the issue at hand.

Yes, but I don't think this is a matter Free Software needs to deal with. And my original message was around that.

Now, we should do something as a set of people that collaboratively work in a project. Probably not under the Free Software label, because what free software is is already pretty clear and well defined, but as something else, may that be Guix users and contributors, if we wish.


The Free Software movement can be labeled (and is often labeled) as a
political movement but I'd say it's more of an ethical movement. It's
a way to share *values* and the value we share here is freedom. We
might or might not share other values, politics, religion or
anything, but as long as we put the freedom in the first place we
should agree that free software is better than any other software
model we have.

There are bad actors in the world (say thieves, killers or... GitHub
and AI), and we can discuss about how we should deal with them but I
don't think the answer is putting our *values* aside but embrace them
harder (one value, freedom, in our case).

Definetily agree. The solution is not to embrace propietary software or
restrict software. Its to write down some common social rules that are
rooted in consent.

If people is not happy with the Free Software movement because it
puts the freedom first, I can only understand it as people being mad
about Free Software because it's about software.

For other values, we can start other initiatives I may or may not
agree more with, but if the value is freedom (in software), I don't
think there's any better way to push for it. But trying to disguise
other things inside of the Free Software is kind of dishonest.

Fair. I mean we already have CoC and channel descriptions. Idk if we
have event guidelines/CoC yet but we should.

I don't know, maybe I'm just a little bit tired.

No worries. I think it was very well said.

MSavoritias

That was just for clarifying my point wasn't against this discussion but to say that the decision Efraim took on dbxfs is not only correct but the only possible decision, and that it should be.

Now in Guix, I don't feel comfortable with the fact we are helping people use AI that doesn't respect the licenses of our work to be trained. I'm sick of it.

If they respected the licenses, I'd be ok with it. Since I accepted Free Software's social contract I'm open for anyone to use my code with any purpose (unless they don't respect people's freedom later).

Also, even if we don't do anything about it, Guix's codebase is public, so they could do it anyway, regardless of SWH, so there's not much we can do about that.

What we *can* do is raise our concerns to SWH, motivating them to be more strict with their collaboration with companies or with the terms of their collaboration. It's probably better that they are in our side in this battle than if we are alone. I think they are sensible to this issue so it shouldn't be hard to have a proper conversation with them and see if we can understand better what they do, how, in which terms and so on.

Maybe it's better that these AI companies reach our code through SWH with a well-written contract than letting them steal it from the internet without having them to sign anything.

I'm kind of just guessing there, but we are probably stronger that way.
Also, if we could make other distros to take part on this it would be a great way to be stronger.

In any case, I think SWH are more than sensible to this issue and I think their connections might be helpful to not only restrict this HugginFace from doing shady things but to start pushing for regulation for every AI company that uses our sweat for their purposes.

So, to come back to my original point: It's not the free software that needs to change. It's the regulation of AI companies that should, and the responsibility we demand from them. Legally and morally, they should be accountable of what they do, and that's the direction I'd like to approach this. Maybe it's not easy to change the regulation of the whole world, but we can try to push for it in Europe (we pioneered some related regulations before) first.

In summary, I don't think this is just a SWH is bad/good or Free Software is bad/good issue.

Best,
Ekaitz

PS: If there's action I'm open and ready for it, but I won't like this discussion to become an exercise of ethical bragging with no goals.



Reply via email to