I agree with Rick that Free Software organizations, and that includes OSI, should make use of entirely free software run for them by a non-profit that contributes its modifications back to the projects. But I don't know who that would be today. Should we be putting together crowdfunding to create such a thing? I would certainly pay for such a service for my company and personal use.
Thanks Bruce On Tue, Jun 4, 2019, 17:18 Rick Moen <r...@linuxmafia.com> wrote: > Quoting Luis Villa (l...@lu.is): > > > People who have asked questions of the list have certainly been told > that, > > both explicitly and by implication ("well, it isn't written down anywhere > > else, so...") Usually politely, but polite terrible news is still > terrible > > news. > > That's regrettable and it would certainly be better to be able to point > to a summary in some suitable non-mailing-list ticket. As with the SVLUG > example, there is a tendency to rely on an existing tool for unsuitable > uses, if that's what is on hand, and I imagine people get lazy and don't > want to spend time getting and providing the right per-message > Pipermail archive URL. > > Well, at least this was not an OSI statement or (I gather) from an OSI > Board member, which was the impression I got from your initial footnote. > > > https://github.com/OpenSourceOrg/ has existed, and been relied on, for > some > > time. And that's purely proprietary. > > Although past regrettable decisions are, in my opinion, best not used to > justify future ones, I have the pleasure today of bringing good news: > > The proprietary GitHub service and the theoretically open source & > self-hostable but extremely ponderous and overengineered GitLab codebase > have, for some years, had excellent, modestly scoped, open source > alternative codebases, fully suitable for self-hosting and devoid of > bloat. > In particular, _Gitea_ is excellent and increasingly in use by Linux > distributions for their own code repositories, in managing their software > development teams. (If you want an example: Devuan Project. There are > others.) > > https://gitea.io/ > > So, today's the day OSI can start migrating that repo off proprietary > software, and onto something less horribly overfeatured than is > Microsoft's GitHub service, to boot, on any OSI static IP. > (Administrative burden, you say? But this isn't corporate bloatware, so > please check the Gitea docs, and you'll see there's rather little.) > > > > More generally, SaaS is a massive channel for open source these days, and > > the org has very limited organizational bandwidth. It would seem odd to > > insist on both avoiding one of (the?) predominant open source > distribution > > model, and imposing overhead on the org. > > Is is not the least bit odd to model the suitability of open source to > be in control of one's computing infrastructure -- the way businesses > control business risk by deploying autonomous open source -- by doing so. > (Example: A year from now, Civilized Discourse Construction Kit, Inc. > advises that it's shutting down its free hosting. Is OSI able and > prepared to migrate everything? To where? Uh-oh. Yes, theoretically > the Discourse Web-forum software is open source hence migratable, but > in practice it's about as vendor-locked-in as is GitLab data.) > > On the other hand, it's entirely impossible to compete with the zero > administrative overhead of outsourcing to third-party hosted software, > so if that's the criterion OSI wants to apply, then outsourcing will > automatically win, every time.
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