Stefano Maffulli wrote:

Various OSI leaders have indicated that they agree that proprietary software is 
harmful over the years, and, as such I had thought there had already been a 
position change by OSI from being neutral about proprietary software toward a 
pro-software-rights position that sees proprietary software as fundamentally 
harmful to society.

 

Who voted? When?

 

I am strongly in favor of open source software. I do not, however, share your 
belief that proprietary software is “fundamentally harmful to society.” When 
was that position fully discussed and argued? Are there exceptions for 
simultaneous open source and proprietary versions? Are there exceptions for 
software licensed under dangerous “open source” terms that affect 
“accompanying” proprietary software? Must consumers avoid all proprietary 
software on their computers no matter its value? 

 

Or is freedom still a choice?

 

/Larry Rosen

 

BCC:

 

Lawrence Rosen

707-478-8932

3001 King Ranch Rd., Ukiah, CA 95482

 <mailto:lro...@rosenlaw.com> lro...@rosenlaw.com

 

From: License-discuss <license-discuss-boun...@lists.opensource.org> On Behalf 
Of Stefano Maffulli
Sent: Monday, October 30, 2023 2:57 PM
To: license-discuss@lists.opensource.org
Subject: Re: [License-discuss] OSI's purely-neutral policy position on 
production of proprietary software (was Re: Query on "delayed open source" 
licensing)

 

On Sun, Oct 29, 2023 at 7:22 PM Bradley M. Kuhn <bk...@ebb.org 
<mailto:bk...@ebb.org> > wrote:

Russ, thanks for clarifying this point as one of OSI's leaders.

 

This statement needs a clarification: Russ is a *thought* leader of the Open 
Source *movement*. While I find his opinions valuable and appreciated, as well 
as his knowledge of history, he's not involved in leading OSI, the organization.

 

It's worth reminding that the current leadership of the Open Source Initiative 
(OSI) is made of an Executive Director (me) and the board, which is mostly made 
of people elected by the community of members (individuals and other non 
profits): We lead the organization, convening conversations within a movement 
with a wide variety of valuable thinkers.

 

Various OSI leaders have indicated that they agree that proprietary software
is harmful over the years, and, as such I had thought there had already been
a position change by OSI from being neutral about proprietary software
toward a pro-software-rights position that sees proprietary software as 

fundamentally harmful to society.

 

We agree that it is harmful to society, and that's one of the reasons why OSI 
joined the Digital Public Goods Alliance, for example. 

 

Bradley, thanks for sharing your concerns.  We'll continue to fund research and 
document our methodology across all our mission-driven program areas.

 

thanks,

stef

 

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