FOSS Notes
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STAGE ONE
- Motivations
- We have these three ideas of the movement. Gift econoimcs. Market economics. A cultural movement. Let's get Mako talking on this.
- Proposition: writing free software and working for a proprietary software company is analogous to doing academic research and working R&D for a corporation.
- Proposition: All of the grand ideas of gift economics really just collapse into market economics. Lerner. (In the beginning, this was *the* explanation. Has it been subsumed by a cultural analysis of the movement?)
- Proposition: Despite Moglen's insistence, Kelty implies that FOSS took off only because Eric S. Raymond turned FOSS into a non-ideological movement.
- Consider these issues in the FOSS world
- Stallman's ideology v. Raymond's practical approach
- Do Stallman and Moglen represent a generational difference in views of FOSS?
- Inclusive movement v. Elitist scene
- Stallman's ideology v. Raymond's practical approach
STAGE TWO
- What are the characteristics of a (1) successful FOSS project, (2) successful FOSS process?
- CATB: Comparing the "bazaar" (FOSS) model to the "cathedral" (proprietary) model, the main advantage of FOSS is the maxim, "with enough eyeballs, all bugs are shallow"
- Isn't it bizarre that a movement that, in some sense, attempts to destroy IP in software, is so heavily dependent on IP law? It seems pretty interested in the law -- can we speculate as to why this is so?
- Kelty says, "free software hacks IP law". Ch. 6.
STAGE THREE
- Regarding open source governance, what are the characteristics we've learned about projects and processes that make open source development successsful?
- Mako on the GPL v3 development process
- If we wanted to create an open source law project, how would it work? Can we learn anything from Wikipedia on this?
- Regarding CATB, open source law complicates matters because law inloves questions of policy choice?
- Kelty says that unlike other "movements", FOSS is held together and progresses by the practices not the ideologies. How does this translate to open source law?
- Do either of these statements translate to open source law?
- ESR: Open source is an evolutionary necessary outcome of the natuarl tendancy of human societies toward economies of abundance.
- Stallman: Open source is a defense of the fundamental freedoms of creativity and speech.
- law as a "speech act" ?
- Dulles: Free software is about self-determination.
- Maybe open source law is destined to fail as a concept because law is too entrenched in society as outside the reaches of laymen, who don't believe they have any place to dictate its maxims.