this post was submitted on 09 May 2025
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I do think it's utopian and I can't see it being effective, but you do raise a good question: "Does it really hurt the essence of open source?"
I see open source through a pragmatic lens, not some untouchable liberalist moral right. I'm not the kind of person who says "We should hand power over to the fascists since they did win the vote this time", or "Nazis have a legal right to be here, stop harassing them!". Helping people in reality is more important than trying to implement abstract ideals consistently. So, when push comes to shove, I don't really care about the essence of open source. One could claim that copyleft (e.g. GPL, CC-SA) violates the liberty of companies to use code freely. Yes, it does violate their liberties, but that's a good thing. That's the whole point, in fact. It's a pragmatic compromise away from some abstract ultimate freedom, making it something that actually empowers us and avoids helping those exploiting us as much. And you've taken a similar theme - while I disagree with some of the entities you've chosen, I agree with your attitude. The essence of open source isn't real, it can't help us.