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The OSI definition and "open source purity" is designed by big tech to erode any value layer open source companies could use to threaten them.

New movements like "fair source", which is a form of source available + free use + expiring copyright is the ideal license. It's effectively unlimited use for customers and users, but has a baked in "non-compete" preventing low effort third parties from coming in and eating the market of managed services established by the authors.

We need to kill open source purity. Especially if we want to erode the hyperscalers that aren't even giving away the magic parts or valuable parts of their kingdoms.

Open source purity is a socialist dream while we're still living under the Empire. And it prevents the formation of a salient that can punch through. It's a very low suboptima.

I don't see any reason why you would want fair source authors to go "OSI" open other than taking their revenue stream as your own. The license bakes in contingencies in case the authors go out of business to open the license up for community ownership. That's good enough.

If these businesses were OSI open, the businessss become unsustainable and impossible to scale into something formidable that could chip away at entirely closed hyperscalers.



Replacing hyperscalers with other hyperscalers born off the back of open source contributors is not exactly progress.


How is it not progress? You have full access to the code, you can use it yourself however you'd like, and the copyrights expire.

They just ask you not to compete with them for a few years.

How is that any way comparable to AWS?

Perfect truly is the enemy of good.

In this case, perfect murders good and locks you in the dungeon of eternal bad so you can think endlessly about perfect. It also stabs any good that comes along while crying about perfect.


> They just ask you not to compete with them for a few years.

No Open Source license actually permits this - by definition of Open Source.

Also the notion that copyright "expires" is ludicrous - we only just saw work from the 1920s enter the public domain (and source is no different to that). Laundering via AI clearly does not count, either.




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