teri

joined 1 year ago
[–] teri@discuss.tchncs.de 8 points 3 months ago (1 children)

Or better named after oil companies.

[–] teri@discuss.tchncs.de 11 points 1 year ago

Google loves open source likely for another reason than you do.

Google loves open source when they can capitalize on it.

That is, when a big community works on code that Google can use for free to build their monopolistic infrastructure. They love a global community which works for them for free. They might even foster this community as far as it serves their purpose or for image reasons.

However, if they'd truly love open-source, they could open the source code to their core services. But they'd never ever do that. For this reason they also ban the AGPL license internally (https://opensource.google/documentation/reference/using/agpl-policy). The AGPL license would force Google to open their code which relies on AGPL licensed projects. Google hates that.

Google does clearly not stand for the ethical values people usually have in mind when talking about open source. For example when something is competing with them, they'll hate it. Like ad-blockers or browsers which don't block ad-blockers like Google chrome does. The core business of Google is about surveillance and advertising. To maximize the profitability of this, then need to violate freedoms of their users (like the freedom to use their service while blocking ads). This is in direct conflict with the ethical values often implied by free and open-source software.

So if somebody tells you "Google loves open-source and contributes a lot", think about what it really means.

 

Die Schweiz will erneut mit der EU verhandeln. Die Eisenbahngewerkschaft SEV befürchtet, dass der Bundesrat bereit sein könnte, das hiesige Bahnsystem dem Markt zu opfern.

[...]

Europas Bahngewerkschaften kämpfen schon lange gegen einen beständigen Liberalisierungsdruck im internationalen Zugverkehr.

[...]

«Wo die Marktideologie aber durchgesetzt wurde, hat sich die Situation praktisch überall verschlechtert»

[...]

Nicht die EU an sich sei das Problem, sondern die EU-Kommission, deren Exekutivorgan. «Diese verfolgt einen völlig ideologiegetriebenen Liberalisierungskurs», so Janisch. Und indem sie immer wieder forsch voranschreite, missachte die Kommission nicht selten den Willen des EU-Parlaments – also des europäischen Gesetzgebers.

[–] teri@discuss.tchncs.de 54 points 1 year ago (5 children)

gitlab.com is a for profit service/company. They have an open-source community edition of Gitlab which you can run on your own server. Codeberg is a non-profit association running the open-source software "forgejo" for you. At Codeberg you can become a member and then you can vote for important decisions and make proposals. People also care about ethics there. Nobody cares about profit. Codeberg runs on donations from members. I think some people feel more respected at Codeberg because the governing body of Codeberg is a subset of its users. If Gitlab cares about you, then probably because a bad user experience would be bad for business.

[–] teri@discuss.tchncs.de 0 points 1 year ago (1 children)

Selling railway infrastructure to car manufacturers is generally a bad idea. That's how the car industry contributed to killing public transportation in the US.

Public transport is their competition. Killing it brings profit. Very simple logic.

[–] teri@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 1 year ago

KiCad. Stay away from closed-source tools. They'll all try to press out the max amount of money sooner or later. Or get bought and discontinued for eliminating competition.