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There's very little evidence, IME, that open source software is any better designed of of higher quality than the closed source software that I've encountered, but OSS does have a higher level of hope of closing issues faster. The more eyes thing doesn't really scale beyond three expert viewers per subject matter. (You really only need one engaged subject matter expert, but people have off days; three guarantees you'll get the equivalent of one.)

The scary thing is we are due for a reckoning.

@ParadeGrotesque When you're in one of MicroSoft's musea, that means you're already dead.

Your important reminder of the day:

"The purpose of the web software industry is to extract value out of Open-Source Software (OSS). [...] Most people in the industry don’t realise that the web dev economy is primarily extractive."

baldurbjarnason.com/2021/the-o

Interesting to come across this from 2012: gizmodo.com/googles-broken-pro Turns out, society loses respect for those who fail to live up to their stated principles. And fair enough too.

"The First Amendment prevents the government from forcing private publishers to publish the government’s preferred speech, and from forcing them to favor politicians over other speakers. This is a fundamental principle of our democracy."-EFF's @davidgreene eff.org/press/releases/unconst

RT @lgbtq_economics: Today CLEAR joined @eff and 20+ organizations in calling on @paypal and @Venmo to provide more transparency and accou…

Sometimes the best debugging technique is taking a nap.

Freenode: "The new freenode is launched. You will slowly be disconnected and when you reconnect, you will be on the new freenode. It's a new genesis for a new era. Thank you for using freenode, and Hello World, from the future. freenode is IRC. freenode is FOSS. freenode is freedom. We're so happy to welcome you and the millions of others."

How delusional can this still get? What a megalomaniac.

The “only” arguably makes it impossible to dual-license.

Hmm, yeah it seems so although if one used MsPL they probably are not interested in dual-licensing (because it just came from MS) and changing the license of a project that we don’t have copyright is not allowed in general. Say we distribute Sequoia under GPL and someone says “well I can’t dual-license it under Apache!”. D'oh!

Thanks for the point Rysiek, see you later!

@lightweight MsPL has a clause added specifically and only to make it incompatible with the GPL and related licenses.

When I was doing FLOSS activism back in the day, I had a meeting with some "FLOSS Evangelist" from Microsoft, they were pushing hard the bullcrap of "FLOSS-friendly" MS. So when they asked what can they do to make the FLOSS community trust them more, I said "remove that clause".

The guy got *actually* offended. How dare I suggest such a thing?!

Wow, I get really frustrated when I see FOSS communities falling for Microsoft's "pro open source" PR spin - note, they never say anything positive about Copyleft (the "F" in #FOSS). They are no friends of FOSS - they're a parasite. Microsoft loves OSS like a tapeworm loves a healthy digestive system - exploiting what others produce for their own (proprietary) self-interest.

@daniel_bohrer @EpicKitty I see it too, as yellow. The top circle is not very distinct. I have trouble seeing red. How does a non-color blind person see this image?

@lwriemen

I've detected a certain incongruity in thought cycles that seem to take the form of: 1) "we live in an entrenched system with evils built into it and nothing is going to disrupt it", combined with 2) "serious disruption always favors consolidation of power."

There's a certain "we can't win, we can't break even, and we can't get out of the game" fatalism to all this that I find profoundly frustrating.

@dynamic To beat a dead horse, the pandemic has also put the minimum wage raise back in the forefront. Hourly jobs are competing for workers right now, and laying waste to many of their "I can't afford to pay more" arguments.

@dynamic Another aspect the pandemic brought (in the USA) was the extended unemployment. This has opened the UBI and health care conversation more. Eliminating health insurance would produce a huge economic change to individuals and businesses in the USA.

Anyway, we don't really want pandemic driven change, but change seems to require disruption to reach the average person. Disruption captures attention and provides an opportunity for education.

@dynamic Employer surveillance of remote employees was happening before the pandemic. The pandemic didn't give time for employers not already using it to adopt it.

Zoom is often a choice by those who just don't care about fighting corporate power. It's not like Windows that was forced upon users, but even the latter is met with apathy.

There are a lot of hourly jobs that moved to remote. e.g., call centers

Small cracks...

It seems that hydrogen can be used to replace coking coal for smelting steel. If that hydrogen is made from surplus energy from renewable generation, that's a huge potential reduction in carbon emissions:

rnz.co.nz/news/national/441832

#RenewableEnergy #hydrogen #steel #coal #CarbonEmissions

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