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Is it appropriate for someone to be a mod here when they don't understand open source, and insult users in the community?

https://lemmy.ml/post/13864821

I'd understand if they were a random user, but a mod should already have at least some understanding about a community's topic.

But worse to me are their comments in that post calling the people responding "childish trolls in this community". I do not think that this is appropriate for a moderator.

52 comments
  • Wtf is this witch-hunt?!

    The person asked a legitimate question and was being made fun of by some people, and downvoted to oblivion for completely legitimate viewpoints imo (wanting to make companies give back to foss). A mod should absolutely be allowed to call out childish behavior and herd mentality when they see it, they aren't supposed to be mindless drones after all! If anything they showed remarkable restraint when faced with some really nasty comments, mostly just stating/defending their opinion and trying to end toxic conversations.

    Please just chill out, and accept that some people have different but equally valid opinions, even mods.

    • This wasn't even a real question. They basically wanted a brainstorming session on how to write monetization contractually into FOSS, and when overwhelmingly told by the community that their idea was counter to the Libre movement, they argued and made rude comments to anyone that wouldn't budge.

      People answered the question honestly: No such license exists for FOSS and never will. If they wanted to learn more about FOSS this was their chance.

      This level of ignorance of what this community stands for and contempt for the users here is completely disqualifying for a moderator. The only saving grace here is that they didn't abuse their moderator powers - if they had it would be like kicking an anthill.

      I don't want them banned or punished, but I absolutely question their value as a moderator here. It doesn't reflect well on this community that someone like this has power over what the users can and cannot say, given their own propensity to endorse anti-libre values and insult people who oppose the same.

      • We really must have read two different posts and sets of comments. All they did was to ask for a foss license that makes for-profit endeavors give back some of the money they earn by using foss projects, just like they have to give back code under most foss licenses. There is nothing bad about that general idea imo, we've hopefully all heard about the problems os projects have to sustain themselves, even when they are being used by commercially successful businesses.

        They were then told by some levelheaded people that this doesn't really work with foss alone, and so accepted that the best course of action would be to dual-license their work going forward.

        Everything else (including what you just wrote) is heavy projection and very toxic behavior by some people imo. Reading things between the lines that absolutely aren't there, accusing the OP of nefarious motives without any valid justification, claiming that there is only one correct way to do foss or be against "the community", and so on. That's cult and herd behavior, it has no place in foss imo, and that's pretty much exactly what the OP said when they called some of the more toxic responses childish.

        I would encourage you again to realize that there is more than one valid way to think about foss, and that people who don't 100% agree with your way still aren't bad people!

    • This is Lemmy, ml, and a software sub.

      Chilling out is not physically possible.

  • https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.en.html

    Am I missing something, gnu gpl is a licence, Foss a philosophy, is gnu gpl licence Foss? And if so why are so many people saying charging for software isn't Foss when Richard stalman himself makes the point "This is a matter of freedom, not price, so think of “free speech,” not “free beer.”"

    Sorry if I got this wrong I am generally confused by this hole thing.

    • GNU is not a license, it's a project, one that practically spearheaded the whole FOSS movement back in the 80s. The programs that were part of the GNU project were licenced under the GNU General Public License (GPL), which was originally written by Richard Stallman, and evolved over time to its current version, GPLv3 (now backed by the Free Software Foundation). So the "GPL" is the actual license that can be applied to any program, should the developer choose to do so (so it's not limited just to the GNU project).

      All GPL licenced programs are considered to be FOSS. However, FOSS can also imply other licenses such as MIT, LGPL, Apache etc. Most of them are kinda similar, but the way but differ slightly on how permissive/restrictive it is when it comes to modifications and derivatives.

      why are some many people saying charging for software isn't Foss when Richard stalman himself makes the point "This is a matter of freedom, not price, so think of “free speech,” not “free beer.”"

      As you said, it's not about the price at all, the "free" means freedom. Specifically, the GPL explicitly states that you may charge money for the software. Other free software licences also generally state something similar.

      The confusion regarding selling is best explained by the FSF:

      Selling a copy of a free program is legitimate, and we encourage it.

      However, when people think of “selling software,” they usually imagine doing it the way most companies do it: making the software proprietary rather than free.

      So unless you're going to draw distinctions carefully, the way this article does, we suggest it is better to avoid using the term “selling software” and choose some other wording instead. For example, you could say “distributing free software for a fee”—that is unambiguous.

      https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/selling.html

      Also, just to be clear, opensource =/= FOSS. Opensource just means that the source code is available, FOSS however implies that you're free to modify and redistribute the program (+ some other freedoms/restrictions as per the specific license used).

      • Thank you for clearing this up, the comments in the linked post where having me question myself

      • Opensource just means that the source code is available, FOSS however implies that you’re free to modify and redistribute the program

        Incorrect. "Open Source" also means that you are free to modify and redistribute the software.

        If the source code is merely available but not free to modify and/or redistribute, then it is called source-available software.

    • There's nothing wrong with charging for your FOSS. You can't, however, force anybody who gets it from you to also charge the people they end up distributing it to like some sort of Ponzi scheme. The transactional relationship between you, your software, and another party ends at the first level.

      • This is what I had thought, where I was confused was the vast amount of comments in the linked post stating flatly that charging for software went against foss

  • I think it's perfectly appropriate for anybody in an interest based community, mod or common user, to question their basic understanding of the subject. Even if the shared topic doesn't change, its context will — and the question of funding FLOSS development has very much been thrown into the mix again with the xz backdoor.

    To be clear, I don't think there is a way to license your way out of supporting developers. Short of UBI or a FLOSS unionisation that the major tech corps will then need to acknowledge and negotiate standards with — I remain unconvinced. But I don't need to agree dogmatically with the mod in question to gain from their point of view.

    Worse to me are users who do not have the capacity to reflect on their views, and clutch their pearls over "appropriateness" only when challenged on what are essentially beliefs rather than established fact. Add to those the "childish trolls" which make up varying percentages of any forum. With users like this, a good telling off is not only appropriate, it's necessary.

52 comments