The argument against Source Available licenses in a single sentence;
"We need to stop torture, but we can't do it through software licenses."
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/programs-must-not-limit-freedom-to-run.html
(1/2)
This includes #CopyFarLeft licenses.
One might argue that unlike trying to prevent torture, limiting use of a piece of software by capitalists or corporations is something a copyright license can actually do. But is it? AFAIK no CopyFarLeft license has been tested in court. So we don't really know.
But the whole idea of these licenses is to protect some actors from economically stronger ones. All else being equal, economically stronger actors can afford the better copyright lawyers.
(2/2)
The argument against Source Available licenses in a single sentence;
"We need to stop torture, but we can't do it through software licenses."
https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/programs-must-not-limit-freedom-to-run.html
(1/2)
This is a long read, but I think it has a much more coherent take on the idea of creating ethical, political, or anti-capitalistic software licenses:
https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/mar/17/copyleft-ethical-source-putin-ukraine/
#nccc #ppl #agpl #gpl #foss #fosh #freesoftware #freehardware #license #licensing #softwarelicense #softwarelicensing #copyleft #copyfarleft
Toward a Broad Ethical Software Licensing CoalitionWe are passionate about and dedicated to the cause of software freedom and rights because proprietary software harmfully takes control of and agency in software away from users. In 2014, we started talking about FOSS as fundamental to “ethical software” (and, more broadly “ethical technology”) — which contrasts FOSS with the unethical behavior that Big Tech carries out with proprietary software. Some FOSS critics (circa 2018) coined the phrase “ethical source” — which outlined a new approach to these issues — based on the assumption that software freedom activists were inherently complicit in the bad behavior of Big Tech and other bad actors since the inception of FOSS. These folks argue that copyleft — the only form of software licensing that makes any effort to place ethical and moral requirements on FOSS redistributors/reusers — has fundamentally ignored the larger problems of society such as human rights abuses and unbridled capitalism. They propose new copyleft-like licenses, which, rather than focusing on the requirement of disclosure of source code, they instead use the mechanisms of copyleft to mandate behaviors in areas of ethics generally unrelated to software. For example, the Hippocratic License molds a copyleft clause into a generalized mechanism for imposing a more comprehensive moral code on software redistributors/re-users. In essence, they argue that copylefted software (such as software under the GPL) is unethical software. This criticism of copyleft reached crescendo in the last three weeks as pundits began to criticize FOSS licenses for failing to prohibit Putin from potentially using FOSS in his Ukrainian invasion or other bad acts.
@[email protected] I have been thinking about this as well. FOSS has the kernel of a new mode of production within it. I think some ideas such an endeavor could take inspiration from are #copyfarleft, which requires commercial users to be structured as worker coops. Within the commons any funds should be allocated by democratic non-market mechanisms like quadratic funding. See (5 minutes):