I thought this 2022 essay by Bradley Kuhn makes a lot of good points with respect to the politics of copyleft. The essay is in the context of Putin invading Ukraine and responding to criticisms of the free software community in this context.

https://sfconservancy.org/blog/2022/mar/17/copyleft-ethical-source-putin-ukraine/

#bradleykuhn #copyleft #politics #putin #ukraine #freesoftware #ethicalsoftware #foss

Copyleft Won't Solve All Problems, Just Some of Them

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.

Software Freedom Conservancy

@neptune22222 On a casual reading, the only thing I disagree with is the author's comically rosy view of how just and not-corrupt the legal systems of rich Western countries are. The essay's thesis remains entirely intact.

#activism #copyleft #corruption #FOSS #geopolitics #law #LibreSoftware #PowerImbalance #privilege #rights

@neptune22222 not sure if I'm missing something, but the idea that Putin commits warcrimes, but would choose to respect stricter FOSS licensing during war is.. questionable..

I personally believe Copyleft does a great job by focusing on FOSS, and not other political issues. In most activism, if you try to fight too many battles, you lose all of them. And the great thing about FOSS is that it works effectively even without government or legal support. It empowers at a grassroots level.

@johnoestmannmusic , you are agreeing with the article. I think it's a good point. Free / libre / copyleft software does take advantage of copyright laws to promote software sharing in countries that have functioning legal systems. The article is making the point that adding stipulations against Putin in a license is not going to do any good because Putin doesn't have functioning legal system that cares about software licenses in the first place. The article is making the point that FOSS licenses should focus narrowly on the user rights to freely copy, modify, distribute, and use software for whatever purposes and use copyleft techniques to extend these rights to all other users down the line. The article makes the point that other techniques should be used to pressure Putin, such as sanctions.

I think you are agreeing with the article.