The backdoor highlights the politics, governance, and community management of an ecosystem exploited by massive tech companies and largely run by volunteers.
There should be a mandate for companies and profiteers of a library or application to donate x amount of revenue upstream.
For example 1% of your revenue should always go upstream, the next one sends 1% upstream, etc. You can do more of course but imo you should have to do 1%.
I know this is a lot of money in googles example but honestly, its better than just using agpl and keeping them out in the first place. Make them pay their fair share.
It’s basically what Redis, ElasticSearch, and others have started doing, but people living in fairytale land are throwing a fit because “iT’s NoT frEe!!11!1”
My previous employer used to donate to the sole maintainer of a php library we used extensively (I’m not a php developer, so I don’t remember the name). It wasn’t much, but it was something and it is unfortunate that it is not the norm
It sort of is by license. Not directly but if you’re using one of the more restrictive licenses like GPL 3, it often doesn’t pass legal review due to many of the copy left provisions.
Most companies simply find a similar library that has a more permissive license. A handful will contact the dev and buy a license.
As much as the MIT license has made code more accessible, its permissiveness is the main reason I don’t use it for my own software, unless I really don’t care for it.
Thanks for mentioning this. It was really helpful.
Can you see why I want a more bespoke license which still allows for distribution, change and all that but also asks for you to donate part of your revenue (if you make any, that is) to foss projects?
Because that would streamline the process and would probably find a lot of adopters which would lead to it getting accepted. Probably even more than agpl because you can still make stuff closed source (if we leave the „need to use same license“ out) but you need to pay anyway.
I‘m getting a lot of hate for this btw. People are really unhappy with this idea because for some reason „free“ for them means free beer it seems.
Edit: someone mentioned percentage of employees wages who work on foss projects be factored in which I think is great
I don’t think we need more licenses. OSS license proliferation is bad as it is. IMO, people should do their best to stick with the major licenses: GPL, AGPL, MIT, or Creative Commons if it doesn’t fit the above.
The problem with a tax that you’ve proposed is that it would be nearly impossible to enforce. How would you know which companies are pulling your library?
What I’ve been doing is adding the Commons Clause to my license and that I think helps. I don’t write wildly popular software so I don’t really see people donating or asking to purchase a license.
I personally like the Mozilla model where they donate to various open source projects from a common fund. I’d like to see more stuff like that.
After tons of troll messages I‘m now at the point where I will just make everything agpl so nobody can use my stuff if its not the same license and be done with it. I will also make every software I fork agpl if possible which will be a fest.
but if you feel about this methodology strongly you’re going to get hit with nay-sayers that use the same argument anti-VAT people use, as it’s ostensibly the same mechanism: that the developers farthest downstream would have to take the full amount of the percents piled up in their pricing scheme.
Thanks but thats not what I meant. I was talking about a combined 1%. Like, if you used my work, you would need to donate at least (!) 1% of your total revenue to open source projects, ideally evenly distributed. That means the library further upstream would get a tiny amount but not nothing and if everyone did this, the library would have a million or more revenue streams (because libraries are widely used).
Which is exactly my idea. The AGPL is A LOT worse in this regard since it prevents them from going closed source in the first place iirc. I think many small businesses would gladly use the software and pay 1% of their revenue.
This kind of argument imo is circular because if I build your house for free, you will not build it yourself, plain and simple. If I provide a service, I ought to get paid for it, plain and simple. And if you make money off of my work, you are part of the problem if you dont donate anyway. So making it mandatory imo is absolutely no issue.
Reinventing the wheel is exactly why we should use open source libraries.
Expanding on other unintended outcome here: Different projects have different values. This takes no account for something like Spring vs Apache Commons IO. Or Rails vs nokogiri.
Libraries will be incentivized into breaking apart to maximize revenue.
This isn’t really unlike the unintended consequences of health insurance and how it leads to overpriced services with lots of indecipherable codes for service.
It’s about how the system rewards (pays) for the service. I’m all for supporting open source, but the proposals in this thread are disturbingly anti open source.
There should be a mandate for companies and profiteers of a library or application to donate x amount of revenue upstream.
For example 1% of your revenue should always go upstream, the next one sends 1% upstream, etc. You can do more of course but imo you should have to do 1%.
I know this is a lot of money in googles example but honestly, its better than just using agpl and keeping them out in the first place. Make them pay their fair share.
we should bake something like that in whenever we feel like doing GPLv5 or something.
“free for people, paid for corpos” or something
Because when projects do it everyone runs away, forks are made, and everyone hates the developers because it’s “not open source anymore”.
exactly. I dont understand why FOSS means “go make billions with it, i’ll chew a rock”
It’s basically what Redis, ElasticSearch, and others have started doing, but people living in fairytale land are throwing a fit because “iT’s NoT frEe!!11!1”
CC BY-NC-SA 4.0
My previous employer used to donate to the sole maintainer of a php library we used extensively (I’m not a php developer, so I don’t remember the name). It wasn’t much, but it was something and it is unfortunate that it is not the norm
I fully agree. It should be mandated either by law or at least by license.
It sort of is by license. Not directly but if you’re using one of the more restrictive licenses like GPL 3, it often doesn’t pass legal review due to many of the copy left provisions.
Most companies simply find a similar library that has a more permissive license. A handful will contact the dev and buy a license.
As much as the MIT license has made code more accessible, its permissiveness is the main reason I don’t use it for my own software, unless I really don’t care for it.
Thanks for mentioning this. It was really helpful.
Can you see why I want a more bespoke license which still allows for distribution, change and all that but also asks for you to donate part of your revenue (if you make any, that is) to foss projects?
Because that would streamline the process and would probably find a lot of adopters which would lead to it getting accepted. Probably even more than agpl because you can still make stuff closed source (if we leave the „need to use same license“ out) but you need to pay anyway.
I‘m getting a lot of hate for this btw. People are really unhappy with this idea because for some reason „free“ for them means free beer it seems.
Edit: someone mentioned percentage of employees wages who work on foss projects be factored in which I think is great
I don’t think we need more licenses. OSS license proliferation is bad as it is. IMO, people should do their best to stick with the major licenses: GPL, AGPL, MIT, or Creative Commons if it doesn’t fit the above.
The problem with a tax that you’ve proposed is that it would be nearly impossible to enforce. How would you know which companies are pulling your library?
What I’ve been doing is adding the Commons Clause to my license and that I think helps. I don’t write wildly popular software so I don’t really see people donating or asking to purchase a license.
I personally like the Mozilla model where they donate to various open source projects from a common fund. I’d like to see more stuff like that.
Yeah, the mozilla model seems quite interesting.
After tons of troll messages I‘m now at the point where I will just make everything agpl so nobody can use my stuff if its not the same license and be done with it. I will also make every software I fork agpl if possible which will be a fest.
I agree with this wholeheartedly,
but if you feel about this methodology strongly you’re going to get hit with nay-sayers that use the same argument anti-VAT people use, as it’s ostensibly the same mechanism: that the developers farthest downstream would have to take the full amount of the percents piled up in their pricing scheme.
Thanks but thats not what I meant. I was talking about a combined 1%. Like, if you used my work, you would need to donate at least (!) 1% of your total revenue to open source projects, ideally evenly distributed. That means the library further upstream would get a tiny amount but not nothing and if everyone did this, the library would have a million or more revenue streams (because libraries are widely used).
This wouldn’t work for a few reasons, but the most glaring is that it would incentive re inventing the wheel.
Which is exactly my idea. The AGPL is A LOT worse in this regard since it prevents them from going closed source in the first place iirc. I think many small businesses would gladly use the software and pay 1% of their revenue.
This kind of argument imo is circular because if I build your house for free, you will not build it yourself, plain and simple. If I provide a service, I ought to get paid for it, plain and simple. And if you make money off of my work, you are part of the problem if you dont donate anyway. So making it mandatory imo is absolutely no issue.
Reinventing the wheel is exactly why we should use open source libraries.
Expanding on other unintended outcome here: Different projects have different values. This takes no account for something like Spring vs Apache Commons IO. Or Rails vs nokogiri.
Libraries will be incentivized into breaking apart to maximize revenue.
This isn’t really unlike the unintended consequences of health insurance and how it leads to overpriced services with lots of indecipherable codes for service.
It’s about how the system rewards (pays) for the service. I’m all for supporting open source, but the proposals in this thread are disturbingly anti open source.
So would their salaries for people working on OSS contribute to that 1%?
That could be the case. Thanks for asking and providing valuable new ideas. I think the amount of foss said employees get should factor in, yes.