- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
- cross-posted to:
- [email protected]
I wasn’t familiar with the author before this article. You can see his wikipedia page here:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bradley_M._Kühn
He is best known for his efforts in GPL enforcement,[7] as the creator of FSF’s license list, and as original author of the Affero General Public License. He has long been a proponent for non-profit structures for FLOSS development, and leads efforts in this direction through the Software Freedom Conservancy. He is a recipient of the 2012 O’Reilly Open Source Award.
Excerpt from the first part of the piece:
In this philosophical essay, I explore the question: “When (if at all) is it ethically and morally acceptable to use proprietary software in the production and/or improvement of urgently needed copylefted FOSS?”
The question presents a complex conundrum. I attempt herein to rigoriously examine it through both a priori ethical analysis and a posteriori (and folksy) consideration of my personal experience and the shared experiences of the early software freedom movement.
I surprised myself at the outcome of my analysis. I conclude that under some circumstances (of which we have already witnessed in key historical examples), use of proprietary software by FOSS contributors to create/improve FOSS becomes a moral imperative. And, that imperitive often supersedes the moral imperative to avoid using that proprietary software.



My comments are written in context of your entire message
It does. The fact something is better for me, doesn’t make it morally superior.
I’d rather buy cruelty-free foods
Benefit and morality are separate things. Some may percive benefit from doing moral things, and some may not.
Morality is subjective. All those things can be moral and immoral at the same time. You have to decouple concepts of morality and percived benefit from each other.
According to you, if you think morality is objective, you might want to create a religion.
Okay, and? What does it have to do with perciving morality of using FOSS software?
I agree
I agree.
Small nitpick, unrelated to the topic: Selfhosted, FOSS solutions aren’t necessarily more private than cloud services, unless you’re the one hosting them and not your employer. They can install any malicious program on the server and have access to all the data, which is impossible on some cloud platforms.
Okay, I can agree.
Making everyone use better software doesn’t have be morally superior. But that’s a convincing argument.
I don’t really understand what you meant. Was using FOSS harder back then or what? (I can absolutely agree with that thesis, but I don’t know what you meant)
Okay, I use neither of those
I understand this wasn’t said to me, but to the general public, but I decided to see what proprietary software I still use:
Firmware doesn’t count.
Okay, you somehow convinced me, I still think that using FOSS is no better (morally) than proprietary software, and that using proprietary software is just stupid when alternatives exist.
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