Easy prediction: people who have been taught to confuse and through the misleading terms and will now be led to further accept the privatization of by small, innovative (and easy to acquire) start-ups.

@Shamar
Perhaps an unpopular opinion, the obvious ambiguity of the word free in the context of software doomed the movement from ever spreading to the mainstream. Not a single non-technical person I've ever met really appreciated the phrase or its importance even after explanation, and the movement is older than I am.

Wholeheartedly agree re: ethical startups though. need to become the norm.

@jump_spider @Shamar

Sorry to butt in, but personally I agree wholeheartedly. I think the best thing the FSF could do for their movement is to completely rebrand the phrase to something like "libre software".

The current name is so catastrophically bad, I have witnessed multiple people within FLOSS circles that think charging for free software goes against its principles. No amount of "I'd like to interject for a moment" will ever fix such a broken term.

@henriquesga @Shamar
I recently overheard the distinction made between "open source" and "source available," which I personally enjoy. I think it's safe to conclude "open source" won the culture war, and I can image a normie saying, "Huh?' in reply after hearing "libre software" but possibly, "What's the difference?" after hearing someone point out something is merely source available

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Free Software, Open Source and Capitalism 

@jump_spider @henriquesga

If we had to declare a winner to a cultural war, it would be : no matter how many criticisms it faces, it can always embrace, marginalize and extinguish them.

And yes, most powerful corporations and agents out there want we to think (which is a tool, thus a one) has won.

But if we are able to see the "cultural war" we should see how it's a never-ending one.

To me, a more appropriate wording would have been "' software", since the core value that actually drive development is : is fundamental, but ancillary.

couldn't see this because he was born in the where (and when) the was the main driver of their internal narrative.

But freedom is not enough: you need (, ...) so that we are bound together by mutual rules in the way we use the commons.

As the fight between and has shown in the 1900, we need something else to balance these two fundamental values.

And such thing is Curiosity, the will to learn and to share knowledge so that others can learn more and teach us.

On this topics I'd have a lot more things to say. If you are interested see

tesio.it/2019/06/03/what-is-in

tesio.it/2018/10/11/math-scien

tesio.it/documents/HACK.txt

tesio.it/documents/vademecum.t

Free Software, Open Source and Capitalism 

@Shamar
Thank you for sharing, I've added these links to my read later list 😀

@henriquesga

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