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Date:      Sun, 3 May 1998 22:18:30 -0500 (EST)
From:      "John S. Dyson" <dyson@FreeBSD.ORG>
To:        hoek@hwcn.org
Cc:        dyson@FreeBSD.ORG, hoek@hwcn.org, freelist@webweaver.net, brett@lariat.org, chat@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: InfoWorld Electric: Linux Zealots Trashing FreeBSD, Berkeley
Message-ID:  <199805040318.WAA00441@dyson.iquest.net>
In-Reply-To: <Pine.GSO.3.96.980503201359.572E-100000@james.hwcn.org> from Tim Vanderhoek at "May 3, 98 08:43:39 pm"

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Tim Vanderhoek said:
> On Sun, 3 May 1998, John S. Dyson wrote:
> 
> > I suggest that synergy with industry is not only *not* destructive
> > to free software, but actually helps fund it.  I believe that
> 
> Synergy is helpful, yes.  (In the real world, that is --- just
> like Stallman, I can propose worlds where it is not --- they
> don't mean anything!).  My concern is that the computer industry
> may be inherently susceptible to the development of monopolies. 
> A monopoly is not conduscive to synergy. 
>
This is where companies are motivated to re-contribute the code
back to free software, because of the reality of internet support
and enhancement.  The motivation isn't totally altruistic, and
this very mechanism helps to keep software free.  It is up to the
"contributors" (either commercial or hobby) to put the code out
for the public to use.  Licenses that a-priori take the freedom
away to hold trade secrets will be avoided by the commercial sector,
and if such inventions are ever to be created, then that innovative
part of the commercial sector will totally avoid such licenses.

The advantages of net support (on non-trivial code) will virtually
entice companies to re-contribute, without the coercion of the encumbering
pseudo-free licenses.  Those companies will consider the opportunity
cost of re-inventing the wheel all of the time by re-integrating the
internet enhancements.  If their invention is significant, and supports
a competitive advantage, then the companies or major contributors will
make the tradeoff.

The beauty of the free software licenses (in the case of products that
have a network support critical mass) is that they in the real world
create a disincentive to keep IP gratuitiously proprietary, where the
encumbered pseudo free licenses effectively take that choice away,
even if the "to be" proprietary innovation is significant, and of
little interest to the internet community at large.

> 
> Most -list readers (including me) agree the BSD license can
> bring-about an open software world much more quickly and easily,
> but if we assume open software is destined to win regardless of
> license, then it is this future 20 years (minimum) that we are
> concerned with in choosing a license.  History judges futurists
> harshly, and 20 years makes my head spin.  Heck, that's probably
> older than most of the -list participants here...  ;-) 
> 
(IMO)
I suspect that for small, entrepreneurial developments, an Artistic
or Netscape type license would be preferable for such a developer.  For
large and diverse projects, it is important to support freedom of business
models, and also important to recognize that the opportunity cost of
taking a "free" software project private, and the PR loss shields the
free project, without the need for restrictive, encumbering and
overbearing religious license terms.

-- 
John                  | Never try to teach a pig to sing,
dyson@freebsd.org     | it just makes you look stupid,
jdyson@nc.com         | and it irritates the pig.

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