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147 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
147 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 3585
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Title: HPR3585: Freedom of speech in open source, Part 2.
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3585/hpr3585.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 01:46:41
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3585 for Friday the 29th of April 2022.
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Today's show is entitled Freedom of Speech in Open Source Part 2.
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It is hosted by some guy on the internet and is about 13 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag. The summary is Freedom has a cost.
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Hello and welcome ladies and gentlemen to another episode of Hacker Public Radio.
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I'm your host, some guy on the internet. Before we get started there's a couple things I want to
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cover. First, in the last community news show, I'd like to give a thank you for everyone that
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commented on the previous shows. I appreciate all your comments, especially yours, Mr. Fallon.
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Wow, that's five words! That's right, them fighting words. I really like it when we can actually
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have these kind of discussions because we all think technology is cool, especially in its various
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forms. It didn't necessarily have to be a Raspberry Pi or a Pine Phone or something like that.
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Any kind of tech that you can hack on and modify? We're all pretty much going to surround that and
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want to be more educated on it, with the hacking process. How far can you go with modifications?
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But when we start discussing things that force you to think and express your own opinions about it,
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where there could be those differences in opinions, that's where I kind of want to bring a little
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bit more of that into it. Not take away any of the tech at all, there's plenty of tech to go around,
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but I guess I see this as another avenue for the community to get involved, where less technical
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members may still be able to participate. Even if they're a little embarrassed about their project,
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they can still chime in on some of this type of stuff because it didn't require you to have,
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you don't have to sound as though you have a PhD to chime in on some of the topics that I bring up.
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It's pretty lighthearted and we can all get involved. Okay, and the second thing I want to bring up
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is my name. Yes, I get it whenever we're having a conversation, saying my entire handle,
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some guy on the internet, you didn't drink in a few bottles of water, just getting started.
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So yes, Scotty is perfectly fine. I accept it. I like it it's short. I'll still be knowing
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that some guy on the internet, but for conversations sake, Scotty will do just fine.
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All right, so now that we got that part out of the way, let's jump right on into the topic,
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Freedom of Speech and Open Source. As many of you've heard, there have been some interesting things
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that have occurred recently, and other shows have covered them pretty well, so I'm not going to
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beat around all the same topics that have already been covered, you know, the same points rather.
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It's going to be the same topic, just different areas of the topic. So you've, you know,
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you've heard about the sabotage where they introduced the malicious code into open source,
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which I mean, basically that's open source malware at that point. We're not going to go too deep
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into that. That's just my opinion. When you do something like that, you delete somebody else's
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data, and you don't give them a path to recovering or an option when deleting their data,
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that's malware. All right, know if fans or butts about it, then I do not include that protest
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wear crap at all. But let's dig more toward the protest wear, not the the one instance of
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deleting other people's data. Now, when it comes down to all this so-called protest wear,
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where these developers are inserting their opinions into the software. I get it, you can
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strip it out or whatever, but we'll come back to that part later on. But let's just talk about
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the act of putting your opinion into the software. So that way, whenever a user loads the software,
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there's some sort of splash screen that gives, you know, the user an image, you know, the opinion
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of the developers, that kind of thing. I disagree with doing something like this. First of all,
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I get it that you want everybody to know that you're against the war that's occurring between
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the two nations, Russia and Ukraine. I get it. That's understandable. A lot of people are against
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war, no matter who the countries are. That's fine. But I thought that the software wasn't supposed
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to have an opinion at all. And one of the things that was brought up earlier on when I joined
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open source that I heard about, I can't remember the source, but they brought up the idea of
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safer and since there's an abortion clinic, the people inside the abortion clinic have the same
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rights to the software or with the software as the people protesting outside of the clinic. The
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software itself does not have any sort of opinion in what they're doing. It's just free and open
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source software that can be used to get the job done. So this is basically installing a bias
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into the software and putting it and putting it on the front page for everyone to see.
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Now, the reason I call it a bias rather than just an opinion is because some of the things that are
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being done is basically what's the word I'm looking for with it. They're discriminating against an
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entire region like xenophobic. There you go. So they're just pointing out that anybody in this region
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of the world, we want you to know that we do not like you. And that is just that is not the way
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to go about anything. You don't you don't really want to paint with a broad brush. At least in this
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instance, because not everyone from Russia is considered an enemy combatant. So there's a lot
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of good people that don't want anything to do with a war and they want to leave. But you're just
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all of a sudden lecturing them and letting them know how bad there are because of what's happening
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with a government that they I'm pretty sure have no control over. So now that we got that out
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of the way, that's all the stuff I'm pretty sure everybody already knows right. What about this
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one other interesting part now that we've already opened the door for you to basically show
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everyone your opinion of what's going on in a certain region of the world. That door is open.
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We can't close it now. But while it's open, what happens if a company were to come in and say,
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hey, you're broadcasting your opinion. What if I were to broadcast goods and services through
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that same door? What if I went to an open source developer and say, hey, you know, there's a big
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issue with you guys getting paid. What if I could just cut you a nice check based on the amount of
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people that use your software? If you were to include like a little splash screen at the start when
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your application is loading, give it like a five-second sleep where they can just see this advertisement
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as soon as they load the software and you get paid for it, right? Everybody's already fine,
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but advertising, right? You get what I'm saying? They're advertising opinions all day long,
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which wrong with advertising goods and services. Now, I know some of you're going to say that
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the distro maintainers will just strip that stuff out of there. That's absolutely correct. They'll
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just pull it out. Now, where the problem is going to happen is once more and more developers find out
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that this is a sustainable method to bring in some income for development. So more and more
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applications start getting these advertisements put in. The distro maintainers are going to have a
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problem after a while. There's not enough volunteers to help strip that stuff out. And then you'll get
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people like Facebook. Imagine if they were to say, okay, developer, look, I get it. You got a lot of
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time invested in this. Let us send you a pull request. We're going to go ahead and really
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tangle this advertisement into the code, right? We're going to make it to where anybody trying to
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take it out is going to have to dedicate some serious time to stripping out all of it. And that
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way, eventually, you're going to, you're going to wear down because Facebook's got the money to
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continue with speaking, winding this thing up. And the distro maintainers, well, eventually,
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they're not going to be able to. So here's the question for you, the listener here at Hacker
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Public Radio. Are you okay with advertising in open source software, rather it be the advertisement
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of opinion? And if you are, you would also have to be okay with the advertisement of good and
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services. So where do you stand on the matter? Do you, do you say one's okay, but not the other?
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Or maybe you're okay with advertisements of goods and services, but it have to be something
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closer to open source. Like maybe when the Raspberry Pi five or six or whatever comes out,
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it's okay for them to advertise within open source, but not someone like Facebook, right? Do
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you, do you have some sort of boundary on it? Do you introduce more bias, more restrictions based
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on what you believe is culturally appropriate for open source? And while you're thinking about that,
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let me also just remind you of a little distribution, a small one. Some of you may have heard of it.
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It's called Ubuntu. In the past, Ubuntu used to have a advertisement, if you will. It is
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basically an icon from Amazon on the desktop. I think it was in the up the favorite spa,
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and it was basically, you know, a way to bring in revenue. You could easily get to Amazon with
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this little icon from understanding it wasn't even that difficult to remove, but people raised
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hell at the idea that Ubuntu would allow, you know, Amazon to put their proprietor, you know,
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you can't put your stuff in our desktop, blah, blah, blah. Meanwhile, that donation button was,
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I mean, it had like an entire foot of dust on it. Or if you're in another country, I don't know
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what a foot is in a meter. Is that the closest thing to it? I don't know. It had a mound of dust on
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it, right? Nobody was ever donating to the Ubuntu desktop servers doing all right, because that's
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enterprise, that's businesses that will, you know, pay to sustain. That's where most income was
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actually coming in from and still is, but desktop, it wasn't doing good. So as you render your opinion,
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I just want you to know, we have history with open source and advertisement in the software,
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and we have, you know, the communities approach or the communities response to this advertisement.
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From the way I saw it, the way we reacted to Ubuntu allowing Amazon to put their application,
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their link to Amazon on the Ubuntu desktop, we responded to that issue. In the same way, the vegan
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community will respond to McDonald's trying to be accepted into the vegan community just because
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they put lettuce and tomatoes onto a hamburger. I heard that example somewhere. I can't really
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remember where. If you recall where that came from, could you do a show? Another thing I want to
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bring up, and it's not so much freedom of speech. I guess you can kind of tie it in. It's interesting,
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and I'd like to bring it up, is open source rebranding and the issues we've had with rebranding.
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Well, you know, there was also the idea of you can't sell something that's free, so they wanted to
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take the word free out of it. And certain, certain developers wanted to create different branches
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of a project, but they'd have like the community edition, and then like an enterprise edition.
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Remember the outrage they came from that? I think LibreOffice is one of them that wanted to do that.
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And at first, it was like, no, no, no, no, no. Don't make hours sound like the cheap, crappy one.
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And then the businesses get the enterprise grade edition, you know, and I believe LibreOffice
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was saying that it was going to be very much the same as just the enterprise edition would come with
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services to help with large deployments, you know, like a school that had a computer lab,
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and they wanted to just, you know, install over multiple different systems at one time.
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The enterprise version would be better for them, whereas, you know, because you could sell a service
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as well, whereas with the community edition, it'd be the same thing you already have. And the language
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of it all was, I guess, insulting to the community. Nope, nope, don't do that. Don't make hours sound
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like crap and the other one sounds like the, you know, the stuff we really want. All right,
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ladies and gentlemen, I think I've touched enough on the freedom and open source for today.
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I thank you guys for listening. Please do a show and response. Don't forget to leave some comments.
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I mean, I love reading the comments. I really want to hear your opinions on everything.
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I welcome all opinions, by the way, differences in opinions, agreements, whatever.
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I received some emails the last time as well. I appreciate emails, all of them. So definitely
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get involved, become a contributing member of the community. So I'll see you guys in the next
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episode. Take care. You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio at Hacker Public Radio does
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work. Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself. If you ever thought of recording
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a podcast, you click on our contribute link to find out how easy it really is.
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Hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive and our
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sing.net. On this otherwise status, today's show is released on our creative comments,
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attribution 4.0 International License.
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