Richard Stallman was right since the very beginning. Every warning, every prophecy realised. And, worst of all, he had the solution since the start. The problem is not Richard Stallman or the Free Software Foundation. The problem is us. The problem is that we didn’t listen.

  • @lemat_87
    link
    English
    011 months ago

    Forgive me if I trivialize, but we should not mourn too much: the obvious solution is to pirate it all. Do not waste time and energy for reinventing the wheel in the form of writing open source software. These resources can be used better for Revolution. Instead of diving into exhausting dispute and overintellectual arguments of Stallman, just do what said Marx: seize the means of production. That is, fucking pirate it. It is simple as that.

    • @underisk@lemmy.ml
      link
      fedilink
      English
      3
      edit-2
      11 months ago

      There’s more to it than just having free software. The source code is important too because it lets people learn from it, improve it, and use it to write or improve their own projects. Free software is only half the equation.

      Unless you mean pirate the source too, in which case yeah absolutely but easier said than done.

      • @lemat_87
        link
        English
        111 months ago

        All right, that’s an argument. Also, having fun from coding is also a valid argument. Though, from my experience, it is easier to start learning programming from some simple, isolated cases, as in thextbooks, than from real life programs, which can be very nasty and domain-dependent.

      • @lemat_87
        link
        English
        011 months ago

        One time, I spent whole day arguing with some anarchkiddies about that, and no one gave me a short, convincing argument like that. Their posts were emotional rather than seeking for truth. That’s the difference between debate and dialectics.

      • @lemat_87
        link
        English
        111 months ago

        I got your point, but please look out of the programmer perspective. For a moment, look from the perspective of, for example, mechanical engineer: all she or he needs is a copy of AutoCad, Inventor or Catia. They know nothing about code, they do not need to modify the code, they are just use the software as any other machine. That’s all they need. BTW, there is no open source competition to these programs. Free CAD, with all respect, is not so good. Not because it is made by bad programmers; simply because making such complicated software costs tons of people, time and effort, so only big enterprises can do that, and now they are sadly capitalistic.

    • @wargreymon@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      211 months ago

      You are wrong at so many levels.

      If you were to pirate something, not only it doesn’t work all the time, doesn’t scale to large corporations, the large corps control you.

      The whole point of this is to gain full control, meaning legally, of what we think should be free.

      • @lemat_87
        link
        English
        111 months ago

        it doesn’t work all the time

        Neither FOSS. There are excellent programs in open source, but many are in some ways much inferior when compared to the cummercial. First example from head: many printers and other devices have drivers only for window$

        doesn’t scale to large corporations

        i consider pirating software for private use

        the large corps control you

        They are spying using regular software too

        The whole point of this is to gain full control, meaning legally, of what we think should be free.

        Why should we bother by unjust capitalist law? Today I shared with my students pirated books which would cost shitton of money in Poland. This should be free for education. But the law forbids it so fuck the law