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O. Simard-Casanova in English

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon I'm sorry but this is complete nonsense

Microsoft used to play dirty against open source projects, but is now financing a ton of terrific open source projects

Assuming that one day Meta changes the same way Microsoft changed, should Mastodon refuses this money like forever?

52 comments
O. Simard-Casanova in English

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon It's one thing to exercise caution, especially with Meta

It's another to have extreme demands based on very rigid principles

Fedi.Tips 🎄

@osc @ThePlant @Mastodon

Microsoft changed? What? 😆

The same Microsoft that nowadays insists on spying on your computer?

techradar.com/news/is-windows-

These are corporations, not charities. They do not have any genuine interest in anything except making money for their shareholders.

O. Simard-Casanova in English

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon Microsoft used to be extremely hostile to anything open source, something Nadella completely changed

The fact they do shitty things on other dimensions doesn't change the fact that they changed their stance on open source

Fedi.Tips 🎄

@osc @ThePlant @Mastodon

"Forget about the mass surveillance programme guys, they donated to open source!"

O. Simard-Casanova in English

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon What about answering to the things I actually said, instead of answering to strawmen?

Fedi.Tips 🎄

@osc @ThePlant

Any company that carries out mass surveillance is not to be trusted.

You can't compartmentalise that kind of behaviour away.

Fedi.Tips 🎄 replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc @ThePlant

Objecting to mass surveillance is extremist? 😱

Liam replied to Fedi.Tips

@feditips @osc so you never use a single thing Microsoft have contributed time or money towards?

Fahri Reza replied to Liam

That's the very definition of too big to fail, sure they spy on you but have you not benefit from them even a bit?

@ThePlant @feditips @osc

Shanie replied to Liam

@ThePlant @feditips @osc What kind of hostile question is that?

Here, I can do that too: Because you use GitHub, you deserve everything Microsoft throws at you.

See? That doesn’t help.

Here’s the facts: Non-profits trusting for-profits has historically not worked out well for non-profits because they have fundamentally different goals. To accept money from them is trusting them in some capacity, and that money absolutely influences decisions.

O. Simard-Casanova in English replied to Fedi.Tips

@feditips @ThePlant Once again, can you answer to the things I actually said, instead of answering to strawmen?

unexpectedteapot replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc @feditips @ThePlant absolutely not an extremist position to hold prejudice against companies that spy on, leak information of and break users' trust. Additionally, these open source projects are beneficial to these profit-driven companies. From open-washing, to attempts at patenting (remember when Facebook tried to patent React?), to other decisions that come from a conflict of interest (Chrome being used as a vehicle for Google to control the web like nerfing adblockers, FLoC, and more..)

Γιάννης Εκελδεκερές replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc In 2017 Meta (Facebook then) did not lift a finger to prevent the ethnic cleansing of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar that was being incited on their web site. This is pretty well documented by the UN and Amnesty International. Not wanting any relation with the product of that organization is not extremist. The extremist position is to say everything is fine when we have so much evidence to the contrary. @feditips @ThePlant

Sally Strange replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc @feditips @ThePlant this is a hell of a cop-out from a purely debate perspective

thomholwerda

@feditips @osc @ThePlant I'm curious - what platforms do you use? Unless it's like Linux or BSD or whatever, you're using a mass surveillance platform. Apple, too, collects vast amounts of data about its users, and lets the CCP control all of Apple users' data in China.

thomholwerda replied to Fedi.Tips

@feditips @osc @ThePlant Good! The fewer Windows/macOS users, the better. 😅

DELETED replied to Fedi.Tips

@feditips @thomholwerda @osc @ThePlant

Microsoft first began contributing to the Linux kernel in 2009

Erin Nivelet replied to Fedi.Tips

@feditips
@thomholwerda @osc @ThePlant So you do use things Microsoft work on: Microsoft is one of the biggest contributor of Linux kernel:

theregister.com/2012/04/03/mic

Shanie replied to Erin

@erin @feditips @thomholwerda @osc @ThePlant I remember when Microsoft lost the court battle for Internet Explorer and being a monopoly. It’s not hard to imagine that they do this because it’s good footing for them to not look like a monopoly. “See? We help the open source movement stay just competitive enough!”

At least that comes with no strings attached thanks to the license. I think that’s the critical part.

Seth Pilgrim replied to thomholwerda

@thomholwerda “well you’re already being watched, why do you care if even more people watch you, and farm even more data about you” :upsidedown:

@feditips @osc @ThePlant

O. Simard-Casanova in English

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon It's not to a literal economist that you will teach that companies aren't charities

But under the correct set of incentives, the interest of companies can somewhat align with the interest of third parties that aren't their shareholders

It's a very surprising move for Meta to support the Fediverse in the first place, which indicates that something evolved in their business calculus

nader

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon I know it seems totally surprising. But do you know what Google did to xmpp (open source decentralized IM protocol) after "surprisingly" adapting it into Gmail and GTalk?
These articles have many examples over the years, explaining how big tech companies kill alternatives. I hope you find time to read them.

- How to Kill a decentralized Network
ploum.net/2023-06-23-how-to-ki

-Stop Talking to Each Other and Start Buying Things
catvalente.substack.com/p/stop

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon I know it seems totally surprising. But do you know what Google did to xmpp (open source decentralized IM protocol) after "surprisingly" adapting it into Gmail and GTalk?
These articles have many examples over the years, explaining how big tech companies kill alternatives. I hope you find time to read them.

Sean

@nader @osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon

This is the real truth that ActivityPub needs to be on watch against. Meta isnt going to "play" nice with anyone other than shareholders.

Pat

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon or...they see an opportunity to enrich themselves. I will believe the evolution when they prove it. until then, it's shareholder driven in my mind

Bales

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon they want to be the Gmail to the fediverse.

DELETED

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon

I think they want to feed the entire fediverse into their data collection scheme personally.

Buster | Felipe

@osc
Yeah, now they are opensource friendly because free training data for shitty AI
@feditips

O. Simard-Casanova in English

@pitbuster @feditips This is a patently false statement

Their pivot toward open source date back to 2013-ish, way before they started to invest in AI

Buster | Felipe

@osc yeah, I was trolling on that one, I admit. But, they open source tools here and there, and how they actually contribute to the rest of the ecosystem? There are ton of "open source friendly" corporations that are still shit.

@feditips

Buster | Felipe replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc Dude, you are the one that brought MS to the thread. Meta also had a lot of opensource contributions and it doesn't change the fact that they profit on surveillance, which is the point @feditips was making all along.

O. Simard-Casanova in English replied to Buster | Felipe

@pitbuster @feditips I literally never disputed that Meta nor Microsoft profit on surveillance lol

Reading is a skill you usually learn in primary school, what about exercising it?

Buster | Felipe replied to O. Simard-Casanova in English

@osc lol an economist bragging about reading comprehension @feditips

Jon replied to Buster | Felipe

@pitbuster Yeah really. But I've also seen a lot of techies say "Facebook has contributed React and does a lot for open source software, so let's not talk about the genocide" so it's not just economists who take this kind of position.

It's kind of like saying "Monsanto has a great Pride float, so it's just fine to take funding from them!"

@osc @feditips

jan Wilejan

@osc @feditips "The Microsoft of the past used to Embrace, Extend, and Extinguish open source projects. The Microsoft of today Embraces, Extends open source projects and I can't wait to see what comes next!" 🙃 🤣

jan Wilejan

@osc @feditips I was paraphasing you, silly. You said "Microsoft used to play dirty against open source projects" (that's the Embrace, Extend, Extinguish). You also said "[Microsoft] is now financing a ton of terrific open source projects" (that's Embrace, Extend). They haven't changed; they just haven't gotten to step 3 yet.

tinkel

@osc @janWilejan @feditips

"Embrace, extend, and extinguish" (EEE), also known as "embrace, extend, and exterminate", is a phrase that the US DOJ used to describe its strategy for entering product categories involving widely used standards, extending those standards with proprietary capabilities, and then using those differences in order to strongly disadvantage its competitors.

MS used that against web with intentionally broken and incompatible browser.

en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Embrace,

@osc @janWilejan @feditips

"Embrace, extend, and extinguish" (EEE), also known as "embrace, extend, and exterminate", is a phrase that the US DOJ used to describe its strategy for entering product categories involving widely used standards, extending those standards with proprietary capabilities, and then using those differences in order to strongly disadvantage its competitors.

tinkel

@osc @janWilejan @feditips

1. Embrace: Development of software substantially compatible with a competing product, or implementing a public standard.

2. Extend: Addition and promotion of features not supported by the competing product or part of the standard, creating interoperability problems for customers who try to use the "simple" standard.

3. Extinguish: When extensions become a de facto standard, they marginalize competitors that do not or cannot support the new extensions

jan Wilejan

@tinkel I know what EEE means. why are you telling me this?

Drikanis

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon I'd agree if you asked me 2-3 years ago, but they're now using code (OSS and otherwise) that is stored in GitHub to train and sell their for-profit AI coding assistant, and that's just the most recent example.

They are in the business of making money. When it comes to open source, they're still in the embrace and extend stages. Take what you can, enjoy what they are contributing, but do not trust them.

RussianDeepStateSock

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon that's because Microsoft, like Google and many others, use open source in closed source projects. Edge, for example. Chrome. Etc. These were built on open source, adjusted enough to become closed and/or paid the legal fees required to own open source.

It doesn't cost them much to maintain influence over open source projects, and the have all the money in the world. No idea what you are saying here, but I'm not here for it.

Loïc Denuzière

@osc
They contribute in ways that benefit them.

Microsoft only really embraced open source when its core business shifted from selling software (for which open source was a direct rival) to selling online platforms and cloud (for which open source is a useful tool).

On the other hand, the fediverse is not just an open source project, but a social network, and Facebook is in the business of showing ads and collecting personal information.

@feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon

@osc
They contribute in ways that benefit them.

Microsoft only really embraced open source when its core business shifted from selling software (for which open source was a direct rival) to selling online platforms and cloud (for which open source is a useful tool).

On the other hand, the fediverse is not just an open source project, but a social network, and Facebook is in the business of showing ads and collecting personal information.

David Plisken 🏳️‍⚧️ BLM!

@feditips @osc @ThePlant @Mastodon Microsoft is currently under the antitrust microscope.
¯\_(ツ)_/¯
They may have changed the perception slightly by doing some good stuff but it doesn't obviate their coercive power dynamics.

Ian Molton

@feditips @Mastodon @osc @ThePlant I'm guessing you're not that old.

Microsoft wiped out thousands of perfectly good (often better) products.

They will not be forgiven.

They held back computing for over two decades imo.

samuel_mahler

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon Ever heard about "embrace-extend-extinguish"? Yeah, Microsoft still does that. Google does that. Meta will do that. They just haven't had a direct competitor to do it to. Meta has already been contributing to open source projects they are using for their own services for years, but all of those are basic infrastructure, not services that could take away users (and therefore money) from their products. They won't play nice.

DELETED

@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon

They only fund Open source because thier entire backend and primary mobile OS is based off it.

Its not altruistic

martza :alpine_linux: :commie_peek: :agender_flag: :neorat_autism:
@osc @feditips @ThePlant @Mastodon
Open source ≠ free #StalmanWasRight
Using cuck licenses or licenses that might be used against you for exercising your right to digital liberty whilst keeping the source code available or only available for client apps but not the backend is just vicious, cheap marketing feeding on ignorance
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