It's time to talk about post-RMS Free Software
Richard Stallman has once again managed to demonstrate incredible insensitivity[1]. There's an argument that in a pure technical universe this is irrelevant and we should instead only consider what he does in free software[2], but free software isn't a purely technical topic - the GNU Manifesto is nakedly political, and while free software may result in better technical outcomes it is fundamentally focused on individual freedom and will compromise on technical excellence if otherwise the result would be any compromise on those freedoms. And in a political movement, there is no way that we can ignore the behaviour and beliefs of that movement's leader. Stallman is driving away our natural allies. It's inappropriate for him to continue as the figurehead for free software.
But I'm not calling for Stallman to be replaced. If the history of social movements has taught us anything, it's that tying a movement to a single individual is a recipe for disaster. The FSF needs a president, but there's no need for that person to be a leader - instead, we need to foster an environment where any member of the community can feel empowered to speak up about the importance of free software. A decentralised movement about returning freedoms to individuals can't also be about elevating a single individual to near-magical status. Heroes will always end up letting us down. We fix that by removing the need for heroes in the first place, not attempting to find increasingly perfect heroes.
Stallman was never going to save us. We need to take responsibility for saving ourselves. Let's talk about how we do that.
[1] There will doubtless be people who will leap to his defense with the assertion that he's neurodivergent and all of these cases are consequences of that.
(A) I am unaware of a formal diagnosis of that, and I am unqualified to make one myself. I suspect that basically everyone making that argument is similarly unqualified.
(B) I've spent a lot of time working with him to help him understand why various positions he holds are harmful. I've reached the conclusion that it's not that he's unable to understand, he's just unwilling to change his mind.
[2] This argument is, obviously, bullshit
But I'm not calling for Stallman to be replaced. If the history of social movements has taught us anything, it's that tying a movement to a single individual is a recipe for disaster. The FSF needs a president, but there's no need for that person to be a leader - instead, we need to foster an environment where any member of the community can feel empowered to speak up about the importance of free software. A decentralised movement about returning freedoms to individuals can't also be about elevating a single individual to near-magical status. Heroes will always end up letting us down. We fix that by removing the need for heroes in the first place, not attempting to find increasingly perfect heroes.
Stallman was never going to save us. We need to take responsibility for saving ourselves. Let's talk about how we do that.
[1] There will doubtless be people who will leap to his defense with the assertion that he's neurodivergent and all of these cases are consequences of that.
(A) I am unaware of a formal diagnosis of that, and I am unqualified to make one myself. I suspect that basically everyone making that argument is similarly unqualified.
(B) I've spent a lot of time working with him to help him understand why various positions he holds are harmful. I've reached the conclusion that it's not that he's unable to understand, he's just unwilling to change his mind.
[2] This argument is, obviously, bullshit
no subject
(Anonymous) 2019-09-15 06:47 pm (UTC)(link)Forgive me for the rant, but I'm just a nobody in this community. I started to get involved a year ago, and from what I could gather, the tech community thrives under abrasive personalities (Torvalds, de Raadt, RMS) simply because of one thing: they know how to run the show. People dislike, hate them. But no one wants to stand up to the task of taking over and doing a better job. You may think some of your posts don't reach many people, but they do. When you called for the community to be better, it struck a chord with me. But not in a good way. I remember asking myself the same question a few months ago. And the answer I've arrived at was:
Can the community be better? Absolutely.
Does the community WANT to be better? No.
And that's where it all falls apart. I may be repeating myself here, but your dream of a community of empowerment is one many people share. But do people REALLY want it? Because what I've seen so far... well, let's just say I've become disillusioned really quickly. People don't really want change. They want to complain. They want some kind of magical solution that removes only the people they dislike and leaves them alone to do their stuff. That's why people are satisfied with letting abrasive personalities walk all over them. Because deep down, they know they aren't up to the task. They know that, if they ever step onto the center of the stage, they won't be themselves anymore. They'll make a lot of enemies really fast - just by taking centerstage, they'll splinter the community. Some people won't like them on principle. Others, because of connections. And that dreamer who just wanted to make the community a better place, is left alone, trying to forever patch up a community that isn't worth all the time they've spent on it.
I guess that's why people like RMS and Torvalds thrive in our community: they don't really care. They don't have to make goody-goody with people. I'm not saying that it's the right way, it's just the way things are right now - and that just makes everyone miserable.
Well, that was a weight off my shoulders. Sorry for taking your time.
Community = Communism.?
(Anonymous) 2019-09-17 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)Re: Community = Communism.?
(Anonymous) 2019-09-17 03:57 pm (UTC)(link)The most apt comparison I've ever heard.