Last active
December 4, 2019 00:53
-
-
Save m/bab8d366d2e826ba2311 to your computer and use it in GitHub Desktop.
freedom zero mark pilgrim text
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
Movable Type has never been Free Software, as defined by the Free Software | |
Foundation. It has never been open source software, as defined by the Open | |
Source Initiative. Six Apart survived and thrived in the blogging community | |
because Movable Type was “free enough.” | |
… | |
Many people misunderstand | |
Free Software and the GNU General Public License. Many people equate the GPL to | |
the boogeyman, because it’s “viral”, and that sounds like a bad thing. | |
Here’s what viral licensing means: GPL software has the restrictions that it | |
has, and that’s it. The GPL is quite restrictive on developers, not at all on | |
end users. (More on that in a minute.) Regardless, GPL software has the | |
restrictions that it has, but it can never become more restrictive. An upgrade | |
can’t take away freedoms that I enjoyed with an older | |
version. | |
… | |
Freedom 0 is the freedom to run the program, for any purpose. | |
WordPress gives me that freedom; Movable Type does not. It never really did, but | |
it was “free enough” so we all looked the other way, myself included. But | |
Movable Type 3.0 changes the rules, and prices me right out of the market. I do | |
not have the freedom to run the program for any purpose; I only have the limited | |
set of freedoms that Six Apart chooses to bestow upon me, and every new version | |
seems to bestow fewer and fewer freedoms. With Movable Type 2.6, I was allowed | |
to run 11 sites. In 3.0, that right will cost me $535. | |
WordPress is Free | |
Software. Its rules will never change. In the event that the WordPress community | |
disbands and development stops, a new community can form around the orphaned | |
code. It’s happened once already. In the extremely unlikely event that every | |
single contributor (including every contributor to the original b2) agrees to | |
relicense the code under a more restrictive license, I can still fork the | |
current GPL-licensed code and start a new community around it. There is always a | |
path forward. There are no dead ends. | |
Movable Type is a dead end. In the long | |
run, the utility of all non-Free software approaches zero. All non-Free software | |
is a dead end. | |
This site now runs WordPress. Thanks to the wonderful people | |
on the #wordpress | |
… | |
It’s not about who has a right to make a living | |
(everyone does); it’s not about how nice Ben and Mena are (I’ve met them, | |
they are very nice); and it’s certainly not about eating. I’ve taken the | |
$535 that Movable Type would have cost me, and I’ve donated it to the | |
WordPress developers. | |
It’s not about money; it’s about freedom. |
Sign up for free
to join this conversation on GitHub.
Already have an account?
Sign in to comment
Thanks for copy/pasting this here, Matt.