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FOSS Things to Pay Attention to in 2020

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FOSS Things to Pay Attention to in 2020

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Delivered to SFSCon in Bozano, Italy in November to 2019, speaker Deborah Bryant discussions challenges and the need for greater awareness and understanding of open source software licenses, growing confusions and challenges.

Delivered to SFSCon in Bozano, Italy in November to 2019, speaker Deborah Bryant discussions challenges and the need for greater awareness and understanding of open source software licenses, growing confusions and challenges.

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FOSS Things to Pay Attention to in 2020

  1. 1. Eternal Vigilance is the Price of Liberty FOSS Things to Pay Attention to in 2020 Deborah Bryant Sr. Director, Open Source Program Office @debbryant
  2. 2. Warning: I am not a lawyer The work of education and awareness is in everyone’s interest.
  3. 3. Licensing Sets the rules of engagement. Allows for adoption and innovation. Enables an open ecosystem.
  4. 4. Watch for: lack of awareness of the importance of licenses among those new to open development
  5. 5. Applying license makes your code useable. Does not = bureaucracy.
  6. 6. Watch for: Increasing corporate adoption and participation in open source.
  7. 7. A good thing, and a thing to watch for balance...
  8. 8. Red Hat’s stake as a reference model for other companies. Community growth Strong communities keep our product lines stable. Community participation We help make it, so we can support it. Diverse innovation Broad set of global talent sparks immense creativity. Rapid development cycles Communities can support faster cadences.
  9. 9. Watch for: Marketing terms of art designed to muddle open source.
  10. 10. Saying “commercial open source software” is like saying “salsa sauce.” (open source is commercial)
  11. 11. Watch for: Business models conflated with free and open source software.
  12. 12. Don’t confuse open core with open source. Open core is a business model. Open source is a development model.
  13. 13. “The open-core model primarily involves offering a ‘core’ or feature-limited version of a software product as free and open-source software, while offering ‘commercial’ versions or add-ons as proprietary software.” Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Open-core_model
  14. 14. Participation is Constrained By definition, avenues of innovation will be blocked, because an open core company will not want to allow contributors to add new features that match the software’s “premium” features. Community is Devalued “... [W]e didn’t open source [MongoDB] to get help from the community, to make the product better. We open sourced as a freemium strategy; to drive adoption.” - MongoDB CEO Dev Ittycheria, June 2019 Vendor Lock-In Premium features, like any proprietary software, increases the aspect of vendor lock-in for customers. Deployment Constrained Customers are either forced to pay with licenses like SSPL, or forbid use of any “hybrid license” product for fear of unsanctioned licenses entering a business IT environment. Source: https://www.cbronline.com/interview/mongodb-ceo-interview Things that bring pause about open core contributors
  15. 15. Pause for thought... and Q&A.
  16. 16. ➢ What can we do to ensure free and open source stays open? ➢ How can we encourage corporate contribution? ➢ How can we make it easier for us all to advocate and educate? ➢ How can Red Hat and OSI* each help? *Speaker is currently on the Open Source initiative Board
  17. 17. facebook.com/redhatcommunity twitter.com/RedHatOpen Red Hat’s Open Source Program Office is passionate about, and dedicated to, providing business-useful insights into community management and success for our fellow Red Hat associates and the entire open source ecosystem. Thank you Deborah Bryant @debbryant dbryant@redhat.com

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