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Using open source software is not a sin. We encourage it.This is a discussion on Using open source software is not a sin. We encourage it. within the Open Source News and Opinion forums, part of the Open Source Analytics category; Brian Gentile of Jaspersoft usually has some interesting and worthwhile things to say on his blog. But, in his latest pos t, he seems to have gone stark raving mad ... |
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![]() | Brian Gentile of Jaspersoft usually has some interesting and worthwhile things to say on his blog. But, in his latest post, he seems to have gone stark raving mad (to put it politely). The sin in open source comes from contributing neither one’s time nor moneyHe makes the bold statement that using open source software without contributing to that project is a sin. I’m not misquoting him, he says its a sin. He goes on to say that if you use JasperSoft community edition you are required to contribute. Your contribution is required.This is called quid-pro-quo – they does something for you and you must do something for them. In some parts of the planet, certain forms of quid-pro-quo are classified as harassment and are illegal. This attitude towards community also rates very low on the openness scale – Gentile is only open to community members who are going to contribute *directly, and within a time-frame that Jaspersoft finds agreeable. I’m not sure the OSI will approve that license. Obviously I disagree with his statements. Completely. Utterly. On multiple fronts. Self-Interest Firstly, open source works best when all participants act purely out of self-interest, and by doing so, the other participants benefit as a side effect. Here are some examples:
With a commercial open source software (COSS) project you have a company that is the single most important participating organization. The motivations of this company are very important. It does not matter which company you look at, whether it’s RedHat, MySQL (Oracle), Pentaho, or Jaspersoft, that company exists for self-interest – to make money. There is nothing wrong with this, it’s actually very healthy. If the stewarding company is acting out of self-interest, you should not expect the community to act differently. Monetizing the Community Secondly Gentile is making an elementary mistake, one that is common among those that are new to the COSS business model. Gentile states ”Open source communities thrive based on the community members donating either their time and/or money”. Within the COSS world getting community members to buy software and services is called ‘Monetizing the Community’. It is a clumsy term that encourages misguided actions. I refer to my Beekeeper model. In there I state: Customers are corporations, the community are people. They have very different needs.The Beekeeper model makes it clear that it is pointless for a COSS company to try to sell it’s enterprise software and services to community members. This statement is true for all COSS companies that focus on business software (it is not true for open source consumer software such as games). This distinction is important, and it is missing from Gentile’s desperate plea. I’m guessing that only a very small percentage of the Jaspersoft installations are for personal use. Reporting software just isn’t that much fun. The majority of Jaspersoft’s installations are for business purposes. The individual who installed the software is usually a technical end user or an IT developer. Either way, the individual is not going to buy the software for their own needs – if a purchase of software is made, the customer will be the employer, not the community member. As a COSS company you can provide tools for your community members to persuade their employers to become customers, and you can explain how this benefits both companies involved and the community. For most COSS companies is it impossible to monetize the community directly, and therefore ridiculous to try. Trying to berate community members into purchasing business software shows a remarkable lack of understanding of the commercial open source business model. Asking, begging, or requiring community members to purchase your software is futile, Gentile. I’m not pretending that the COSS business model is easy. I’m not pretending that Pentaho does not have room for improvement either. I am stating that Pentaho provides more BI functionality in open source than Jaspersoft, and that you are welcome to use that software – sin-free and guilt-free. ![]() More from James Dixon’s Blog ... |
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