tcpip: (Default)
Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2008-05-19 06:21 pm

Recent Events, FOSS and Security, Gaming Personalities

Somehow I neglected to mention in my last post two excellent events which I recently attended. First was John Foxx's Tiny Colour Movies. I shouted [livejournal.com profile] dukeofmelbourne to the event as it was he who introduced me to early Ultravox some twenty years ago. It was excellent, an arthouse-style archive of movie fragments from disparate sources, combined with the Foxx providing backing music. The second was a more intimate affair, but one by a person who has probably affected more people indirectly; dinner with [livejournal.com profile] arjen_lentz who regularly visits Melbourne to provide MySQL training and do more work for OpenQuery. As usual it was excellent technical and friendly conversation and I quite enjoyed the contributions by [livejournal.com profile] laptop006.

Free and Open Source software is one of the areas where, it seems to me, the morally right policy is also the best technical approach. Widely reported, for example, has been a serious OpenSSL exploit which has affected Debian and Debian-derived systems (e.g., Ubuntu), which of course was widely discussed on Slashdot. Now despite the seriousness of the problem, it was found and patched remarkably quickly. Would this even have been discovered in a closed source model? Would the company holding the patents and copyrights admit the problem? Would they release a patch? With those questions in mind - and given the general usability of FOSS desktop UNIX-like systems, it never ceases to surprise me that people, every day, are still using MS-Windows and other closed-source solutions. It's morally wrong, and it's technically dangerous.

Over the years, I have realised the people who are attracted to roleplaying games are an interesting bunch. Many are people with either an incredibly systematic knowledge (it seems that every second sysadmin is a RPGer). Many (such as [livejournal.com profile] patchworkkid, [livejournal.com profile] artbroken, [livejournal.com profile] drzero for example) are people of significant literary merit and talent. But some however are special and not in a good way. For example, one has to be a "very special individual", to start an abusive tirade because an observer comments that a regular gaming schedule might work better than an inconsistent one. Such a "special individual" would include Ian Bouch (yeah, top-posting, start from the bottom *sigh*). Congratulations Ian; I don't often condemn people on my journal for their personal behaviour but you sir, are an arsehole.

[identity profile] zey.livejournal.com 2008-05-19 10:32 am (UTC)(link)
The model we discussed with [info]arjen_lentz was the "skim off the top" model, which I think does have a degree of economic legitimacy. Basically value-add to an existing OSS project, make it worth your while in recompense, and then make it public.

Ah, I wish I shared your optimism ;-). What's most likely to happen is the FOSS project eats its own: new participants notice that great add-on and cherry picks its functionality as their new contribution to the original project.

Indeed arjen pointed out that many organisations he ecounters are insisting on use of FOSS.

I suspect the success/failure of that strategy will depend on the industry you're in (ie, how specialised the software is). It'd work great if you're in software development, a real estate clerk needing plain jane office apps, etc. Good luck if you're in mining, oil and gas, accountancy or graphic design ;-).

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2008-05-20 03:42 am (UTC)(link)
Ah, I wish I shared your optimism ;-). What's most likely to happen is the FOSS project eats its own: new participants notice that great add-on and cherry picks its functionality as their new contribution to the original project.

That indeed is a risk; however there is very good incentives in releasing a good product into the public domain, as it encourages others to contribute to the development.

I suspect the success/failure of that strategy will depend on the industry you're in

Absolutely. I am very fortunate to be involved in the sort of work I am as result. The arts is probably one of those industries where open source content is perhaps not the best methodology, although I do notice many do so - or something similar by disposition (e.g., Cort Doctrow, Nine Inch Nails etc).

Overall, I think that the world is moving towards a variety of differing licensing structures (GPL, Creative Commons etc) which are orientated towards an FOSS model as a general trajectory.