If you feel the need to be rude, offensive, lie or you are intentionaly trying to start a fight, I encourage to do that in your blog.
Unsurprisingly someone attacked Miguel and Mono for "always chasing tail lights" which is a common logical fallacy that the anti-Mono folks love to argue...
Moreover, if the term “open source” becomes devalued, coders and users will become disillusioned, and start to desert it. The former will find the sharing increasingly asymmetric, as their contributions are taken with little given in return (something that may well happen even to open source companies using the GNU GPL if they demand that contributors cede their copyright, as most currently do). Users will similarly discover that some of these new-style “blurred” open source applications fail to deliver the promised benefits of control, customisation and cost-savings.
But, of course, the point is not “to go mainstream”: as Stallman said, it's about having “freedom as a principle.” Spreading free software is about spreading *free* software, not free *software*: software is simply the means, not the end.
Another approach by which companies such as SAP and Microsoft seek to steer the brand is by escalating, aggravating and encouraging conflict between false enemies, and by seeking to harmonize the wider community with false friends.
OpenPGP: *Parts of the message have NOT been signed or encrypted*
Dear Mr Schestowitz,
Thank you for your e-mail dated 21/09/2009 registered on 21/09/2009. I hereby acknowledge receipt.
Yours sincerely,
[Anonymised]
[...]
Dear Mr. Schestowitz,
Thank you for your email of 20th March, registered on 23rd March, applying for a copy of documents in accordance with Regulation (EC) N€° 1049/2001 regarding public access to European Parliament, Council and Commission documents.
In this message you requested access to the following documents:
"I hereby request electronic access to all documents related to the Towards the European Software Strategy process in the posession of the EU-Commission, in particular access to the following documents: * the list of participants in the industry expert group * the list of WGs, WGs sleaders and observing Commission officials * draft contributions of all industry Working groups on a the European Software Strategy * draft input to all WG prepared by the Commission * the participant list of the related meeting on January 20th in Brussels * all submissions from industry to the ESS consultation under the applicable provisions of regulation 1049/2001 which grant me a right of access to all documents mentioned above."
We were, and still are, unable to identify the documents referred to in the 6th item "all submissions from industry to the ESS consultation", as notified to you in our emails dated 15th April 2009, 8th May 2009, 27th May 2009 and 5th June 2009.
We sent you the documents corresponding to the first five items in your request in our email of 5th June 2009. I would draw your attention to the fact that they can, in no way, be reproduced or disseminated for commercial purposes unless we have first been consulted.
The documents that were sent were: * the list of participants in the industry expert group: "list of participants in the industry expert group.pdf" * the list of WGs, WGs sleaders and observing Commission officials: "Working Groups.pdf" * the participant list of the related meeting on January 20th in Brussels: "Participants list 20th of January.pdf" * draft input to all WG prepared by the Commission: "Moderator for the European Software Strategy Working Group SMEs Reduction of Fragmentation - D104400.tif" Please note that the email is a model for all the emails sent to the moderators
Please note that the following documents have been drawn up by independent experts and do not necessarily represent the European Commission's views and can in no way be reproduced or disseminated for commercial purposes unless we have first been consulted. * draft contributions of all industry Working groups on a the European Software Strategy: "WG1_Future_Internet.pdf" "WG2_Technology and Business Trends in the Software Industry.pdf" "WG 3 - IPR, Standards, and Interoperability.zip" "WG4_Public Procurement - Financing Software Innovation.pdf" "WG5_SMEs-Reduction of Fragmentation.pdf" "WG6_Skills.pdf" "WG7_OSS.pdf"
* draft input to all WG prepared by the Commission: "Software_Strategy_Issues_Paper.pdf"
In our email dated 5th June 2009 we sent you the documents that we had identified from your original email dated 20th March 2009. In your reply, dated 7th June 2009, you subsequently informed us that "I shall ask again for more documents". To date, no request has been received by our services.
Yours sincerely,
[Anonymised]
Thank you for the reply. When I wrote "I shall ask again for more documents" I meant to say "I hereby ask again for the documents". In particular, I wish to see the contributions of Mr. Zuck (he confirmed to me that he was in the panel) and SAP. ACT and SAP have a well documented track record of systematically stomping on Open Source software. Mr. Zuck has been a lobbyist for Microsoft for about a decade, so his role in this paper only help in substantiating allegations that the eventual outcome is manipulated by hostile edits. I adamantly believe that the process -- not just the output -- should be transparent.
--Arthur Schopenhauer quotes (German Philosopher, 1788-1860)
Comments
twitter
2009-09-29 03:06:10