| Some
information on the copyleft/opensource movement:
from:
http://www.alternet.org/story/13494
(published under copyleft)
The
Great Open Source Giveaway By Graham Lawton, New Scientist. Posted July 1, 2002.
Massive fortunes are built on great ideas. So why are some giving
these ideas away for free? Cola, periodicals, encyclopedia, even
legal advice are all going open source.
If
you've been to a computer show in recent months you might have
seen it: a shiny silver drink can with a ring-pull logo and
the words "opencola" on the side. Inside is a fizzy
drink that tastes very much like Coca-Cola. Or is it Pepsi?
There's something else written on the can, though, which sets
the drink apart. It says "check out the source at opencola.com." Go
to that Web address and you'll see something that's not available
on Coca-Cola's website, or Pepsi's -- the recipe for cola. For
the first time ever, you can make the real thing in your own
home.
OpenCola is the world's first "open source" consumer
product. By calling it open source, its manufacturer is saying
that instructions for making it are freely available. Anybody
can make the drink, and anyone can modify and improve on the
recipe as long as they, too, release their recipe into the public
domain. As a way of doing business it's rather unusual -- the
Coca-Cola Company doesn't make a habit of giving away precious
commercial secrets. But that's the point.
OpenCola is the most prominent sign yet that a long-running
battle between rival philosophies in software development has
spilt over into the rest of the world. What started as a technical
debate over the best way to debug computer programs is developing
into a political battle over the ownership of knowledge and how
it is used, between those who put their faith in the free circulation
of ideas and those who prefer to designate them "intellectual
property." No one knows what the outcome will be. But in
a world of growing opposition to corporate power, restrictive
intellectual property rights and globalisation, open source is
emerging as a possible alternative, a potentially potent means
of fighting back. And you're helping to test its value right
now.
The open source movement originated in 1984 when computer scientist
Richard Stallman quit his job at MIT and set up the Free Software
Foundation. His aim was to create high-quality software that
was freely available to everybody. Stallman's beef was with commercial
companies that smother their software with patents and copyrights
and keep the source code -- the original program, written in
a computer language such as C++ -- a closely guarded secret.
Stallman saw this as damaging. It generated poor-quality, bug-ridden
software. And worse, it choked off the free flow of ideas. Stallman
fretted that if computer scientists could no longer learn from
one another's code, the art of programming would stagnate (New
Scientist, 12 December 1998, p 42).
Stallman's move resonated round the computer science community
and now there are thousands of similar projects. The star of
the movement is Linux, an operating system created by Finnish
student Linus Torvalds in the early 1990s and installed on around
18 million computers worldwide.
What sets open source software apart from commercial software
is the fact that it's free, in both the political and the economic
sense. If you want to use a commercial product such as Windows
XP or Mac OS X you have to pay a fee and agree to abide by a
licence that stops you from modifying or sharing the software.
But if you want to run Linux or another open source package,
you can do so without paying a penny -- although several companies
will sell you the software bundled with support services. You
can also modify the software in any way you choose, copy it and
share it without restrictions. This freedom acts as an open invitation
-- some say challenge -- to its users to make improvements. As
a result, thousands of volunteers are constantly working on Linux,
adding new features and winkling out bugs. Their contributions
are reviewed by a panel and the best ones are added to Linux.
For programmers, the kudos of a successful contribution is its
own reward. The result is a stable, powerful system that adapts
rapidly to technological change. Linux is so successful that
even IBM installs it on the computers it sells.
To maintain this benign state of affairs, open source software
is covered by a special legal instrument called the General Public
License. Instead of restricting how the software can be used,
as a standard software license does, the GPL -- often known as
a "copyleft" -- grants as much freedom as possible
(see www.fsf.org/licenses/gpl.html). Software released under
the GPL (or a similar copyleft licence) can be copied, modified
and distributed by anyone, as long as they, too, release it under
a copyleft. That restriction is crucial, because it prevents
the material from being co-opted into later proprietary products.
It also makes open source software different from programs that
are merely distributed free of charge. In FSF's words, the GPL "makes
it free and guarantees it remains free."
Open source has proved a very successful way of writing software.
But it has also come to embody a political stand -- one that
values freedom of expression, mistrusts corporate power, and
is uncomfortable with private ownership of knowledge. It's "a
broadly libertarian view of the proper relationship between individuals
and institutions", according to open source guru Eric Raymond.
But it's not just software companies that lock knowledge away
and release it only to those prepared to pay. Every time you
buy a CD, a book, a magazine, even a can of Coca-Cola, you're
forking out for access to someone else's intellectual property.
Your money buys you the right to listen to, read or consume the
contents, but not to rework them, or make copies and redistribute
them. No surprise, then, that people within the open source movement
have asked whether their methods would work on other products.
As yet no one's sure -- but plenty of people are trying it.
Take OpenCola. Although originally intended as a promotional
tool to explain open source software, the drink has taken on
a life of its own. The Toronto-based OpenCola company has become
better known for the drink than the software it was supposed
to promote. Laird Brown, the company's senior strategist, attributes
its success to a widespread mistrust of big corporations and
the "proprietary nature of almost everything." A website
selling the stuff has shifted 150,000 cans. Politically minded
students in the US have started mixing up the recipe for parties.
OpenCola is a happy accident and poses no real threat to Coke
or Pepsi, but elsewhere people are deliberately using the open
source model to challenge entrenched interests. One popular target
is the music industry. At the forefront of the attack is the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco group set up
to defend civil liberties in the digital society. In April of
last year, the EFF published a model copyleft called the Open
Audio License (OAL). The idea is to let musicians take advantage
of digital music's properties -- ease of copying and distribution
-- rather than fighting against them. Musicians who release music
under an OAL consent to their work being freely copied, performed,
reworked and reissued, as long as these new products are released
under the same licence. They can then rely on "viral distribution" to
get heard. "If the people like the music, they will support
the artist to ensure the artist can continue to make music," says
Robin Gross of the EFF.
It's a little early to judge whether the OAL will capture imaginations
in the same way as OpenCola. But it's already clear that some
of the strengths of open source software simply don't apply to
music. In computing, the open source method lets users improve
software by eliminating errors and inefficient bits of code,
but it's not obvious how that might happen with music. In fact,
the music is not really "open source" at all. The files
posted on the OAL music website http://www.openmusicregistry.org
so far are all MP3s and Ogg Vorbises -- formats which allow you
to listen but not to modify.
It's also not clear why any mainstream artists would ever choose
to release music under an OAL. Many bands objected to the way
Napster members circulated their music behind their backs, so
why would they now allow unrestricted distribution, or consent
to strangers fiddling round with their music? Sure enough, you're
unlikely to have heard of any of the 20 bands that have posted
music on the registry. It's hard to avoid the conclusion that
Open Audio amounts to little more than an opportunity for obscure
artists to put themselves in the shop window.
The problems with open music, however, haven't put people off
trying open source methods elsewhere. Encyclopedias, for example,
look like fertile ground. Like software, they're collaborative
and modular, need regular upgrading, and improve with peer review.
But the first attempt, a free online reference called Nupedia,
hasn't exactly taken off. Two years on, only 25 of its target
60,000 articles have been completed. "At the current rate
it will never be a large encyclopedia," says editor-in-chief
Larry Sanger. The main problem is that the experts Sanger wants
to recruit to write articles have little incentive to participate.
They don't score academic brownie points in the same way software
engineers do for upgrading Linux, and Nupedia can't pay them.
It's a problem that's inherent to most open source products:
how do you get people to chip in? Sanger says he's exploring
ways to make money out of Nupedia while preserving the freedom
of its content. Banner adverts are a possibility. But his best
hope is that academics start citing Nupedia articles so authors
can earn academic credit.
There's another possibility: trust the collective goodwill of
the open source community. A year ago, frustrated by the treacle-like
progress of Nupedia, Sanger started another encyclopedia named
Wikipedia (the name is taken from open source Web software called
WikiWiki that allows pages to be edited by anyone on the Web).
It's a lot less formal than Nupedia: anyone can write or edit
an article on any topic, which probably explains the entries
on beer and Star Trek. But it also explains its success. Wikipedia
already contains 19,000 articles and is acquiring several thousand
more each month. "People like the idea that knowledge can
and should be freely distributed and developed," says Sanger.
Over time, he reckons, thousands of dabblers should gradually
fix any errors and fill in any gaps in the articles until Wikipedia
evolves into an authoritative encyclopedia with hundreds of thousands
of entries.
Another experiment that's proved its worth is the OpenLaw project
at the Berkman Center for Internet and Society at Harvard Law
School. Berkman lawyers specialise in cyberlaw -- hacking, copyright,
encryption and so on -- and the centre has strong ties with the
EFF and the open source software community. In 1998 faculty member
Lawrence Lessig, now at Stanford Law School, was asked by online
publisher Eldritch Press to mount a legal challenge to US copyright
law. Eldritch takes books whose copyright has expired and publishes
them on the Web, but new legislation to extend copyright from
50 to 70 years after the author's death was cutting off its supply
of new material. Lessig invited law students at Harvard and elsewhere
to help craft legal arguments challenging the new law on an online
forum, which evolved into OpenLaw.
Normal law firms write arguments the way commercial software
companies write code. Lawyers discuss a case behind closed doors,
and although their final product is released in court, the discussions
or "source code" that produced it remain secret. In
contrast, OpenLaw crafts its arguments in public and releases
them under a copyleft. "We deliberately used free software
as a model," says Wendy Selzer, who took over OpenLaw when
Lessig moved to Stanford. Around 50 legal scholars now work on
Eldritch's case, and OpenLaw has taken other cases, too.
"The gains are much the same as for software," Selzer
says. "Hundreds of people scrutinise the 'code' for bugs,
and make suggestions how to fix it. And people will take underdeveloped
parts of the argument, work on them, then patch them in." Armed
with arguments crafted in this way, OpenLaw has taken Eldritch's
case -- deemed unwinnable at the outset -- right through the
system and is now seeking a hearing in the Supreme Court.
There are drawbacks, though. The arguments are in the public
domain right from the start, so OpenLaw can't spring a surprise
in court. For the same reason, it can't take on cases where confidentiality
is important. But where there's a strong public interest element,
open sourcing has big advantages. Citizens' rights groups, for
example, have taken parts of OpenLaw's legal arguments and used
them elsewhere. "People use them on letters to Congress,
or put them on flyers," Selzer says.
The open content movement is still at an early stage and it's
hard to predict how far it will spread. "I'm not sure there
are other areas where open source would work," says Sanger. "If
there were, we might have started it ourselves." Eric Raymond
has also expressed doubts. In his much-quoted 1997 essay, The
Cathedral and the Bazaar, he warned against applying open source
methods to other products. "Music and most books are not
like software, because they don't generally need to be debugged
or maintained," he wrote. Without that need, the products
gain little from others' scrutiny and reworking, so there's little
benefit in open sourcing. "I do not want to weaken the winning
argument for open sourcing software by tying it to a potential
loser," he wrote.
But Raymond's views have now shifted subtly. "I'm more
willing to admit that I might talk about areas other than software
someday," he told New Scientist. "But not now." The
right time will be once open source software has won the battle
of ideas, he says. He expects that to happen around 2005.
And so the experiment goes on. As a contribution to it, New
Scientist and AlterNet have agreed to issue this article under
a copyleft. That means you can copy it, redistribute it, reprint
it in whole or in part, and generally play around with it as
long as you, too, release your version under a copyleft and abide
by the other terms and conditions in the licence. We also ask
that you inform us of any use you make of the article, by e-mailing
copyleft@newscientist.com.
One reason for doing so is that by releasing it under a copyleft,
we can print the recipe for OpenCola without violating its copyleft.
If nothing else, that demonstrates the power of the copyleft
to spread itself. But there's another reason, too: to see what
happens. To my knowledge this is the first magazine article published
under a copyleft. Who knows what the outcome will be? Perhaps
the article will disappear without a trace. Perhaps it will be
photocopied, redistributed, re-edited, rewritten, cut and pasted
onto websites, handbills and articles all over the world. I don't
know -- but that's the point. It's not up to me any more. The
decision belongs to all of us.
THE INFORMATION IN THIS ARTICLE IS FREE. It may be copied, distributed
and/or modified under the conditions set down in the Design Science
License published by Michael Stutz (which presumably used to be
available) at http://dsl.org/copyleft/dsl.txt |