[1] https://github.com/webpack/webpack.js.org/issues/3765
[2] https://github.com/webpack/webpack.js.org/issues/3762
Have we reached a point where open source will throw POC developers under the bus in order to score political virtue points?
It's a total trainwreck, and politics is used as a weapon in open source against political enemies through shut downs, egregious code of conduct policies and arbitrary enforcement actions.
By all means support whatever causes you believe in, write a blog post, donate to the cause and (most importantly - which is what a lot of companies conveniently omit in the case of BLM) fix your own internal issues related to that cause.
But if you're going to degrade the service you promised to provide as some sort of "support" it is just bullshit virtue-signaling and it is actively hurting people including those that are part of the cause you're supporting.
This is an open-source project so there's no liability or warranty attached to it and we have no right to expect anything, but nevertheless I will definitely keep this in mind next time I have to pick a technology or library and will make sure to evaluate them not only on their technical merits but also on their propensity to such bullshit.
It's obvious even they know their actions can't stand up to basic scrutiny, hence the immediate locking of the threads and even suspension of someone for daring to have the opinion that they shouldn't be doing it.
A dismissable banner for the cause that doesn't screw your users? Far less objectionable. It's baffling they went down that route, and it's emblematic of ideology clouding judgement.
Popular open source developers are using their platforms to advocate against oppression. This should be encouraged, not discourage - regardless of what your political leanings are.
Would you be just as upset if they wrote #AllLivesMatter? Probably not.
This post is using open source as a thinly veiled guise to rant about "SJW"s (the use of that term alone should disqualify it). This shouldn't be on HN.
What one person calls 'oppression' is another person's freedom. A drug-free society/the 'war on drugs' versus freedom of choice. Second amendment activists versus gun control. Freedom of expression versus various laws which either forbid or mandate the use of certain types of expression.
"How is 'all lives matter' divisive in any way?"
The response was "Oh, well, you know."
No, really, I don't. "All" seems like an inclusive quantifier.
The best understanding I can reach is that many of the arguments in circulation these days are NOT rational in nature.
> "WTF is the impulse behind changing #BlackLivesMatter to #AllLivesMatter. Do you crash strangers' funerals shouting I TOO HAVE FELT LOSS" - @arthur_affect on Twitter
Yes, weakening free licenses with constraints aligned to individual causes is problematic but that doesn't mean we should ignore all other issues of justice outside of those related to ownership and control. If anything, we need more conversations about the increasing inequalities and injustices caused by technology and the role we play within that. How can we do that without having "political" discussions in public? Why shouldn't entire open source communities have these discussions collectively?
> fmad89: DOCS LIVES MATTER!
Once it's alive, it's immortal on web archives. e.g.
Is this satire? I'm blown away otherwise.
No, this is not what they think, obviously.
The call is for developers to recognize the potential for abuse of the software they write, to use their means and their platforms to speak out against oppression, and to generally not be huge pieces of shit under the guise of purported software neutrality.
This post is extremely low quality. It lacks meaningful content, is basically just a "SJWs are ruining open source!" rant, and is poorly edited. I think this has no place on HN.
"open source" started in the 1990s, not as "an attempt to escape the clutches of proprietary and monopolistic companies like Microsoft and Apple" but as a way to make the source code part of the free software movement more palatable in proprietary and monopolistic companies like Microsoft and Apple.
And the GNU project started in 1983, before Microsoft or Apple had anything like their current influence. Apple didn't ship the first Macintosh until 1984, for example, and the Apple ][ opened computing domains far unlike the walled gardens outside of microcomputing.
If you go into open source to make the world a better place, then that's a political statement. Which might also explain why some open source programmers consider that open source development might not be the only way to make the world a better place.
There are of course other reasons that people go into open source. My statement is that there's no clear and obvious separation between the two.
Any activity related to changing or reinforcing the balance of power in a society is a political action as is any effort to prevent injustice. Free software is a movement to give more power to users and so is, by definition, a political movement
How do you even keep track? If someone asked me the political stances of my closest colleagues or largest software partners I couldn't even tell you.