Why Linux is Bad for Freedom
WE THE USERS need an operating system that we control. We should reject operating systems that are controlled by trillion dollar corporations like Google, Amazon, Microsoft, and Facebook. Although it may label itself as free software, we cannot rely on it to protect our freedoms.
Linux is controlled by exploitative corporations
- IBM
- Microsoft
- https://www.zdnet.com/article/top-five-linux-contributor-microsoft/
- "The Linux Foundation sponsors the work of Linux creator Linus Torvalds and lead maintainer Greg Kroah-Hartman and is supported by members such as AT&T, Cisco, Facebook,[5] Fujitsu, Google, Hitachi, Huawei, IBM, Intel, Microsoft,[6] NEC, Oracle, Orange S.A., Qualcomm, Samsung,[7] Tencent, and VMware, as well as developers from around the world." These corporations donate tens of millions of dollars annually. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Linux_foundation
- Microsoft Azure is a proprietary platform and yet is actively being promoted by the Linux Foundation because of Microsoft's financial contributions
- Google
- Google, Money and Censorship in Free Software Communities, https://debian.community/google-money-censorship-free-software/
Google money pays for interns to do work for him. It appears he has a massive conflict of interest when using the former role to censor posts about Google, which relates to the latter role and its benefits.Why are these donations and conflicts of interest hidden from the free software community who rely on, interact with and contribute to Debian in so many ways? Why doesn’t Debian provide a level playing field, why does money from Google get this veil of secrecy?The Debian Social Contract[3] states that Debian does not hide our problems. Corporate influence is one of the most serious problems most people can imagine, why has nothing been disclosed?
Here are the top donors to the Linux Foundation:
Platinum Members (USD $500k annually) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
AT&T | Tencent | Fujitsu | IBM | Microsoft | Oracle | VMware | |
Cisco Systems | Intel | Qualcomm | Hitachi | Huawei | NEC | Samsung Electronics | |
Gold Members (USD $100k annually) | |||||||
Alibaba Cloud | Baidu | Citrix Systems | Dell EMC | Doky | SUSE | BlackRock | Accenture |
Hart | Oath | Uber | Toyota | Renesas Electronics | Panasonic | Sony | Toshiba |
Silver Members | |||||||
Aarna Networks | Comcast | Sprint | Arista Networks | Canonical | PANTHEON.tech | Tencent | |
Desotech | AMD | Fujitsu |
Do we the users have any voice or say in the development process? It may be nominally free but if we have no control over it, it is almost as bad as proprietary software.
Source code is too complex, average users can no longer understand it
According to a report from the Linux Foundation, these are the top 10 corporate contributors in 2015-2016:
Company | Changes | Percent of total |
Intel | 14,384 | 12.9% |
Red Hat | 8,987 | 8.0% |
None | 8,571 | 7.7% |
Unknown | 7,582 | 6.8% |
Linaro | 4,515 | 4.0% |
Samsung | 4,338 | 3.9% |
SUSE | 3,619 | 3.2% |
IBM | 2,995 | 2.7% |
Consultants | 2,938 | 2.6% |
Renesas Electronics | 2,239 | 2.0% |
Can a reasonably intelligent, amateur software developer be able to understand and modify the code that these corporations write? If not, then linux has become like proprietary software. It's so complex that we have lost the ability to view and modify the source code.
Linux Foundation Board of Directors are Corporate
The Linux Foundation's board of directors are not made up of users but entirely of corporate representatives. These corporations have repeatedly shown that they have no commitment towards user freedom. Why should we trust them to oversee our operating system?
Linux's developers are accountable to its corporate sponsors, not to us the users.
Aggressive censorship through code of conducts
Linux adopted the Contributor Covenant Code of Conduct
This would make it possible for developers to be banned for disagreeing with homosexuality, affirmative action programs, or merely just criticizing poor code quality. The Contributor Covenant defines harassment to include:
This would make it possible to ban anyone for almost any reason. In fact, even Linus Torvalds was forced to take a break for his violation.
The author of the Contributor Covenant, Coraline Ada Ehmke, is also the author of several "ethical licenses". These unfree licenses would give software developers the power to sue a user for using software in a way they don't approve of if they consider it a human rights violation. This "ethical license" would not even require a court ruling to determine if it is a violation or not -- the developer gets to decide what constitutes a human rights violation.
This is an extreme form of censorship which will be used to sue opposition into silence.
It even affected the founder Linus Torvalds himself: https://www.theverge.com/2018/10/22/18011854/linus-torvalds-linux-kernel-development-return-code-of-conduct.
This implies censorship of people who disagree with "social justice" activism.