GerardM is not alone.
I do agree, with Gerards view. Why this hostility to commerce, I don't understand? Let's use them for our purposes in stead of renounce them!
Kind regards Londenp
2007/1/20, Gerard Meijssen gerard.meijssen@gmail.com:
Anthony schreef:
On 1/19/07, George Herbert george.herbert@gmail.com wrote:
You're giving several people the impression that you are trying to bag on several corporations.
I'm not even sure what it means "to bag on" a corporation, so I guess I'll take your word on it.
This is not the place for merely bagging on the corporations. It's one of many places where real serious discussions could start on what to do next.
Well, this isn't the place for praising corporations either, then.
It's not praising them to note that they're an integral part of how the Internet's typical user experience works, and how Wikipedia is being used by typical users.
It is praising Google to claim that "Google did a world of good to the Open Content movement".
Google is in no way a part of the open content movement. In fact, much of what they do is directly opposed to the open content movement. APIs that can't be used without agreeing to a highly restrictive terms of service, patents which inhibit others from building upon their innovative approach to search, tons of content all Copyright (c) Google with all rights reserved. They even throw their watermarks and copyright notices on public domain content trying to claim it as their own.
Google runs a search engine that is smart enough to put Wikipedia articles at the top of searches for which a Wikipedia article is one of the most relevant results. Whoop-de-do, that's not doing a world of good to the Open Content movement, that's making a popular search engine so you can sell lots of ads.
Anthony
Hoi, The open content movement is not living in a vacuum. When you insists on everybody to behave like you would see the world and be overly negative about everyone that is not like that, you must live in a frustrating world. Google did and does a world of good. It is not an open source organisation but it has played a crucial role in making us what we are. It has contributed significantly to Open Source projects. One of their best policies is that they create their software in such a way that you can move away from Google if you so choose. If you want to reduce it to only "they did it for their own reason" fine, but you do not convince me.
In the mean time, the WMF has a problem that is increasingly serious, we got a million and a bit out of our fund-raiser where we need a million and a half. Where we could use a million and one more. We predict that our growth is exponential. In my mind the biggest problem we have is a culture where other organisations, particular organisations that earn money are trash talked. Whoop-de-do that is just like it is baby; freedom of expression. And yes, but it is utterly irresponsible. In the case of Google, they made us and continue to make us as big as we are, and your aversion to selling ads does not detract one iota from that. They did not have to do such a thing. Were they in the pocket of the big content owners, they would not have done so and consequently we would not have been the big relevant movement that is changing the way people look at Open Content and licensing in the first place.
I started this thread because to me it is essential to understand who our friends are. It is important to understand with whom we share values. It is important to understand for whom Open Content and Open Source can become more relevant and why. By engaging our friends and our could be friends, it is possible to increase the relevancy of what we do. We increase the potential for the WMF to realise its aims. It is sad that some choose to have such a narrow negative view on the world that they destroy opportunities. It is a fact of life that they are part of our community and it is for that reason that I feel it is necessary to repeat; Google has been good to us.
Thanks, GerardM
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