• kadup@lemmy.world
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      2 days ago

      No, that’s the OpenSource Initiative’s definition for what they endorse.

      Open source quite literally means the source is open. That’s it. Otherwise there would be absolutely no point in having terms like FOSS or libre or whatever else.

      They’re not OSI approved, but that’s about it. Ubuntu is not FSF approved, and guess what, it’s still a GNU operating system. We are not forced to follow definitions from specific orgs.

      • baduhai@sopuli.xyz
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        2 days ago

        You can follow whatever you think is best. I’ll stick to and evangilise what I view to be the correct definition of open source.

        Ubuntu is not FSF approved, and guess what, it’s still a GNU operating system

        What makes Ubuntu a GNU operating system isn’t the fact that it’s FSF approved, it’s the fact that it uses GNU tools.

        • kadup@lemmy.world
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          2 days ago

          What makes Ubuntu a GNU operating system isn’t the fact that it’s FSF approved, it’s the fact that it uses GNU tools.

          Exactly. You’re precisely right. Which is why:

          What makes software open source isn’t the fact that it’s OSI approved, it’s the fact that the source is open for scrutiny.

          • baduhai@sopuli.xyz
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            2 days ago

            What? The two things have nothing to do with each other. A GNU operating system doesn’t need to be open source or have its source code available anywhere. A GNU operating system just means it uses GNU tools.

            You could write a new kernel from scratch, never distribute a single character of the source code, make an operating system with your new kernel along with GNU tools, and even sell your operating system, which the GPL allows for. The GNU tools would still be open source, sure, but your operating system would be neither open source, nor have its source code completely available.