Copyright © 2003 Shlomi Fish
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.5 Licence (or at your option a greater version of it).
Revision History | ||
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Revision 2895 | 28 September 2009 | shlomif |
Corrected a lot of spelling/grammar/etc. problems. | ||
Revision 2826 | 24 September 2009 | shlomif |
Converted to DocBook/5, changed more text to Commonwealth spelling and made some other corrections (“a software”, “constitutional”, etc.). | ||
Revision 1593 | 12 May 2008 | shlomif |
Started keeping track of version. Changed the “book” schema to an “article”-based one. Changed more spelling to Commonwealth one. Changed the two-level of Ethics to “Ethical” and “Moral”. |
Table of Contents
The “open source” movement is perhaps the most important phenomenon in the software world today. Thousands of developers and millions of users worldwide create, maintain, support and use high-quality software packages, that are made available for everyone to use, modify and distribute. Many Objectivists may reject this movement on the premises of it being anti-Capitalistic in nature. The aim of this document is to show that they need not and should not.
This document will demonstrate that working on open source software is not anti-Capitalistic, and that it is also an objectively moral and healthy activity. It will explain why there is no dichotomy between the open source world and Objectivism, and why Objectivists can support it, without having guilt feelings of behaving un-Capitalistically.