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Oxide and Friends Twitter Space: October 24th, 2022

Open Source Inside Baseball

We've been holding a Twitter Space weekly on Mondays at 5p for about an hour. Even though it's not (yet?) a feature of Twitter Spaces, we have been recording them all; here is the recording for our Twitter Space for October 24th, 2022.

In addition to Bryan Cantrill and Adam Leventhal, our special guest was dear friend-of-Oxide, Stephen O'Grady. Other speakers on October 24th included Ian Rountree. (Did we miss your name and/or get it wrong? Drop a PR!)

Some of the topics we hit on, in the order that we hit them:

  • Monktoberfest - Red Monk's annual conference in Maine
  • @7:40 cheating in baseball
  • The shot heard 'round the world
  • For non-American and/or non-baseball fans "inside baseball" is an idiom meaning "an expert's take or opinion"
  • Also, Stephen, Bryan, and Adam love actual baseball so there was quite a bit of that as well...
  • For the baseball fans, the Bryce Harper at bat we were so excited about
  • @12:55 The main event
  • Stephen's The Dead End
  • @20:45 The smoke-filled room with CTOs collaborating
  • No concern for collateral damage to the industry, the future of software, see also hustle porn
  • Commons Clause
  • @20:55 EULA-like language
  • What does a EULA mean if I can build the software myself
  • Lack of case law around open-source licensing, even lack of legal precision in the language
  • lawyers messaging to other lawyers
  • trying to use a license to solve a business model problem
  • @29:40 Bryan's VC rant
  • VCs build to flip, short time horizons
  • using open-source downloads as a proxy for product-market-fit
  • You could not have built Google, Amazon, Meta - without open-source software
  • Pulling up the ladders
  • @41:45 Immanual Kant
  • The Categorical Imperative
  • One person littering isn't a big deal. Everyone littering is a big deal.
  • @51:40 Lower-hanging fruit in the industry, ripe for ruining
  • infrastructure middleware, market where people have historically been willing to throw money at it
  • Impossible to relicense projects with sufficiently large contributors and no assignment of copyright - Linux would be beyond impossible
  • left-pad incident
  • Uniqueness of Red Hat's evolution
  • Open is the default for today's developers, but that openness was hard fought and hard won

If we got something wrong or missed something, please file a PR! Our next Twitter space will likely be on Monday at 5p Pacific Time; stay tuned to our Twitter feeds for details. We'd love to have you join us, as we always love to hear from new speakers!