This is a discussion about the changing open source landscape, from the perspective of an open source software engineer. For quick takeaways, see the overview below. You can also listen to an informal (shortened) audio version via SoundCloud. I recommend reading first.
When I was in graduate school, open source had clear definition for me. It meant that code was provided openly under a particular kind of license, and the license detailed to what degree it could be re-used with or without modification. It meant transparency, and it usually meant good intentions, because there was an inherent decision to encourage openness and sharing versus coveting the code for any selfish reason. In academia, it coincided with a movement around open science, meaning having transparency every step along the way.
I could break down different projects into two bins at that timepoint. There were established, big projects like nginx, Linux, and redis, and there were smaller (lesser known) projects like code released by an academic lab. For example, everything that I or my lab created was smacked onto GitHub, and had an MIT license added by default. I was really proud of that. When I encountered colleagues that didn’t want to share simple scripts, it seemed silly and out of practice. Everyone was afraid of scooping, but I was bluntly ruthless - I truly believed that if someone could do something better than me, they should. I could move on to other things. But really, I didn’t see any issue with having replication in work - replication is the fundamental basis of the scientific method.
Open source at this time seemed to revolve around licenses and control. There was still some gray area between “big well known project” and “the code I wrote last weekend to scrape Pokemon.” They both might have the same license, but one felt more established than the other. It had a presence online, branding, and a much larger community. What was clear to me, however, was that we didn’t have a chicken or the egg problem. For these projects, the code and community came before the branding. The beautiful sites and other community interactions resulted from a thriving community with a lot of people excited about the project.
So what happened? The gray area got bigger, or maybe it was just me that started to notice shades of purple and blues. For much larger projects, I started to realize association with business models, whether it be a nonprofit, LLC, or fully established corporation. It started to become a chicken or the egg problem, because I wasn’t sure if branding and online markers of success were created after a project took up, or pre-empively to then help it take off. All through this party literally and figuratively at the Farm (Stanford) the licenses (mostly) stayed the same. It’s never really been about them.
The growing gray
Let’s zoom ahead to today - and now the grey area has expanded. We have GitHub projects that have many qualities of (what used to be) small, selfless academic projects. They grew organically and were primarily driven by community needs, and work was done by community members. We also have many of the top repositories, whether that be ranked based on stars or contributions, associated with corporate entities. The corporate entities typically have rigorous release and rules for the community, so the repos themselves are carefully put together with codes of conducts, tools to assert agreement about licensing, and guides for contribution. The documentation is flawless, and the logos are adorable. If you started with open source recently, you probably don’t think twice about big company names having GitHub organizations, but even back in early graduate school, this wasn’t a thing. This has me constantly questioning - what does open source mean? Is it about a license? Is it something else? What does it mean to be sustainable, and how can we quantify this change that seems to be happening? “Open source” is a general term that is thrown around that can refer to any kind of project along this spectrum. So how then, do we actually define open source, is it even about the license, or something deeper?
Open source also describes a culture
It’s about other things, but the strongest factor is culture. I’ve talked about this before - sustenance of a project not only depends on having maintainers (people) and a code base on GitHub, is also relies upon the contributors feeling good about what they are doing. The problem today is that the term “open source” is thrown around casually, and it means different things to different people. Let’s step back.
There are two very different kinds of open source, and perhaps this is more representative of a stage of development than a tangible difference in the projects themselves. There are
- the organically grown, new and green small projects that don't have definition beyond a license and code base
- the projects that, for one reason or another, are large enough to have some kind of business entity directly behind them, or sponsors from the same entity.
There are several large, (still community driven) projects that I see falling into a category of their own. For this discussion, what I’m primarily interested in is the new wave of open source, meaning the corporate controlled projects, vs. the smaller community and academic ones.
The business of open source
If you didn’t notice, open source is now a business. Here is the typical story for a corporate open source model. First, a company has some awesome internal software. They realize it’s awesome, and that they would go much farther by opening it up to the community. They likely assembled a team of developers just to maintain it, and a company wide guide for “How to Do Open Source.” There might be a marketing department involved to help with branding, and a designer to make it appealing. As soon as it’s thrown out there and gets the attention of the world, the developers that follow the latest trends on social media start to take notice. The repository gets used, starred, and contributed to. After some time, maybe there is a conference. They give away stickers, overuse the work “rockstar,” and everyone is made to feel empowered, and like part of something bigger. This is the corporate model of open source, and it’s great, because it means we have come so far since the days of buying software in boxes at Staples. It’s better for business to share code and work together.
But, why shouldn’t every project have a business model?
Couldn’t it be the case that some smaller projects would appreciate help on the code base, but don’t operate the same as a business? Yes, this is suggesting that they don’t know how to deal with monetary contributions beyond putting them into a bank account, and that every project doesn’t necessarily fit with a business model.
But what about sustainability?
Corporate open source tells us that we have to package projects alongside a business model. For example, the “open core” model says that some level of the software is provided for free (the core) and then advanced features or services are paid for [1]. Some projects that were from the original wave of “traditional” open source have (I think) felt taken advantage of, and as a result have resorted to doing things like having dual licenses, or coming up with their own license all together. Again, there is this coupling of licensing with the amount of control that an entity wants to maintain over a code base. I’m uncomfortable with a lot of the current conversation not because these models are bad, but because of square pegs and round holes.
Why are we trying to fit everything into the same box?
Hold the phone, Shelly. Why does open source have to fit into a consumerist model, and why does it have to be marketed? Just because this new wave of projects are corporate driven and have business plans, does this have to define open source? I think the main issue here is that we’re really dealing with two things. This new wave of open source is really a subtype of corporate or commercial open source, and it’s not to be confused with traditional, or non-corporate open source. Selling an associated product or service is not evil. However, having an expectation that “to be sustainable, there must be funding and a business model” is not something that feels right to me. With open source projects that I care about, it’s never felt like it’s about monetary sustainability. It feels more like selling an ideology. The software I care about I care about not to sell it like something on Amazon, but to sell a method for how a process can be done (containers built, monitoring tasks, continuous integration checks, etc.) When I am alone with my thoughts I am not excited by the external rewards of a project, or some potential to make profit, but rather the interactions that I have with the community, and this deep, vulnerable hope that I’m working on something for the greater good.
How does commercial open source hurt culture?
I can’t speak for others, but I can speak for myself. Fitting open source into a business model is hard because it doesn’t fit. As soon as a project tries to, it gets a little less fun. You aren’t just there because you believe in it. The original excitement and disbelief that others value the project and contribute voluntarily is replaced by fear of project death and lack of sustainability. You start to obsess over business models, and being on the bleeding edge of the industry. You start to worry about competitors. You maybe spend a lot more time trying to sell your project than actually working on it. The fun turns to stress, and obligation. I would hypothesize that it’s a lot easier for corporate open source, specifically projects that were always associated with a company, to thrive because they never had to transition from being totally free, to something that seems selfish. Maybe we know and accept the idea of a company and making money, so we don’t feel betrayed because there is no 180 degree turn or change of mind about the reason that the project exists.
To the community, any initiative to make profit smells like greed
The problem is that as soon as a project takes on a business model, that’s making a statement that the maintainers behind the project have changed their incentives. They are are selfish. Their incentives can’t be about being for the greater good, even if they started that way. How then, can we have sustainable open source software, something that has resources to stand the test of time, without branding it as selfish?
I don’t know the answer to that question, but I would guess that what makes projects most (naturally) sustainable is having a focus of development for and by the community. This means adding features that the community needs, and not ones that are in the company’s best interest. It means treating every user as a first class citizen, and not abandoning the community that was previously supported. It also means that you go out of your way to support users and developers of your project. You make sure they are inspired, having fun, and not overworked, stressed, and tired.
How Developers Thrive
I’m an open source developer. I span academia and industry quite a bit, and I’ve interacted with different communities. I understand them very little, in fact I’d say many are very different but appear almost the same when slapped onto GitHub. At the end of the day, I’m not someone that can get behind an aspiration for cashing in, and being eaten by a bigger fish. My love for software development is tightly coupled with an idealistic dreamer that likes to believe I’m working for some greater good. The contributions that I make are done at my own jurisdiction. My top incentives are not metrics of performance, but rather how excited I am by something I’m working on, and how much fun I have to work on it. I believe that the fundamental component, the magical feeling that we get from open source, isn’t because of business models, expensive conferences, or external incentives. It’s the people. It’s the culture. It’s having fun with your tribe and working on something that will survive because it’s great. I am free.
What if this passion could be packaged and supported officially?
Now imagine that there is an actual career track for an open source developer. There is some body with governance that hires them. Companies go to the body and state projects they support. The developers are then paid to focus on those projects. Or maybe companies themselves just hire open source developers, and pay them to only work on open source. They don’t need to do it on top of a full time job, or in their free time during weekends and evenings. The developers are best matched to contribute to the projects that they care most about.
Should all open source projects be supported?
And now, an unpopular opinion. It goes without saying that if some projects can stand the test of time because people care about them, others will not. Communities dry up, and small groups of developers get tired. Many projects simply won’t stand the test of time, and in laymans terms, one would say they aren’t sustainable. But is this a bad thing? I don’t think so. The landscape of these projects is one of survival of the fittest. It might not be a fair game given some unfair advantage or growing to be well known, but that’s the world that we live in - it’s not fair. I want to argue that a lot of projects should go away. If a project is useful and valued, the community won’t let it die. If it’s not, or if the community isn’t healthy, it should be allowed to die.
The Open Source Heartbeat
What can you do, as an individual? Close your eyes. Thinking about your projects, and the people you work with, and take a snapshot of the feeling that you get. Are you having fun? How often do you laugh, and smile, or work really hard on something and feel something like triumph over challenge? How often are you inspired, and how easy is it to share that with others? These are what I believe the true metrics of a healthy open source project. It’s the community spirit that gives a project its heartbeat. You can put any project on life support and it will continue to breath, but it’s not the same thing.
What can you do, as an organization? I think it’s okay for businesses to keep focusing on these business models, but not to send the message that every project out there must have one. You should encourage your employees to work on open source. If you have employees that are passionate about a particular project, well you have a match made in heaven. But what about the others? If you force them to work on something they don’t find inspiring, it could be the case that they learn to like it, but more likely not. How about instead, let them be free? Give them time to look around, and get excited about projects. Give them space to work on the ones that they care about. Don’t tell them that they have to, but show and encourage them that they can. Open source projects that aren’t company maintained come out of everywhere, and they need help. Companies assume that the same units of contribution that would help a business entity might help these projects. For some this is the case, but for many, they aren’t set up for that. What if instead of trying to shove these projects into corporate business models, we placed value on the project themself, and set free an army of engineers to be free, and work on a subset that are meaningful for their goals?
Overview
Let’s quickly summarize.
Open source has subtypes
The first takehome point is that opensource is not one concept. There seem to be subtypes of open source, the most prominent one this new kind of corporate open source, and this does not mean that every project should try to fit into that mold.
Sustainability does not mean consumerism
The next point is about sustainability. Corporate open source is arguably okay in that they can hire an army of maintainers, and people to create branding for a project. But what about the smaller, non corporate projects? We already stated that it’s commonly not the best fit to shove them into a business model. For these projects, I want to suggest that sustainability comes from larger companies that have armies of engineers giving back. If they’ve truly realized the value of open source, other than hosting their own projects, they should build in protocol into their companies to practice a little tit for tat.
Open source calls for new jobs
Imagine how the world could be different. Imagine if an open source software engineer was a fully accredicted profession, where there was some governing body to manage sponsors, and passionate disparate engineers worked as a team to make projects valued by the community better. Imagine if contributing to open source was so valued that it was built into every companies protocol. Imagine if the culture of open source didn’t create a divide of haves and have nots, where conferences were available and affordable to all kinds of software engineers.
Community is the heartbeat
And finally, let’s not forget about community. Regardless of whether you are home grown or corporate grown, if your community isn’t strong, inspired, and people aren’t having fun, you’re in trouble.
SoundCloud
Suggested Citation:
Sochat, Vanessa. "The Changing Open Source Landscape." @vsoch (blog), 24 May 2019, https://vsoch.github.io/2019/os-thoughts/ (accessed 18 Nov 24).