What is to be done about companies who use open source software to create something derived from open source, but provide it as a Web service and don't contribute their changes back to the community?&nbsp; Aren't they violating the spirit, if not the letter, of the open source agreement?&nbsp; I don't think so, for a variety of reasons.</p>

Serdar Yegulalp, Contributor

May 13, 2008

3 Min Read

What is to be done about companies who use open source software to create something derived from open source, but provide it as a Web service and don't contribute their changes back to the community?  Aren't they violating the spirit, if not the letter, of the open source agreement?  I don't think so, for a variety of reasons.

It's a topic that a number of other folks already have weighed in on -- Matt Asay and Gordon Haff at CNET, for instance -- and there's a lot of hesitancy about whether or not this is the monster issue it might be.  Here's my take.

The first is the notion of such outfits "not giving anything back".  Sure, a closed source Web service has its drawbacks -- you can't see how it runs, or take it and build a derivative work on it from the inside out.  But if said service has APIs that can be accessed by third parties, then you get the next best thing -- something that can be re-used and mashed up.  That sounds like a form of giving back that shouldn't be underrated; look at how much is being done with such things by the broad mass of people, many of whom have probably never heard the term "open source."

Still, there's also the problem of impermanence.  If I provide a closed source Web service, open APIs or not, who's to say I won't be around in five years?  Wouldn't it be best to give back in a way that is a little more durable?  This is probably the toughest issue of the bunch, because it plugs right into something else that open source does best: it allows software to survive calamity.  If you create a great Web service and it evaporates because you can't pay your hosting bills, and you don't choose to release the innovations you made, haven't you deprived the community of some great work?

Here's where the assertions become particularly hard to swallow.  In order for this to be true, you have to assume that the great work in question couldn't have been done by anyone else.  Perhaps, then, the best response to a closed source Web service built on open source software is to create something like what you see, and in a way that does give back, instead of singling out the original creators for vilification.  Sure, it's a duplication of effort, but it wouldn't be the first time that happened.

Fabrizio Capobianco (he of the open source mobile messaging app Funambol) has his own answer to these issues.  He drafted his own modified version of the GPL, the Honest Public License, which specifically spells out that code shared with the public in the form of a service also has to be given back to the community.  A good idea for folks moving forward, but what about the mass of GPLv2 software out there which will probably not be relicensed anytime soon?

A lot of this seems to come down to what people feel is the real spirit of the open source agreement -- mainly, that freeloading (specifically, this kind of freeloading) should not be tolerated.  I have the feeling that any licensing agreement for open source, no matter how tightly worded, is always going to have some kind of workaround or end run.  We might as well deal with it as gracefully as we can, and the exact method is always going to come down to each one of us individually.

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Serdar Yegulalp

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