๐Ÿก is a user on social.tchncs.de. You can follow them or interact with them if you have an account anywhere in the fediverse. If you don't, you can sign up here.

Github is now a fully owned, proprietary tool of Microsoft.

It's time to decide.

Do we as a community allow our future to depend upon commercial interests of a company that to this day spreads FUD and minimizes our impact when it suits their plans?

Or do we step up, do what we do best and take our code to somewhere created by the us for us and the good of the community?

This isn't about hating Microsoft. It's about loving our own sovereignty and controlling our *own* future.

Please Boost.

@satanya Yes, it was. That was a problem. Now it's a problem being actively exploited by Microsoft for their own gain. Does that mean we shouldn't fix the original problem?

@Blort I just honestly never saw proprietary websites as a problem. You choose exactly what data you give them. Unlike proprietary software that runs on your own machine, there's nothing posing a threat to one's "freedom".
๐Ÿก @Blort

@satanya Also, "just choose what data to give them" is problematic as it becomes harder and harder to "choose" to not give data.

Take Facebook for example. Even if you choose to never post there, they have a profile created for you based on all the websites that you've visited that use their pixel/like button/comments widget. Having to run software to try and block all that, is yet another barrier to opting out, catching more people unaware. Why support that kind of thing?

ยท Tusky ยท 0 ยท 0
@Blort I absolutely agree, but my point was that it takes MS to buy Github for people to screech "propietary!!" even when it always has been. This thought that some tech companies are more ethical than others is absurd. Everyone wants to make money.

@satanya

I do agree that it's sad that people ignored this issue before the MS buyout, and that all businesses are under the same pressure to put profits before people.

The creation of the public benefit corporations in the US goes a small way to mitigating the problem by limiting liability when one puts public good before profit. Companies are run by people though, with different ideologies that get them doing more or less evil things, so I do think some companies are worse.