[Discussioni] Perchè Google Chrome OS potrebbe offendere la comunita SL ?

Giovani Spagnolo giovani a telematicsfreedom.org
Ven 10 Lug 2009 18:55:32 CEST


/molto, molto... insightful !/

http://tech.yahoo.com/news/pcworld/20090710/tc_pcworld/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity


    Chrome OS Could Offend the Open Source Community

By Keir Thomas, PC World - Fri Jul 10, 2009 8:47AM ED

The announcement a few days ago of Google's new Chrome OS
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=131v4eile/*http://www.pcworld.com/article/168043/google_chrome_os_an_open_source_challenge_to_windows.html>
was simultaneously shocking and expected. It's a typically understated
and quietly ambitious move on behalf of Google. It's also proof -- if it
were needed -- that Google people are supremely smart. They have their
sights firmly set on the future as well as the here and now.

Chrome OS is initially targeted at netbook computers but it's
anticipated it will spread to more mainstream computing devices as time
goes on. Like Intel's Moblin OS
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=12osgb1pf/*http://www.pcworld.com/article/167762/moblin_a_first_look_at_intels_opensource_os.html>,
Chrome OS is a proof of concept that will use the hothouse environment
of netbook computing to grow and mature.

I'm reasonably sure that Chrome OS will offend the open source
community. There may even be a major reaction against it. You might not
see open source luminaries picketing the Googleplex (although I wouldn't
be surprised), but there will almost certainly be a handful of
inflammatory blog postings, and some very hot collars.

(See related: "How Google Chrome OS Could Beat Windows
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=12k8qvsmq/*http://www.pcworld.com/article/168117/how_google_chrome_os_could_beat_windows.html>")

Figuring out what's so wrong about Chrome OS is also a perfect
illustration of the strange ways and workings of the open source
community. Here are Chrome OS's sins, laid out one-by-one.

*1. Chrome OS will include proprietary technologies*

*Linux still lacks a high-quality open source Flash plugin. Practically
the only choice for 100% site compatibility is to use Adobe's
proprietary plugin, so Chrome OS will need to license and include it out
of the box.* HTML5 will lessen the need for Flash over time, especially
on video sites (and it's interesting that Chrome OS isn't due until
2010, when HTML5 might have more of a foothold). However, the Flash
plugin is definitely required at the present time. How can I keep up
with Strong Bad's antics
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=10vbh1jmj;_ylt=AlA58hpE9knEDXImhNN.xnniS5A5/*http://www.homestarrunner.com>
without it?

Then there are multimedia codecs. People are gonna want to play their
tunes and watch their movies. There are open source versions of most
popular codecs but *to keep its nose clean and avoid litigation Google
will have to license the patents covering them. *This will offend the
open source community, who see the software patenting system as broken
and corrupt.

* It's not just a software issue. Linux also has a poor set of fonts. To
avoid users complaining about web pages looking crappy, Chrome OS will
need to include the standard Microsoft Web fonts *(Arial, Times New
Roman, Courier etc.). It could probably do with including the more
recent Microsoft Vista fonts too. These can be freely licensed
(Microsoft was very careful to make this possible), and Google certainly
has the cash to do so. But such a move will undoubtedly offend the
community because the font packages won't be freely distributable.

Google could take the approach of having the user download proprietary
software after installation, just like Ubuntu, but I doubt this will
happen. It's too amateurish, and too scary for the non-technical user.
It also resides in a legally grey area.

*2. Chrome OS was created to take away your privacy*

I hinted at this in my blog posting the other day
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=131v4eile/*http://www.pcworld.com/article/168043/google_chrome_os_an_open_source_challenge_to_windows.html>,
but the reality is that Chrome OS exists to give Google access to your
data. All of it. *Chrome OS might be free of charge but you'll pay for
it with your online soul.*

* Money isn't the currency of the Internet. Data is. Micropayments
aren't made in cents or pennies, but in details about your shopping
habits, or where you plan to go on vacation.*

Most ordinary users don't know about privacy issues, and normally take a
laissez-faire attitude even if they do. But it's a very sore spot for
open source advocates. Open source types have a tendency to be paranoid
about their data. They make the bizarre assumption that not only do
various covert agencies take an active interest in their data, but that
they generate data that's worth taking an interest in.

*3. Google is big, ergo Google is evil*

*Open source people are suspicious of corporations, especially ones that
are big. I have open source friends who won't even shop at major
supermarket chains, simply because of their size.* It's worth
remembering that many open source advocates refer to Microsoft as M$.
The argument is often less about proprietary software and more about the
fact Microsoft is a corporation that makes a lot of money. (And don't
think it's just kids who use the "M$" reference; I've had conversations
with big-wigs in the open source industry who use it.)

In some ways, Chrome OS fails almost at the first hurdle just because of
who its parent is. Of course, to everybody outside of the open source
community, Google's ownership of Chrome OS is extremely appealing. It's
only in the topsy-turvy world of open source that it could be seen as a
bad thing.

*4. Chrome OS could destroy desktop Linux*

This is perhaps the most interesting suggestion here. The only people
who were probably tight-lipped at the announcement of Chrome OS
yesterday were Canonical, the guys behind Ubuntu. Chrome OS could
destroy Ubuntu, or at the very least kill dead its plans for world
domination.

In some ways, Chrome OS will present no significant issues for most
other versions of desktop Linux. These are used by members of the
community who know what they're getting into. For want of a better way
of describing it, they're niche products.

* But Ubuntu was always aimed at the common man, and Canonical has been
extremely successful at promoting this message. Chrome OS has the
potential to make Ubuntu entirely redundant. Some people will stick with
it, of course, but Chrome OS is aimed at exactly the same type of
general user as Ubuntu. The two will compete, and Chrome OS will win
because Google has virtually infinite resources and brainpower compared
to Canonical.*

Whatever happens, it's clear that the landscape of desktop Linux has
once again changed forever.

*5. Chrome OS is not a community Linux*

Although it's early days, it's looking like Chrome OS will be a
"product" released by Google, much the same as Google Earth or Picasa,
or even Gmail.

* The way it will work is that Google makes Chrome OS available, and you
can make use of it if you wish. They might invite community feedback,
and perhaps even source code patches, but they are in charge. You get
what they give you.*

Compare and contrast this approach to Ubuntu, or most versions of Linux,
where the community drives the project forward. If a new feature appears
in Ubuntu, it's probably because the community requested it. *If a new
feature appears in Chrome OS, it's probably because a Google engineer
thought it was a good idea.*

In many ways, in the way it's handled and marketed, Chrome OS may have
more in common with proprietary software than with traditional open
source. This might not be a bad thing; the community is simultaneously
one of the most useful and most detrimental elements of open source.
Practically since day one, the community has turned open source projects
like Linux into ghettos, and have a set of rules that must be followed
or ostracization will follow (as companies like Novell found out).

*Irony*

Of course, none of this matters. Chrome OS isn't aimed at Linux
fanatics. It's aimed at the ordinary user. Who cares what the fanatics
think?

But it does matter. A lot.

The open source community has a knee-jerk tendency, and also ownership
issues -- there's a belief amongst many that anything that originates in
the community must stay within the community.

Criticism hurts, even if it comes from a small number of people and
isn't entirely rational. I can easily imagine getting to a stage where
Chrome OS is consistently referred in press articles and blog-postings
as "the much-criticised Chome OS project".

When these kind of epithets start to migrate upwards to the mainstream
press, it might make it hard for Chrome OS to gain traction.

Chrome OS is a test of whether open source can actually live-up to its
declaration of freedom. Most open source licenses are about freedom,
provided certain caveats are followed.

Google can diffuse the situation a little by rectifying the criticisms
above. It could heavily involve the community in decision-making, for
example (or at least give the impression of doing so). But some of the
other issues are intractable. *People will want to play their movies,
and Google can't break the law, so it must license patented codecs. And
if Chrome OS doesn't look beautiful, with beautiful proprietary fonts,
nobody will touch it.*

Make no mistake: Chrome OS is going to push and pull the Linux community
in lots of different directions. The coming years should be very
interesting indeed.

/Keir Thomas is the author of several books on Ubuntu, including the
free-of-charge/ Ubuntu Pocket Guide and Reference
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/pcworld/tc_pcworld/storytext/chromeoscouldoffendtheopensourcecommunity/32662068/SIG=11eef1b9p/*http://www.ubuntupocketguide.com/index2.html>
//
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