Comment by quantum_state
8 years ago
We, the open source community, need to respond to this pollution firmly and decisively. Apart from removing the sneaky code put in for these types of purpose, we may need to consider adjusting the licensing to forbid such doing ... the entire open source world need to unite against this ... it is threatening the future of open source.
Is Facebook part of the "open source community?" I would expect that most people here would say yes, for reasons I will assume are obvious to most readers here. Yet they've built, arguably, the world's second largest (non-governmental) data mining operation on the back of open source software, designed for nothing more than slurping up user data to sell to advertisers. How is that fundamentally any different than what's described here? Because the product is "more" useful to end users? Because it's true nature is "more" visible? It's a difference in degree, not kind. If you hate what's been done here, by extension, you should hate the business model of Facebook and Twitter, et. al. (I do, and I refuse to participate.) There seems to be a bit of hypocrisy having this sort of outrage on this particular site.
Does React or any of Facebook's OSS libraries have pop-up/modal ads for joining Facebook? Do they contain analytics code?
So that's the difference, here, that exculpates Facebook? That they don't put their analytics code in PHP or React? Granted, Facebook doesn't put analytics code in those products, but almost every web programmer in the world happily embeds Facebook's JS blob/web bug in almost every single site on the planet to track every single click, by Facebook users or not, which can be tied back to at least a shadow profile in the mothership. That's cool? If so: Got it.
I can see the distinction you're making, but, IMO, it's splitting hairs. Either tracking users activity, by the simple act of their use of your product, is morally acceptable, or it's not. To me, this seems like this exact same thing.
As Scott McNealy said, "You have no privacy. Get over it." I wish that wasn't true, but it would seem that the every government and company is hell bent on making it so.
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I agree totally, the license should prevent companies or individuals to add promotional content band code