Comment by nalekberov
6 hours ago
> Same issue there. A profession is an occupation that you get paid for doing.
Wrong, a profession is an occupation that requires specialized training or qualifications. This means one can have a profession and still not get paid.
> And he mainly seems to be getting abuse in return for that service.
What abuse you are referring to?
If you want to go down that semantic route, then being an open source maintainer clearly isn't a profession, as it requires neither specialized training nor qualifications!
In terms of abuse, I was thinking of this issue thread: https://github.com/RsyncProject/rsync/issues/929
> If you want to go down that semantic route, then being an open source maintainer clearly isn't a profession, as it requires neither specialized training nor qualifications!
Open source software maintenance without qualifications? I hope you understand how disastrous it would be for serious software like rsync.
I should think most open source software is maintained by people without any special training or qualifications. And would you expect to obtain the services of, say, a highly qualified plumber or electrician for free?
It might be more useful if qualifications were required before people were allowed to complain about open source software on internet message boards. That’ll be the day!