• @Cowbee@lemmy.ml
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      1236 months ago

      Linus’ power doesn’t come from Ownership, but respect. Anyone can fork it and do what they want, but because Linus is respected, everyone else follows suit.

      Anarchism would function in a similar manner, it wouldn’t be a bunch of opinionated people doing whatever they want, but people generally listening to experts who don’t actually hold systemic power.

      • Atemu
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        136 months ago

        Problem is that the average person cannot discern between an actual expert and a charlatan.

        • @psud@lemmy.world
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          136 months ago

          Skilled programmers can see that Linus is an expert. It works in tech. It probably works in any professional environment - anywhere where skilled people are picking someone highly skilled.

          For the average person, we have clearly seen average people suck at picking expert leaders, though it works fine in small groups

        • @Cowbee@lemmy.ml
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          76 months ago

          And yet Linux works fine. Not everyone needs to be a dev, devs can tell the difference between an expert and a charlatan.

          • Atemu
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            6 months ago

            I meant that as a reply to the second paragraph which generalised anarchism; including the non-Linux world.
            I also disagree that this isn’t an issue in the broader Linux community however. See for example the loud minority with an irrational hate against quite obviously good software projects like systemd who got those ideas from charlatans or “experts”.

            • @Cowbee@lemmy.ml
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              46 months ago

              I know, I used Linux as an example. Just like not everyone needs to be a weatherman to trust weatherman that can recognize experts among themselves, so too can engineers recognize experts among themselves, and so forth.

      • @whoisearth@lemmy.ca
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        106 months ago

        I would disagree and say it’s more akin to a philosopher king hence less anarchy and more monarchy. It’s all good until the king dies and let’s see who succeeds them.

        It will be most telling when Linus dies.

    • @pbpza@lemmy.dbzer0.comOP
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      346 months ago

      You can fork it, sure Linus is very respected and his decisions are considered very important but you can fork it and change however you want so it’s still compatible with Anarchism.

        • JoshCodes
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          16 months ago

          So I did miss that Linus is in the article, but the reference to him says he was awarded the title, which makes it sound like an honour rather than a hierarchical system. I don’t believe that he’s ever been anything other than the projects owner/founder but I’m happy to learn if I’m wrong.

          • @survivalmachine@beehaw.org
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            16 months ago

            Yes, that’s just how open source works. Of course they always serve at the pleasure of the community, otherwise forks would happen. Nobody said otherwise. As the “Usage” section of that article implies, the “benevolent” bit comes from the feedback loop of a happy community supporting their dictator-for-life.

            • JoshCodes
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              16 months ago

              I mean how the community refers to him. I’ve never read a thread where someone called Linus a BDFL, I have with python. If they do, they do. Just haven’t seen it myself.

    • @schnurrito@discuss.tchncs.de
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      26 months ago

      Free software doesn’t have owners. If someone else did a better job of being the “benevolent dictator” of a fork of Linux, everyone would start using that fork. Arguably this is a more free-market system than non-free software.