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Open Source, Closed Documentation?

sunset asks: "Recently I was motivated to look at WebGUI which looks like a pretty cool open source project. However I was having trouble making it work with Red Hat 8.0 which includes Apache 2.0. This seems like a reasonable thing to want, as Red Hat 8 has been out since September and Apache 2 has been publicly released for close to a year. Checking the WebGUI community discussion forum, I found that someone else had already inquired about this. Following the rest of the thread, you learn that the product's vendor considers this information to be proprietary, and that you must pay $50 to join their Support Forum to get the information. It gets better. The associated Membership Agreement for the Support Forum includes the clause 'You shall not to share [sic] the information contained herein with any other party.' So if I join up, I am locked out of sharing valuable information with the open source community about how to install this open source product. In the end I found out what I needed to know without giving up my rights or my hard-earned bucks, but frankly this attitude from the vendor pisses me off. Am I alone in this? What do you think?"

20 of 490 comments (clear)

  1. Well... by unterderbrucke · · Score: 4, Insightful

    considering the only way for them to make money is to charge for support, this makes sense to me

    1. Re:Well... by billDCat · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I disagree here. It is their choice whether or not they charge for support, and I agree that they need to make money somehow. That said, to prevent the information on how to fix the issue from being further disseminated is against the open source spirit, and will just lead to increased user frustration and will reduce the number of people who will use the product as they give up in frustration.

    2. Re:Well... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The SOURCE CODE IS AVAILABLE! If you have a problem, USE THE SOURCE! If you can't read the source code, do you feel the spirit of open source software is that a programmer somewhere must interpret it for you? Because that's what I hear you saying..."I can't read the source so they have to provide documentation for free."

    3. Re:Well... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So...your position is that when ignorant people use source code that I provide for free, then I am obligated to explain to them what it is that my source code does?
      This isn't about best practices or business plans or anything like that...it's a guy who got software for no cost whining because the vendor has copyrighted the documentation and charges for support.

      P.S. My answer then will be the same as it is now..."If you don't know how to use your FREE software, pay someone who can teach you. Don't whine."

    4. Re:Well... by Malcontent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      No it's your attitude that sucks. Nobody owes you anyting. Somebody gave you an awsome piece of software like gimp for nothing and all you can do bitch and moan and complain. Get off your ass and write some documentation, help other people like the Gimp authors helped you. Give something back instead of whining about you not getting enough stuff for free.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    5. Re:Well... by dillon_rinker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Hi. I'm an artist.
      OK. Give me all your art for free. You must also provide step-by-step instructions on how you created the art. You must also provide information on what the art did for you and what the art should do for me. If you ever have a show in an art gallery, I should be able to video tape it and give away the videos, even if you charged for admission. Anything that you I can conceive of that you can produce, you MUST provide for free.

      THAT attitude sucks. It's tantamount to slavery - that's kind of a loaded word in the USA, but I don't know what else to call it when you want to mandate what someone produces and you don't want to pay them.

      If you can't read source code, I'll bet you can pay someone else to read it for you. Or perhaps they'd take some custom art in exchange. That's the cool thing about a market economy.

    6. Re:Well... by Blenderkitty · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Sorry, but if you're going to contribute to a community, you have certain obligations to fill

      No. You don't. It's FREE software. "Free" means that it doesn't take rights away from the user, and it doesn't impose additional rights on the developer. What else would you think "free" meant?

      If everybody makes an obscure interface for their app just so they can make a few bucks on a manual, then who's going to adopt it?
      THEN USE SOMETHING ELSE!!!!!!!

  2. Write a HOWTO by ninewands · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Well, now that you've found out, write a HOWTO and contribute it to the LDP. This will undercut their revenue stream and teach them that trade secrets won't protect them in a world where they publish the source ... wait ... I MAY have made an unwarranted assumption that there are people who will READ a HOWTO ...

  3. Where's the motivation for Open Source? by zaqattack911 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Every company needs some sort of motivation for creating Open Source software.

    I'd hate to state the obvious, but if you want to make the opensource community attractive... there needs to be money involved somehow.

    RedHat charges for support, some charge for documentation. Aside from the hobbiests out there, you expect large companies to throw away time and money into opensource, and getting NOTHING in return by making everything 100% free?

    Did you really expect a free lunch? You know the saying I hope :)

    --Zuchini

  4. It bites, but big deal. by Xzzy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    These guys do have a reasonable expectation to be able to profit off their inventions. Many linux distros encourage you to pay for support, how is this any different from them requiring you to pay for the manual?

    Since it is open source, one could argue that all the documentation you could possibly need is already available to you.. just read the source. ;)

    Is it a little underhanded, yes. But there's nothing terribly unethical about it.

    Depending on the license of the software (site is already too hosed for me to find it myself), there's nothing stopping you from forking your own branch of the source, documenting that, and continue on your merry way.

    1. Re:It bites, but big deal. by geekoid · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "These guys do have a reasonable expectation to be able to profit off their inventions. "

      Actually, they have a reasonable expectation to try to make a profit. Nobody gets paid just because they invented something.

      I know its a nitpic, but that belief is why corporations believe they can sue you, if you come up with a different way to do the same thing, and people by your product instad of theirs.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  5. They don't get it. by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It's plain to me that they don't get it.

    Quoting Sarah from the list:

    I also think it is a bit unfair for you to assert that we are violating the spirit of open source by selling said manual.

    Of course, selling the manual is a completely different matter. What they're doing isn't selling the manual; they're selling the manual and then telling you that you can't share the information.

    These guys are shooting themselves in the foot. The main strength of open-source software is that open source empowers the user community. By segmenting the user community into those who pay vs. those who don't, one hobbles a large segment of the user community. It doesn't help, either, that someone publicized their behavior on Slashdot.

    I certainly hope they "get it," sharpish.

  6. Ask Slashdot has become a bitch forum by 0x0d0a · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Frankly, this article, as well as almost all of the Ask Slashdots in recent memory, are no longer questions. They've become "I had a bad experience with (my employer, a company, a developer, you name it) and I want to build a little bad PR to get back at them". Ask Slashdots have become just a place to bitch, not a place to ask questions.

    This really is a shame, because the idea of Ask Slashdot is very valuable. Editors simply should not let articles that are not *questions* through. Articles that contain one long string of complaints about someone followed by a random "question" tacked on the end to make it fit the format do not count.

  7. Re:Silly goose by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apples and oranges, kiddo. The book is covered by copyright; the techniques for using a software product are not. This is equivalent to including an NDA with a fiction book stating that you won't describe the plot to someone else.

  8. The problem is... by TheZapman · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Sorry if this sounds strong. I had to deal with people with a real entitlement attitude for a year, so it hits a nerve

    ...giving up your hard earned *RIGHTS* is a bad joke. You have no right to the documentation. None whatsoever. The authors wrote it and can do with it what they wish. Print it out, roll it in duct tape and cram it up their candy ass, whatever. However, you have no right to do anything with it, because you didn't write it. The bill of rights has no clause saying "I can take other peoples work and give it to everyone I know".

    The biggest problem with open source as I see it is an entitlement mentality that just because someone wrote something cool, I should be able to use it for free. Being a developer that owns my own company, I have found this amazing realization that I need food. It's really a good thing. And to get food, I need money. Therefore I exercise my rights under the laws of this country to charge people to use my hard work to make their lives easier, and send me money so I can eat dinner. It's really quite a convinent arragement that has worked for quite a while.

    I find that these guys have struck on something ingeneous, and have actually been reading the reports on the practical problems of Open Source software in the marketplace. The biggest problem is support. You need to have a team of experts on staff to deal with it, because M$ won't come out and fix it for you. This is really expensive from a resource point of view, because you then have to cover the HR costs of these people even when they're sitting idle, because you will need them in a pinch. Dumb arrangement. Therefore charging for support is absolutely ingeneous, and is a great model, I think. INCLUDING the documentation. We happen to give away ours for free, and charge for licensing in commercial products. We are looking at a QT type dual-license model so that we can stay in buisness. For all their detractors, I want everyone to notice that they are still in buisness. And important point since if you're laying cable with a bunch of Mexicans, you find yourself too tired to program.

    Software is inherently expensive to produce. Open source has been subsidised through tax dollars via the university system (student loans, grants, etc). Before you bitch about people having to pay for software, why don't you think about the fact that people who don't have crap to do with Linux, etc, had to pay for it's construction...

  9. Re:Free Software needs Free Documentation by The+Bungi · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Stallman has been talking about this for some time

    Perhaps the next book he releases will be available as a free download, then. Or perhaps not.

    It's painfully obvious that "free" and "open" are terms better applied to other people, especially when you're trying to pay the bills.

    Or you happen to be comfortably funded by MIT.

  10. Open source != open everything by Winterblink · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since when does being open source mean that everything's free? Or that you're entitled to get everything for free? Redhat has commercial services they charge for, same with MySQL. What's the difference? Sure charging for documentation may not be the most warm and fuzzy thing in the world, but that's their decision and right. You don't have to use their software, and I'm sure there's a lot of other places to go for support (Google and Google Groups, as examples).

    --
    "I'm a leaf on the wind. Watch how I soar."
    -Hoban Washburn
  11. Sounds like a crude NDA by Sloppy · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I don't think that paying for access to the forum and the supporters' time, is the submitter's objection.

    Certainly you're not allowed to make photocopies of O'Reilly books and hand those out to others, but you aren't prohibited from sharing the information within. The expression is protected, the information is not. If I ask you a perl question, you're allowed to look up the answer in your O'Reilly book and answer me. If you ask me the plot of a movie I've seen, I'm allowed to tell you even if you haven't paid to see the movie.

    In this case, the

    You shall not to share [sic] the information contained herein with any other party.
    sounds pretty far out, almost NDA-like.

    An NDA for information about an "open source" project, is something I haven't heard of before.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  12. In the US, You Can't Sign Away Your Basic Rights by Lucas+Membrane · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The support forum agreement could turn into a moneymaker for the lawyers if it was ever battled out in court. They can protect trade secrets. But how can information about how to make software work be a trade secret when every detail of the software's operation is already published in source form under an open source license? That won't walk. They can copyright their presentation of the information, but they can't prevent you from telling others how to make the software work. If they could, you would bet that, for example, MS would have a similar clause in their license that made the whole Windows for Bozos book industry illegal.

  13. Letter of the law... agreement...etc... by digital+photo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I would have to definitely agree with the charging of the fee for support.

    That company has made the source freely available to those who would use it. They work on it and improve it, fixing bugs as necessary. But the support itself costs money. If they were just another open source coder, then I'm sure they'd more than happily help you for free and maybe a thanks. But they are a company and they are charging support fees.

    This is definitely within their right to do so in both the spirit and letter of open source. Though whether or not it agrees with different peoples' versions and understandings of open source is another matter.

    As for documentation, what kind of documentation is being referred to? A help file? A Howto? Or a custom tailored document to help the user?

    As for the having people basically sign a NDA to not disclose how they were shown to perform the install, that is something which is beyond the scope of "open source".

    The reasoning is that open source covers the accessibility of the source code by the masses in a way which the masses can understand. If the code is beyond the means of the masses to understand, assuming it has not been obfuscated, then they require support to assist them with getting the code/app to work with their system. This help is billable and could very well be restricted information. Not from a security standpoint, but from a commodity standpoint. Ie, it is the model upon which their business is based.

    One can think of it as buying software which comes with basic instructions which works for some, but doesn't for others. You can always pay more to obtain support and/or documents to better assist you, but you are not allowed to copy that document since it is copyrighted and is essentially the incentive for people to purchase support.

    So I would agree with your assessment with the contractor example.

    Some might point out that RedHat/etc are charging for support as well in a similar manner. Though I do not know if they are having people NDA'd.

    Take with big whopping grains of salt for IANAL.