Bill Gates Evidently Gets Open Access And Open Data: So What About Open Source?

from the baby-steps dept

One of most important ways of helping to promote open access is for major research organizations to make it a condition of their funding. Two of the pioneers in this respect were the Wellcome Foundation and the Howard Hughes Medical Institute, which made open access a requirement in 2006 and 2007, respectively. Here’s another major funder joining the open access club:

The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation is committed to information sharing and transparency. We believe that published research resulting from our funding should be promptly and broadly disseminated. We have adopted an Open Access policy that enables the unrestricted access and reuse of all peer-reviewed published research funded, in whole or in part, by the foundation, including any underlying data sets.

Specifically, the CC-BY license, one of the most open, has been adopted:

All publications shall be published under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 Generic License (CC BY 4.0) or an equivalent license. This will permit all users of the publication to copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format and transform and build upon the material, including for any purpose (including commercial) without further permission or fees being required.

Now, this is the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation making this announcement, not Bill Gates, but it’s hard to believe he doesn’t know about and approve of the move. After all, it represents a very high-profile boost for the idea that making things freely available for anyone to “transform and build upon” is better than locking things up so that neither of those is possible. So the natural question is: when will Gates admit the same is true for software too?

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Comments on “Bill Gates Evidently Gets Open Access And Open Data: So What About Open Source?”

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15 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

whats open source

Short answer: No.
Long answer: have to keep the money rolling into the foundation
Even Longer Answer: Since multinationals like Microsoft pay almost Zero taxes in HQ Countries and Countries they sell Stuff, promoting open source will kill income so they couldn’t pay any tax. If Microsoft Couldn’t sell stuff the foundation couldn’t get an income so it couldn’t do any “good” works.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: whats open source

Well now, I’m not saying they should open source the stuff they’re still selling. That makes sense (at least from their perspective).
But what about the stuff they’re no longer selling, and have loudly and publicly declared they no longer support? If you’re not getting money from it, why not open source it? That way new devs can take over and fix security vulnerabilities and such.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: whats open source

But what about the stuff they’re no longer selling, and have loudly and publicly declared they no longer support? If you’re not getting money from it, why not open source it? That way new devs can take over and fix security vulnerabilities and such.

That defeats the objective of removing support, getting people to buy the latest version.

Jeffry Houser (profile) says:

Microsoft makes use of Open Source

Microsoft has open source aspects to parts of their business. Not everything they do is open source, but not everything they do is closed source. Here is a list of Microsoft Open Source projects:

http://www.microsoft.com/opensource/directory.aspx

One recent, prominent, example is the open sourcing of .NET.

http://venturebeat.com/2014/11/12/microsoft-starts-to-open-source-net-and-take-it-cross-platform-to-mac-linux/

I have no idea if Bill Gates was involved in the decision–I would doubt he was.

As a software developer, I’m not sure if “open access” to research can be compared to “open source” software. They seem two very different concepts.

Many people conflate “open source” with free, however that is not the case. Many common open source software licenses place explicit restrictions and limitations on the use of said source code.

Daniel (profile) says:

Re: Microsoft makes use of Open Source

Really glad someone pointed out the .Net OSS efforts. For those in the .Net circle, this is a HUGE thing and much of their frameworks built on top of .Net have been open source for several years now. MS does open source just fine, they even gave a bunch of money to Novell and Xamarin to help further the OSS Mono framework project over the years.

It’s too obvious that this article could have used a bit more research and maybe wouldn’t have been written at all.

tqk (profile) says:

Re: Re: Microsoft makes use of Open Source

It’s too obvious that this article could have used a bit more research and maybe wouldn’t have been written at all.

That’s a bit harsh. I don’t know Glyn’s background, but if he hasn’t spent the last couple of decades immersed in this stuff as a developer, I wouldn’t blame him for not seeing all the minutia related to this stuff.

Open Access for scientific research is long overdue. The journals have been holding this stuff for ransom way long after it should have, and the prices they ask for it is ridiculous.

Free Software/OSS is a different issue. I don’t resent Microsoft having a market for proprietary software as long as there are willing customers out there who want to buy it. Choice is good, and some choices are better than others from different points of view.

Proprietary software producers have come around quite a ways over the years. That’s good.

BentFranklin (profile) says:

It’s great that the Foundation is embracing Open Access research, but the author doesn’t even praise them for their stance. Then, the author takes the un-natural leap to conflate Open Access research with Open Source software, apparently because they share the word Open. This is supposed to be a jab at Microsoft but it just backfires because it is off point and impertinent.

Anonymous Coward says:

I’m sure Bill owns patents or copyrights on anything being “openly” researched. I remember reading a CEO state, “I love open source software, who doesn’t like free labor?”.

Bill’s probably thinking the same thing. “I love open access research on technologies I already own patents on. Who wouldn’t?”.

Last I heard, the Gates Foundation was trying to push GMO crops in Africa. If I remember correctly, Warren Buffet was also involved in the endeavor.

Karl (profile) says:

When pigs fly

So the natural question is: when will Gates admit the same is true for software too?

I’m sure he is simply waiting for the temperature in Hell to dip below the freezing point, for the Pope to renounce Catholicism, and for bears to start using indoor toilets.

Yes, Microsoft supports some open source projects… when it helps to lock people into their proprietary software. But let’s not forget that the term “FUD” was popularized by Microsoft’s behavior, expecially towards open-source software.

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