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Rhetorically problematic #7

@dariusk

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@dariusk

Posting the document to Github with the stated intent "that it will be shared, edited, forked, remixed, translated, and hacked" is a prime example of openwashing. I work in the open source software development world, and so I spend a lot of time on Github. Just because something is on Github and has a permissive license doesn't make it particularly open. One can ask the following questions of any project:

  • If I file an issue (as I am doing now), what is the likelihood that it will be addressed?
  • If I file a pull request, will the maintainers engage with it and possibly merge in my changes?
  • If these changes are made, will there be an official release of the project that announces the incorporated new changes? Is that even feasible?

As it stands, it seems like this project is on Github so that people can copy it and do new things with it. Which is fine, but kind of odd. If this were a software project, that would make some kind of sense: there is value in at least having access to the source code of a project so you can fix bugs in your own local branch. But this project is an authored piece of writing; essentially it's a group blog post. And a blog post, posted on Github or not, will always have its "source code" available -- you're looking right at it!

The above reasons lead me to believe that the existence of this document on Github is weird at best and disingenuous at worst.

See this blog post from Ian Bogost for further elucidation (and for once, I can recommend that you read the comments).

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