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anon291last Saturday at 8:18 PM5 repliesview on HN

Linux is also realistically American since the largest contributors are American corporations and the dictator for life lives on Portland oregon.

America has a monopoly on software essentially.


Replies

cultofmetatronlast Saturday at 9:11 PM

assumign this is arguing in good faith..

the issue is not about it being american as it is america being in control of it. you don't get access to windows or mac os source code. You can however take the linux source code, fork it and make it yours. that "dictator for life" in portland can't stop you. nor can anyone else in the us government for that matter.

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LeFantomeyesterday at 11:46 AM

> Linux is also realistically American

I think this is objectively true. The Linux Foundation is also US based. We saw this when Russsian contributors were banned from the kernel to comply with US sanctions.

The big difference of course is that relying on Linux does not have to mean realying on US corporations. At the level of a nation-state, and certainly at the level of a larger political collective like the EU, control can always be taken back if political interests diverge or if risks mount. Linux could be forked and maintained out of Europe, Asia, or elsewhere if needed. And technology could even continue to be pulled from the US version if desired.

Above, I mean the kernel. But the "distro" level offers another level of contorl. A distro maintained outside of the US offers a lot of local control and isolation from the risks of US control. The kernel used in this distro does not have to be fully forked to be audited, to remove anything concerning, or to add in whatever is desired. And the same is true of all other software included in the distro.

While maintaining a distro is a lot of work, it can be done at the scale of an individual or a small team. It can be done with a travial number of resources at the nation state level. In some ways, it is crazy that more countries do not have their own distro even if it does start as much more than a "spin" of some maintstream distro. As political tensions mount, this may become a more normal "national security" step to take. Being ready to pivot and isolate from the US is more important than actually doing it. If all your government and military infrastructure is based on a distro you control, you can then pivot quickly if you need to. And there are customization and standardization benefits of having a regionally focussed distro beyond national security.

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stavroslast Saturday at 10:01 PM

The question is which nation you'll have to depend on when you want a bug fixed. With OSS, the answer is "none".

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1over137last Saturday at 9:23 PM

It doesn't much matter that Americans are the largest contributors, because you can still take it and change it however you want.

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robocatyesterday at 12:08 AM

Are the BSDs as US-focused?

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