I knoiw you're not going to like this, but as asinine as it sounds what they say isn't that far off the mark. Many of those who claim to support open source are doing so for one of several reaosns:
Who is more unAmerican?
The open source hackers who choose to contribute something freely to the world? To me the open source authors are more akin to the pioneers who would band together to raise a barn or build a house for the new family in the area. That is not unAmerican to me. That is quite laudable.
Or a corporate criminal who has broken the law again and again and so far has not been punished harshly enough to stop their criminal ways?
Is it communist to help others without being paid? Is it communist to try to make the world better for others as well as yourself? I don't think so.
1.) They think all software should be free and believe piracy is a legitimate act of file and application sharing.
They? Why would "they" bother writing their own if all "they" wanted was to steal it? Why bother promoting open source if your going to steal your software anyway? Your logic seems rather faulty.
2.) Are coropoate CEO, FEO, or other corporate cost cutter and see open source as the absolute perfect opportunity to increase the bottom line--these folks are the biggest proponents of out-sourcing too.
Some are, so what? Though they contribute to open source the projects are almost uniformly started and run by individuals not companies. Who controls Linux? No company and no individual. Any company that tried to take it over would be frozen out by everyone else refusing to obey. Open Office was started by a company (Sun Microsystems) but they don't control it at all. Mozilla spun out of Netscape but AOL does not control Mozilla, Firefox, Thunderbird or Sunbird either.
The major thing is that these companies currently see a future where it can go two ways.
One way is to continue as it has been with Microsoft step by step taking over more and more markets using their monopoly control of the OS to expand into territories
created by others. They did it with Word, Excel, Access and Internet Explorer. Would you want to compete with them on those grounds?
The other way is to find a way to join together. Open source allows that. Together they can hope to break the OS monopoly and survive and prosper in a diverse market place. A market Microsoft can survive in that market as well.
If you were one of these CEOs would you try to survive on whatever Microsoft doesn't want
yet? Or would you try to find a way to survive and prosper even if it meant working with others.
3.) They are simply anti-MS anything. If MS donated 1 billion dollars to children's aid funds these folks would complain that it wasn't 1.1 billion. Nothing MS does is good or good enough.
Again some are. But then again I have had an American on these boards say Canada has no right to exist. Does that make all Americans anti Canada? I don't think so.
Do you really condemn entire groups because of the actions of a tiny minority?
Also can you blame people who time and again have run into Microsoft trying to control their computers. Can you blame those who have computer problems caused by Microsoft screwing up and have Microsofts solution be "buy an upgrade" or reformat and reinstall - for the 3rd time this week?
4.) They see open source as the great equalizer. That open source is the masses ability to throw off the yoke of corporate control.
It can be. It can also be used to allow more variety in those corporate programs you
choose to use rather than are
compelled to use and
buy.
There are lesser reasons too, but those are, imho, the 4 greatest motivators in the OS movement.
Jerry
Your sweeping with a very wide broom toasty.
How about a 5th reason?
5.) Freedom of choice. Microsoft is like the old Ford. "You can have any colour you want as long as its black". I prefer a rainbow of colours to choose from and a plethora of competing suppliers for those colours.
To put it bluntly I dislike abusive monopolies intensely. I want the
freedom to choose. Who knows, in a given instance I might even choose Microsoft, I'm not a fanatic. When Microsoft does well I'm quite willing to heap praise on them.