The Kos of Open-Source Hypocrisy
As a relative WordPress novice, I can only imagine the difficulties involved in developing and maintaining a blogging platform, so I try to stay out of the bits and bytes.
But Wizbang got me interested about 10 days ago in the evolution of blogging software when he noted how Markos Moulitsas Zuniga, proprietor of The Daily Kos (affectionately known to friend and foe alike as “Kos”) is handling software development.
In October 2003, Kos began using the open-source version of a blogging and publishing program known as Scoop. Since then, he has been enhancing the program. Most curiously to say the least, he has chosen to share those enhancements only with certain left-leaning blogs:
You can’t get the version of Scoop in use at DailyKos - One of the cool features (reader recommended diaries) isn’t in the Scoop available from scoop.kuro5hin.org. In fact as the development page indicated, there’s been very little public activity on the Scoop development site, while sites led by DailyKos have been implementing all sorts of new Scoop features. Why is that, you might ask? It’s because Scoop has become, in effect, a bought and paid for tool of the elite liberal bloggers. Scoop development is occurring, funded by Kos and others, and the by-product of that work isn’t available to you the lowly blogger. There’s nothing wrong with Kos and crew keeping the good stuff for themselves while the open source Scoop stagnates…
Whoa. Stop, right, there, Wiz. I sense an inconsistency in KosWorld.
A Wizbang commenter at the same post confirms and references my suspicions about Kos’s in-the lefty-house development efforts (bold is mine):
Scoop is licensed under the GPL v2.
What Kos is doing with it is within the letter of the GPLv2 but is in violation of the spirit.
Stallman is working on GPLv3 and if this statement from wikipedia–”We’ll put in something to deal with this case of public use on a server the public connects to”–bears out (statement is in italicized section of page under “History”–Ed.), then Kos’s use of Scoop (which can remain licensed under GPLv2) will be in violation of the letter of the GPLv3.
Open source developers would consider Kos’s actions to be sleazy hoarding.
“Fine,” you might say (and Wiz might agree), “what’s wrong with Kos and his cohorts doing the capitalist thing, improving a generic product and using it in a competitively advantageous way to set his blog and other lefty blogs apart from the others? Going further, what would be wrong if he or they ultimately (it’s hard to know at this point) decide to license the improved blogging software to others for profit?”
The problem is that Kos, and perhaps his cohorts, appear to believe in “open source for thee, but not for me.”
Look at how excited Kos was (”The Rise of Open Source”) on February 11 about the growth of the open-source Firefox web browser, and how it leads him to wax rhapsodically about the beauties of an open-source world (posted in full, bold is mine):
I’ve been watching with fascination as Microsoft’s share of the browser market erodes at warp speed to better alternative browsers.
On 12/03/04, Internet Explorer had 67 percent of browsers. Earlier in 2004, IE enjoyed over 85 percent of the market.
As of this post’s writing, IE is down to 55 percent of Daily Kos readers. That number can fluctuate quite a bit over a typical day, so at times IE will drop below 50 percent.
The biggest culprit is the open source Firefox, which has garnered about 25 percent share of the dKos readership in a matter of mere months, with no advertising campaign. That’s pretty cool, and yet more evidence that open source is the way of the future.
What does this have to do with politics? Not much. But as the Propagannon types have shown, dozens (hundreds) of people waging open source journalism can sometimes be more effective than understaffed newsrooms filled with overworked reporters trying to meet deadline.
When I’m asked about blogging’s legacy, I talk about open source. Open source politics, open source activism, open source journalism — the aggregation of thousands on behalf of a common cause. Bloggers and their opinions might be mildly interesting, but the ability to pool our efforts on issues that capture the collective imagination is what really gets me excited.
So it appears reasonable to conclude that Kos believes the following:
- Open source browsers, operating systems, and software–way of the future, good (stated by Kos in a generalized way clearly meant to apply to all software development).
- Open source politics, activism, and journalism–way of the future, good.
- Open source blogging software–”Nope. It’s ours, all ours.”
These positions appear to be at best inconsistent, and at worst hysterically hypocritical.
I’d be open to receiving a coherent defense or explanation from Kos (I have requested a response to this post from him) or someone who believes he or she can stand in for him before removing the question mark from the post title. E-mail me here.
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UPDATE: The footer at the Daily Kos site reads:
“© 2005. Steal what you want. Powered by Scoop.”
Cute. This would appear to be an open invitation to hack and steal “open source” Kos’s upgraded Scoop, doncha think?
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UPDATE 2, July 1, 1 AM: Three unanswered e-mails sent within Kos’s site (which means I registered and everything [eek]). The question mark has been removed. More to come on this subject from another more technical person who is addressing this.
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UPDATE 3, August 20: A person in a position to know tells me in two separate e-mails (the two different paragraphs):
Markos recently reached out to all the other large volume Scoop sites …. in an effort to rally some momentum around the platform before the big traffic rush next year in the primaries. Other than a few introductory emails, I don’t have anything yet. But the intent seems to be to share what’s been improved upon.
We’ll see if words are followed by action. So far, they have not. I’m perfectly happy to call him on the mat if he misbehaves.










The first thing I thought when I read this was that I’m surprised that you can get away with that using GPL software. It does feel like a violation of the spirit if not the letter of the license.
I think it’s a fair cop. Funny that the whole dialog was brought about by the left goofing on right blogs not offering comments.
I personally think that we need to get over this. I call the dynamic the trap of the game… Stanley Greenberg from a US political perspective calls it The Two Americas. Our hatred for each other causes us to act in ways against our own interest.
With community everyone wins. With dialog everyone wins. The more people participating the better. That’s the whole spirit of the open source community. If you are afraid of that than it’s time to look into the mirror.
One of the things that I’d like to see is the formation of trust mechanisms that facilitate dialog but add to it the perspective of the person’s political philosophy. Trust is a relative term. You may love everything that comes out of Tom Delay’s mouth while to me it is all sewer filth. It’s all a matter of perspective. Kinda like adding a political dimension to the ranking of posts. That would foster dialog as it promotes perspective instead of the current good vs. evil approach.
Comment by Chris Baker — June 27, 2005 @ 10:20 pm
I’m with you mostly, and good links. Kos and Delay both think the other side is out to end America as they know it. And, since you sort of said it (I didn’t), maybe Kos thinks stopping the evil Delay & Co. is so important that he throws his open-source principles overboard so he can come up with the biggest, baddest blogging weapon around (cartoonish ha-ha-ha-ha-ha in background). And though I can’t name them, I don’t doubt that certain Republicans are harboring similar ideas in other arenas.
It would be nice to hear from Kos (not holding breath).
Comment by TBlumer — June 27, 2005 @ 10:34 pm
I’m quite interested in seeing if that question mark ever goes away.
Comment by Eric Kephas — June 30, 2005 @ 3:13 am
We’re on 72+ hours. Stay tuned. There’s another person who is supposed to comment on this elsewhere. I thought he would have done something by now, and will check on it in a few hours.
Comment by TBlumer — June 30, 2005 @ 4:34 am