Allowing contributions only from big tech companies sounds ideologically questionable from free/libre software movement perspective, and it emboldens decisions which go against the user's interests, such as removing manifestv2 in Chromium.
Allowing contributions only from big tech companies sounds ideologically questionable from free/libre software movement perspective, and it emboldens decisions which go against the user's interests, such as removing manifestv2 in Chromium.
Op said nothing about only allowing corporations. Simply stated that one path to allowing large swaths of users without having to approve every single individual user is to trust all users of certain orgs by default.
Presumably you would still allow individual contributions but with restrictions unless someone has vouched for them or some other gating factor.
The thing is, it becomes a slippery slope. It's "corp accounts are pre vouched today", "non corp accounts are temporarily suspended for a few days during some downtime", to "we've decided to only allow corp accounts going forward".
Where does the frog stop getting boiled?
I'm pretty sure decimalenough was talking about having the project structured in an org and only allow org members to contribute, not to automatically allow contributions from people that are members of a completely unrelated, corporate-managed org like google.
I am genuinely baffled by how you could possibly parse my comment as suggesting we allow "only" big tech companies.
Because that's the only meaningful interpretation of your suggestion.
Big corp accounts are pre-vouched. And it will be mostly their responsibility to vouch for other accounts.
It doesn’t have to just be companies. It could be some kind of guild with standards and application criteria. That group could vet members and kick them out for posting slop code.
That's exactly what I thought, I don't know why that's not a thing yet.
I had that idea too. Maybe that's the future of OSS development.