* Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
@ 2024-06-18 8:37 MSavoritias
2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
` (3 more replies)
0 siblings, 4 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-18 8:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: guix-devel
Hello,
Context:
As you may already know there have discussions around Software Heritage
and the LLM model they are collaborating with for a bit now. The model
itself was announced at
https://www.softwareheritage.org/2023/10/19/swh-statement-on-llm-for-code/
As I have started writing some packages I became interested in how I
might actually stop my code from ever reaching Software Heritage or at
the very least said LLM model. Every single package in guix is added
there automatically.
I sent an email on Friday and I got an answer back that such consent
mechanism hasn't been implemented and I was shown the legal terms.
instead what I am supposed to do is:
After guix has my code, my code will be automatically in Software
Heritage and the LLM model. So I am supposed to opt out seperately with
both of them to ensure that my code wont be used for future versions.
This of course means that my code will stay forever in Software
Heritage and the LLM model (or some version of it at least).
The reasoning that was given was that code harvesting happens anyway
and we give an opt-out. I am guessing its opt-out and not opt-in
because they would have less code but this is speculation of course :)
This is against our desire to make it a welcoming space and also
against the spirit of our CoC. Specifically because authors do not know
this happens when they submit packages to Guix. So it is all done
without consent.
Next Steps:
So what can we do as a Guix community from here?
Communication/Writing wise:
1. Add a clear disclaimer/requirment that any new package that is added
in Guix, the person has to give consent or get consent from the person
that the package is written in. This needs to be added in the docs and
in the email procedures.
2. Make a blog post of our stance towards Software Heritage and the
code harvesting they are doing. This post will write in environmental
and ethical grounds why Guix is against this and mention specifically
Software Heritage. This is done to separate and mention that we do not
like what is happening in case anyone comes asking, and hopefully give
public pressure to Software Heritage.
3. Exclude all Software Heritage merch, stands, talks, people in
official capacity, logos, or anything else that participates in social
events of guix and write it in some rules we have. also write in
channel rules that Software Heritage is offtopic same way Non-Free
Software is offtopic.
4. There doesn't seem to be any movement on the side of Guix towards:
- Accountability in an official capacity of SH for the terrible
handling of the trans name incident and a plan to make it easier in
the future.
- The LLM problem that was mentioned in this email.
So with that said I urge anybody who has been in contact with them in
an official Guix capacity to come forward, otherwise I can volunteer to
be that. Idk if we have a community outreach thing I need to be in also
for that. (we should if not)
The above make two assumptions:
1. That the Guix community is against LLM/"AI". Which for environmental
and ethical grounds we should be.
2. That we are a consent culture.
Coding Wise this has been talked about before some potential options
are:
- Communicate with Software Heritage to be able to give a "sign" that
the code that is sent should go or not in the code harvesting project.
- Remove all Software Heritage integration since its too hard to be
ethical about it and built a better solution.
Conclusion:
To summarize from the steps I wrote above, it seems Software Heritage
makes it harder and harder for us to actually be an inclusive,
welcoming space we want to be. Idk what that leaves us, as I said I am
not part of any "insider" discussions. But it seems to not move that
much and its time to start doing actionable things in another direction.
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 8:37 Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-19 8:36 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-18 16:21 ` Greg Hogan
` (2 subsequent siblings)
3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Ian Eure @ 2024-06-18 14:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: guix-devel
Hi MSavoritias,
Thank you for the email.
I’m going to lay out this situation as clearly as I can, in the
hope that others will better understand, and hopefully treat it
with the seriousness it deserves.
1. Guix requests SWH to archive some source code. This is fine.
2. SWH archives the code. This is also fine.
3. SWH gives all their source to an AI company, HuggingFace. This
is questionable. While fine in theory, the company they gave it
to, HuggingFace, violates both the licenses of the code they’re
given, and SWH’s own policy on LLMs. Instead of terminating the
partnership, SWH has continued to tout it as "responsible AI" in
the face of these violations[1]. This makes me doubt whether
they’re acting in good faith.
4. HuggingFace trains a LLM out of all the code they’re given and
redistributes it. This is *not* fine. The LLM is a derivative
work of the source code it’s trained on, which violates the
licenses of many projects in its training set -- it’s akin to
compiling a gigantic .so file built from the SWH dataset.
5. HuggingFace uses its StarCoder2 LLM to generate source code.
This is *also* not fine. This output is also a derivative work of
the inputs, and it’s redistributed with no license or attribution
whatsoever. HuggingFace purports to include attribution in their
model, however, their own tools make no use of it and emit code
with no attribution. You can observe this behavior yourself:
https://huggingface.co/spaces/HuggingFaceH4/starchat2-playground
I understand Guix’s participation is several degrees removed from
where the core of the problem lies. However, the partnership with
SWH is indirectly enabling massive violations of the licenses of
the software it packages. Guix should stop doing that.
Thanks,
— Ian
[1]:
https://www.softwareheritage.org/2024/02/28/responsible-ai-with-starcoder2/
MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
> Hello,
>
> Context:
>
> As you may already know there have discussions around Software
> Heritage
> and the LLM model they are collaborating with for a bit now. The
> model
> itself was announced at
> https://www.softwareheritage.org/2023/10/19/swh-statement-on-llm-for-code/
>
> As I have started writing some packages I became interested in
> how I
> might actually stop my code from ever reaching Software Heritage
> or at
> the very least said LLM model. Every single package in guix is
> added
> there automatically.
>
> I sent an email on Friday and I got an answer back that such
> consent
> mechanism hasn't been implemented and I was shown the legal
> terms.
> instead what I am supposed to do is:
>
> After guix has my code, my code will be automatically in
> Software
> Heritage and the LLM model. So I am supposed to opt out
> seperately with
> both of them to ensure that my code wont be used for future
> versions.
> This of course means that my code will stay forever in Software
> Heritage and the LLM model (or some version of it at least).
>
> The reasoning that was given was that code harvesting happens
> anyway
> and we give an opt-out. I am guessing its opt-out and not opt-in
> because they would have less code but this is speculation of
> course :)
>
> This is against our desire to make it a welcoming space and also
> against the spirit of our CoC. Specifically because authors do
> not know
> this happens when they submit packages to Guix. So it is all
> done
> without consent.
>
> Next Steps:
>
> So what can we do as a Guix community from here?
> Communication/Writing wise:
>
> 1. Add a clear disclaimer/requirment that any new package that
> is added
> in Guix, the person has to give consent or get consent from the
> person
> that the package is written in. This needs to be added in the
> docs and
> in the email procedures.
> 2. Make a blog post of our stance towards Software Heritage and
> the
> code harvesting they are doing. This post will write in
> environmental
> and ethical grounds why Guix is against this and mention
> specifically
> Software Heritage. This is done to separate and mention that we
> do not
> like what is happening in case anyone comes asking, and
> hopefully give
> public pressure to Software Heritage.
> 3. Exclude all Software Heritage merch, stands, talks, people in
> official capacity, logos, or anything else that participates in
> social
> events of guix and write it in some rules we have. also write in
> channel rules that Software Heritage is offtopic same way
> Non-Free
> Software is offtopic.
> 4. There doesn't seem to be any movement on the side of Guix
> towards:
> - Accountability in an official capacity of SH for the terrible
> handling of the trans name incident and a plan to make it
> easier in
> the future.
> - The LLM problem that was mentioned in this email.
> So with that said I urge anybody who has been in contact with
> them in
> an official Guix capacity to come forward, otherwise I can
> volunteer to
> be that. Idk if we have a community outreach thing I need to be
> in also
> for that. (we should if not)
>
> The above make two assumptions:
> 1. That the Guix community is against LLM/"AI". Which for
> environmental
> and ethical grounds we should be.
> 2. That we are a consent culture.
>
> Coding Wise this has been talked about before some potential
> options
> are:
> - Communicate with Software Heritage to be able to give a "sign"
> that
> the code that is sent should go or not in the code harvesting
> project.
> - Remove all Software Heritage integration since its too hard to
> be
> ethical about it and built a better solution.
>
> Conclusion:
>
> To summarize from the steps I wrote above, it seems Software
> Heritage
> makes it harder and harder for us to actually be an inclusive,
> welcoming space we want to be. Idk what that leaves us, as I
> said I am
> not part of any "insider" discussions. But it seems to not move
> that
> much and its time to start doing actionable things in another
> direction.
>
> MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 8:37 Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem MSavoritias
2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
@ 2024-06-18 16:21 ` Greg Hogan
2024-06-18 16:33 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-19 10:10 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-21 8:39 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Simon Tournier
3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Greg Hogan @ 2024-06-18 16:21 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 4:37 AM MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> wrote:
>
> 1. Add a clear disclaimer/requirment that any new package that is added
> in Guix, the person has to give consent or get consent from the person
> that the package is written in. This needs to be added in the docs and
> in the email procedures.
You will be happy to know that Guix has always had this requirement
[1] by only packaging software licensed with the four essential
freedoms [2]. It's the first item on the Guix homepage.
[1] https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/html_node/Software-Freedom.html
[2] https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.en.html
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 16:21 ` Greg Hogan
@ 2024-06-18 16:33 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-18 17:31 ` Greg Hogan
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-18 16:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Greg Hogan; +Cc: MSavoritias, guix-devel
On Tue, 18 Jun 2024 12:21:33 -0400
Greg Hogan <code@greghogan.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 4:37 AM MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me>
> wrote:
> >
> > 1. Add a clear disclaimer/requirment that any new package that is
> > added in Guix, the person has to give consent or get consent from
> > the person that the package is written in. This needs to be added
> > in the docs and in the email procedures.
>
> You will be happy to know that Guix has always had this requirement
> [1] by only packaging software licensed with the four essential
> freedoms [2]. It's the first item on the Guix homepage.
>
> [1] https://guix.gnu.org/manual/en/html_node/Software-Freedom.html
> [2] https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.en.html
Ah it seems I wasn't clear enough.
I meant write something like:
By packaging a software project for Guix you are exposing said software
to a code harvesting project (also known as LLMs or "AI") run by
Software Heritage and/or their partners. Make sure you have gotten
fully informed consent and that the author of this package fully
understands what the implications are.
Something like that. To make it clear that the package that is about to
be added to Guix is going to be harvested for the LLM models Software
Heritage decided to share the code with.
Hope this is more clear.
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 16:33 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-18 17:31 ` Greg Hogan
2024-06-18 17:57 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Greg Hogan @ 2024-06-18 17:31 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 12:33 PM MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> wrote:
>
> Ah it seems I wasn't clear enough.
> I meant write something like:
>
> By packaging a software project for Guix you are exposing said software
> to a code harvesting project (also known as LLMs or "AI") run by
> Software Heritage and/or their partners. Make sure you have gotten
> fully informed consent and that the author of this package fully
> understands what the implications are.
>
> Something like that. To make it clear that the package that is about to
> be added to Guix is going to be harvested for the LLM models Software
> Heritage decided to share the code with.
>
> Hope this is more clear.
Free software licenses do not require bespoke consent to "to run the
program, to study and change the program in source code form, to
redistribute exact copies, and to distribute modified versions" (and
"Being free to do these things means (among other things) that you do
not have to ask or pay for permission to do so.").
Your fear mongering against free software runs afoul of Guix project
guidelines ("In addition, the GNU distribution follow [sic] the free
software distribution guidelines. Among other things, these guidelines
reject non-free firmware, recommendations of non-free software, and
discuss ways to deal with trademarks and patents.").
If you feel that LLMs/AI are violating the terms of a license, then
feel free to pursue that through the legal system (potentially very
profitable given the monetary penalties for violations of copyright).
Otherwise, we should be celebrating the users and use of free
software. I'm old enough to remember "Only wimps use tape backup:
_real_ men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the rest
of the world mirror it ;)"
[https://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9607.2/0292.html].
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 17:31 ` Greg Hogan
@ 2024-06-18 17:57 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Ian Eure @ 2024-06-18 17:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: guix-devel
Hi Greg,
Please read my earlier reply in this thread[1].
HuggingFace is demonstrably violating the licenses of the Free
Software used to train its StarCoder2 LLM.
Software Heritage is continuing to partner with HuggingFace in
spite of these violations.
Guix is continuing to partner with SWH in spite of their continued
support of these violations.
Guix is indirectly enabling the violation of the license for the
Free Software it packages. Guix has the power to stop doing that.
What is your specific rationale for continuing to enable these
clear license violations?
Thanks,
— Ian
[1]:
https://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/guix-devel/2024-06/msg00195.html
Greg Hogan <code@greghogan.com> writes:
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 12:33 PM MSavoritias
> <email@msavoritias.me> wrote:
>>
>> Ah it seems I wasn't clear enough.
>> I meant write something like:
>>
>> By packaging a software project for Guix you are exposing said
>> software
>> to a code harvesting project (also known as LLMs or "AI") run
>> by
>> Software Heritage and/or their partners. Make sure you have
>> gotten
>> fully informed consent and that the author of this package
>> fully
>> understands what the implications are.
>>
>> Something like that. To make it clear that the package that is
>> about to
>> be added to Guix is going to be harvested for the LLM models
>> Software
>> Heritage decided to share the code with.
>>
>> Hope this is more clear.
>
> Free software licenses do not require bespoke consent to "to run
> the
> program, to study and change the program in source code form, to
> redistribute exact copies, and to distribute modified versions"
> (and
> "Being free to do these things means (among other things) that
> you do
> not have to ask or pay for permission to do so.").
>
> Your fear mongering against free software runs afoul of Guix
> project
> guidelines ("In addition, the GNU distribution follow [sic] the
> free
> software distribution guidelines. Among other things, these
> guidelines
> reject non-free firmware, recommendations of non-free software,
> and
> discuss ways to deal with trademarks and patents.").
>
> If you feel that LLMs/AI are violating the terms of a license,
> then
> feel free to pursue that through the legal system (potentially
> very
> profitable given the monetary penalties for violations of
> copyright).
> Otherwise, we should be celebrating the users and use of free
> software. I'm old enough to remember "Only wimps use tape
> backup:
> _real_ men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the
> rest
> of the world mirror it ;)"
> [https://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9607.2/0292.html].
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 17:31 ` Greg Hogan
2024-06-18 17:57 ` Ian Eure
@ 2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-19 9:57 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-20 2:56 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-19 7:01 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Greg Hogan; +Cc: guix-devel
On Tue, 18 Jun 2024 13:31:02 -0400
Greg Hogan <code@greghogan.com> wrote:
> On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 12:33 PM MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me>
> wrote:
> >
> > Ah it seems I wasn't clear enough.
> > I meant write something like:
> >
> > By packaging a software project for Guix you are exposing said
> > software to a code harvesting project (also known as LLMs or "AI")
> > run by Software Heritage and/or their partners. Make sure you have
> > gotten fully informed consent and that the author of this package
> > fully understands what the implications are.
> >
> > Something like that. To make it clear that the package that is
> > about to be added to Guix is going to be harvested for the LLM
> > models Software Heritage decided to share the code with.
> >
> > Hope this is more clear.
>
> Free software licenses do not require bespoke consent to "to run the
> program, to study and change the program in source code form, to
> redistribute exact copies, and to distribute modified versions" (and
> "Being free to do these things means (among other things) that you do
> not have to ask or pay for permission to do so.").
>
> Your fear mongering against free software runs afoul of Guix project
> guidelines ("In addition, the GNU distribution follow [sic] the free
> software distribution guidelines. Among other things, these guidelines
> reject non-free firmware, recommendations of non-free software, and
> discuss ways to deal with trademarks and patents.").
>
> If you feel that LLMs/AI are violating the terms of a license, then
> feel free to pursue that through the legal system (potentially very
> profitable given the monetary penalties for violations of copyright).
> Otherwise, we should be celebrating the users and use of free
> software. I'm old enough to remember "Only wimps use tape backup:
> _real_ men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the rest
> of the world mirror it ;)"
> [https://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9607.2/0292.html].
Hey Greg,
You seem to be arguing on a different thread or a point I never made. I
didn't talk about licenses or legal/state rules before you mentioned
them. What I have mentioned is that SH breaks our social rules and
expectations by feeding all code into an algorithm that will endlessly
output the same as original.
I am not interested what the states or licenses/copyrights allow or
don't allow in this case. What I care about is what we expect as a
community when we submit a package/code to guix and if that violates
our social rules and expectations. And from what I have seen and talked
with people it does indeed.
PS. I am also not a man :P
Regards,
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
@ 2024-06-19 8:36 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-20 17:00 ` Andreas Enge
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Dale Mellor @ 2024-06-19 8:36 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ian Eure, guix-devel
On Tue, 2024-06-18 at 07:19 -0700, Ian Eure wrote:
> Hi MSavoritias,
>
> Thank you for the email.
>
> I’m going to lay out this situation as clearly as I can, in the
> hope that others will better understand, and hopefully treat it
> with the seriousness it deserves.
>
> 1. Guix requests SWH to archive some source code. This is fine.
No, it's not. I use Guix as a tool to develop my own projects, private and
personal for reasons I'm keeping to myself. As part of that I write package
definitions for them, and use the Guix machinery to build and test. I *cannot*
have Guix just giving my code away to anybody, that is just fundamentally wrong.
We need to ask what is Guix? A free operating system, a framework for
developing free operating systems, or a more generic tool for software
development and deployment? If the latter it *cannot* do nefarious things
without explicit consent.
I think at least there should be a /restricted/ license type available to
package definitions, and the system absolutely should not give source code away
from packages which use this (of course, they won't get into the official
distribution, but that's fine).
More broadly, I think they should just stop inter-operating with SH. Just
walk away.
Dale
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-19 9:57 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-20 2:56 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Efraim Flashner @ 2024-06-19 9:57 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Greg Hogan, guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1240 bytes --]
On Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 10:01:43AM +0300, MSavoritias wrote:
> On Tue, 18 Jun 2024 13:31:02 -0400
> Greg Hogan <code@greghogan.com> wrote:
>
> > On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 12:33 PM MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me>
> > wrote:
> > >
<snip>
> >
> > If you feel that LLMs/AI are violating the terms of a license, then
> > feel free to pursue that through the legal system (potentially very
> > profitable given the monetary penalties for violations of copyright).
> > Otherwise, we should be celebrating the users and use of free
> > software. I'm old enough to remember "Only wimps use tape backup:
> > _real_ men just upload their important stuff on ftp, and let the rest
> > of the world mirror it ;)"
> > [https://lkml.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/9607.2/0292.html].
>
> Hey Greg,
>
<snip>
>
> PS. I am also not a man :P
To head off any potential misunderstanding, I followed the link above
and the line "Only wimps ..." is an old quote from Linus Torvalds, not
Greg assuming your gender :).
--
Efraim Flashner <efraim@flashner.co.il> רנשלפ םירפא
GPG key = A28B F40C 3E55 1372 662D 14F7 41AA E7DC CA3D 8351
Confidentiality cannot be guaranteed on emails sent or received unencrypted
[-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-18 8:37 Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem MSavoritias
2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-18 16:21 ` Greg Hogan
@ 2024-06-19 10:10 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-21 8:39 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Simon Tournier
3 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Efraim Flashner @ 2024-06-19 10:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 828 bytes --]
On Tue, Jun 18, 2024 at 11:37:17AM +0300, MSavoritias wrote:
> Hello,
<snip>
> So with that said I urge anybody who has been in contact with them in
> an official Guix capacity to come forward, otherwise I can volunteer to
> be that. Idk if we have a community outreach thing I need to be in also
> for that. (we should if not)
<snip>
Without addressing the rest of the email, I'd like to point out that if
the Guix project needs to interact with SWH (or Hugging Face) in an
official capacity then the maintainers will either do it or take care of
it. Thank you for your offer, we'll keep it in mind.
--
Efraim Flashner <efraim@flashner.co.il> רנשלפ םירפא
GPG key = A28B F40C 3E55 1372 662D 14F7 41AA E7DC CA3D 8351
Confidentiality cannot be guaranteed on emails sent or received unencrypted
[-- Attachment #2: signature.asc --]
[-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-19 9:57 ` Efraim Flashner
@ 2024-06-20 2:56 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-20 5:18 ` MSavoritias
1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution. @ 2024-06-20 2:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias, Greg Hogan; +Cc: guix-devel
Hi MSavoritias,
On Wed, Jun 19 2024, MSavoritias wrote:
> I am not interested what the states or licenses/copyrights allow or
> don't allow in this case. What I care about is what we expect as a
> community when we submit a package/code to guix and if that violates
> our social rules and expectations.
Just in case the sweeping mention of our social rules and expectations
includes me, please know that licensing and copyright are a big part of
why I am a part of this community.
Kind regards
Felix
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 2:56 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
@ 2024-06-20 5:18 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-20 5:18 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Felix Lechner; +Cc: Greg Hogan, guix-devel
On Wed, 19 Jun 2024 19:56:26 -0700
Felix Lechner <felix.lechner@lease-up.com> wrote:
> Hi MSavoritias,
>
> On Wed, Jun 19 2024, MSavoritias wrote:
>
> > I am not interested what the states or licenses/copyrights allow or
> > don't allow in this case. What I care about is what we expect as a
> > community when we submit a package/code to guix and if that violates
> > our social rules and expectations.
>
> Just in case the sweeping mention of our social rules and expectations
> includes me, please know that licensing and copyright are a big part
> of why I am a part of this community.
>
> Kind regards
> Felix
Sure we all are.
But remember that we also have a CoC and social rules because building
a community can't be done on top of legal rules ie. copyright.
Just like social rules shouldn't be used for legal matters all the
time, same way with copyright for social rules. Which is what I am
saying here.
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-19 8:36 ` Dale Mellor
@ 2024-06-20 17:00 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-20 18:42 ` Dale Mellor
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Andreas Enge @ 2024-06-20 17:00 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor; +Cc: guix-devel
Am Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 09:36:29AM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
> No, it's not. I use Guix as a tool to develop my own projects, private and
> personal for reasons I'm keeping to myself. As part of that I write package
> definitions for them, and use the Guix machinery to build and test. I *cannot*
> have Guix just giving my code away to anybody, that is just fundamentally wrong.
>
> I think at least there should be a /restricted/ license type available to
> package definitions, and the system absolutely should not give source code away
> from packages which use this (of course, they won't get into the official
> distribution, but that's fine).
Is there a misunderstanding here? The Guix software framework does not
communicate software that you work on to outsiders. As I understand it,
SWH looks at the Guix packages that are publicly available in the Guix
git repo, and then archives the corresponding source code of these packages.
By definition, this is free software (otherwise we would not package it),
and available from elsewhere on the Internet (the "uri" part of the
"source" field). So I think Guix does not actually do anything in this
context, and all this discussion is moot. (Well, I suppose we may encourage
SWH to archive these sources, and am personally very much in favour of it;
but they do not need us for archiving the sources.)
The goal of SWH is to archive all free software in the world, and if you
want to prevent your software from appearing in their collection, the only
reliable solution is to not publish it as free software (which apparently
is your approach, Dale, for the software you are talking about).
Andreas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 17:00 ` Andreas Enge
@ 2024-06-20 18:42 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-20 20:54 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-20 21:27 ` Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem Simon Tournier
0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Dale Mellor @ 2024-06-20 18:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
On Thu, 2024-06-20 at 19:00 +0200, Andreas Enge wrote:
> Am Wed, Jun 19, 2024 at 09:36:29AM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
> > No, it's not. I use Guix as a tool to develop my own projects, private
> > and
> > personal for reasons I'm keeping to myself. As part of that I write package
> > definitions for them, and use the Guix machinery to build and test. I
> > *cannot*
> > have Guix just giving my code away to anybody, that is just fundamentally
> > wrong.
>
> Is there a misunderstanding here? The Guix software framework does not
> communicate software that you work on to outsiders.
I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I tried.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 18:42 ` Dale Mellor
@ 2024-06-20 20:54 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-20 20:59 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2024-06-20 21:27 ` Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem Simon Tournier
1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Andreas Enge @ 2024-06-20 20:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor; +Cc: guix-devel
Am Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 07:42:44PM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
> I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I tried.
Ah indeed, there is this in guix/lint.scm:
(define (check-archival package)
"Check whether PACKAGE's source code is archived on Software Heritage. If
it's not, and if its source code is a VCS snapshot, then send a \"save\"
request to Software Heritage.
It potentially calls this:
(define (save-package-source package)
"Attempt to save the source of PACKAGE on SWH. Return a list of warnings."
Which calls this from swh.scm:
(define* (save-origin url #:optional (type "git"))
"Request URL to be saved."
(call (swh-url "/api/1/origin/save" type "url" url) json->save-reply
http-post*))
So it does not push code, but a URL from which the code can be downloaded.
Thus it requires the code to be available from the Internet; local code
is "safe" from SWH.
Now I do not know what will happen if you save your code as a git
repository at a hidden URL. For instance, does SWH check the license?
I would hope so.
There is documentation of this feature here:
https://archive.softwareheritage.org/api/1/origin/save/doc/
which says this:
Depending of the provided origin url, the save request can either be:
- immediately accepted, for well known code hosting providers like for instance GitHub or GitLab
- rejected, in case the url is blacklisted by Software Heritage
- put in pending state until a manual check is done in order to determine if it can be loaded or not
So I suppose that if you submit a hidden, but publicly available URL
pointing to non-free code, the request will be "put in pending state",
manually checked and rejected, and maybe the URL added to the blacklist.
Andreas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 20:54 ` Andreas Enge
@ 2024-06-20 20:59 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2024-06-20 21:12 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Ekaitz Zarraga @ 2024-06-20 20:59 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andreas Enge, Dale Mellor; +Cc: guix-devel
Hi,
On 2024-06-20 22:54, Andreas Enge wrote:
> Am Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 07:42:44PM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
>> I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I tried.
>
> Ah indeed, there is this in guix/lint.scm:
>
> (define (check-archival package)
> "Check whether PACKAGE's source code is archived on Software Heritage. If
> it's not, and if its source code is a VCS snapshot, then send a \"save\"
> request to Software Heritage.
>
> It potentially calls this:
> (define (save-package-source package)
> "Attempt to save the source of PACKAGE on SWH. Return a list of warnings."
>
> Which calls this from swh.scm:
> (define* (save-origin url #:optional (type "git"))
> "Request URL to be saved."
> (call (swh-url "/api/1/origin/save" type "url" url) json->save-reply
> http-post*))
>
> So it does not push code, but a URL from which the code can be downloaded.
> Thus it requires the code to be available from the Internet; local code
> is "safe" from SWH.
>
> Now I do not know what will happen if you save your code as a git
> repository at a hidden URL. For instance, does SWH check the license?
> I would hope so.
>
> There is documentation of this feature here:
> https://archive.softwareheritage.org/api/1/origin/save/doc/
> which says this:
> Depending of the provided origin url, the save request can either be:
> - immediately accepted, for well known code hosting providers like for instance GitHub or GitLab
> - rejected, in case the url is blacklisted by Software Heritage
> - put in pending state until a manual check is done in order to determine if it can be loaded or not
>
> So I suppose that if you submit a hidden, but publicly available URL
> pointing to non-free code, the request will be "put in pending state",
> manually checked and rejected, and maybe the URL added to the blacklist.
>
> Andreas
>
>
For this specific case we could add some flag to the command line like
`--do-not-archive` or something like that.
WDYT?
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 20:59 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
@ 2024-06-20 21:12 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Andreas Enge @ 2024-06-20 21:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ekaitz Zarraga; +Cc: Dale Mellor, guix-devel
Am Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 10:59:41PM +0200 schrieb Ekaitz Zarraga:
> For this specific case we could add some flag to the command line like
> `--do-not-archive` or something like that.
guix lint -x archival
if I understand "guix lint --help" correctly.
Andreas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 18:42 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-20 20:54 ` Andreas Enge
@ 2024-06-20 21:27 ` Simon Tournier
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-20 21:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
Hi,
On Thu, 20 Jun 2024 at 19:42, Dale Mellor <guix-devel-0brg6a@rdmp.org> wrote:
> I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I
> tried.
Yes, it’s the checker ’archival’.
Therefore, running “guix lint -x archival” does not send any request to
SWH.
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-18 8:37 Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem MSavoritias
` (2 preceding siblings ...)
2024-06-19 10:10 ` Efraim Flashner
@ 2024-06-21 8:39 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 9:12 ` MSavoritias
3 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-21 8:39 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias, Dale Mellor, Ian Eure, guix-devel
Hi all,
For the record, the Software Heritage initiative is supportive of the
Guix project since years.
It means that members of Guix community have or had interactions with
Software Heritage (SWH) teams since years. For example, the blog post
“Connecting reproducible deployment to a long-term source code archive”
[1] published in 2019. And more recently, the scientific communication
“Source Code Archiving to the Rescue of Reproducible Deployment” [2].
Almost 6 years of friendly interactions and shared values.
Could we avoid to express definitive opinions based on partial
considerations about multi-dimensional topics?
Since years, several members of Guix community are helped in one way or
the other by SWH team members in improving free software ecosystem.
Well, I speak for myself: I have been invited to several events
organized by SWH and it’s up to you to trust me when I say: SWH team
works very hard to embrace all the diversity of FOSS communities. For
example, I recently attended to a talk organized by SWH about Commons;
that talk had been a very good food for thought and maybe it could feed
our current discussion about governance/sociocracy via comments here or
there I could commit, I do not know, maybe.
Well, I am very grateful for the opportunity to interact with SWH teams.
For the record, SWH provided various supports for the organization of 10
Years of Guix, back in 2022. Please remember that SWH team members were
there and some stayed all the three days; probably because we are a nice
community? All the video stream and good videos of the 10 Years of Guix
event you probably watched or maybe watch again is because the tireless
work of multi-hats person (Debian Developer, Debian Video Team, … and
working at SWH) helped by Guix community members.
Please check the Copyright header for the subcommand “guix locate”.
Yes, it had been partly written by one SWH team member because, yes they
run Guix. Yes, their day-job is at SWH and they are also part of our
Guix community by contributing to Guix source code.
Now, you take it as it is: I am sad by what people are concluding!
Yes I understand why people are angry. Yes discussions must happen.
However, I was expecting more benefit of the doubt considering history
and track record. Hum, even, maybe, I am asking myself if Guix
community is indeed nice or if this time the community is just harsh and
unfair.
Do we forget the track record and the common history?
Then, for what my opinion is worth, fighting against SWH while thinking
it’s fighting against LLM/AI is the wrong fight. Because 1. we are all
in the team. And 2. because SWH could be a facilitator for helping in
some regulations, maybe, I do not know. Somehow, I agree with Ekaitz.
You take it as it is: I was expecting more humility by Guix community
members. Do you really think that a collective of people involved in
various FOSS communities with different roles, dedicating their free
time to free software or open source movements, do you think they are
the bad actors here?
My humility tells me, as I expressed several times, nothing is ignored.
Yes I also got the point about the lack of transparency. As I said
above, FWIW, I am in touch with SWH team. Well, I do not have special
information from SWH and I trust them to have listened or are still
listening various communities. So my understanding is: work is in
progress… Somehow, wait and see.
Yes I know we cannot wait forever. Again, do we forget the track record
and the common history? Do we consider that a multi-layers topic
involving legal or ethics questions is straightforward to articulate?
My humility tells me to wait to have clear and better understanding
about SWH motivations, their rationale, the measures and
counter-measures they maybe have in mind. Be patient and tolerant as I
am with my friends.
Long enough email and thread. That’s all from me! :-)
My last message. Not because I am bored but because one week of
holidays is starting now for me. ;-)
1: https://guix.gnu.org/en/blog/2019/connecting-reproducible-deployment-to-a-long-term-source-code-archive/
2: https://hal.science/hal-04586520v1
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-20 20:59 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2024-06-20 21:12 ` Andreas Enge
@ 2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-21 9:19 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
1 sibling, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Dale Mellor @ 2024-06-21 8:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
On Thu, 2024-06-20 at 22:59 +0200, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
> Hi,
>
> On 2024-06-20 22:54, Andreas Enge wrote:
> > Am Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 07:42:44PM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
> > > I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I
> > > tried.
> >
> > Ah indeed, there is this in guix/lint.scm:
> >
> > So it does not push code, but a URL from which the code can be downloaded.
> > Thus it requires the code to be available from the Internet; local code
> > is "safe" from SWH.
But this is still leaking information.
> > Now I do not know what will happen if you save your code as a git
> > repository at a hidden URL. For instance, does SWH check the license?
> > I would hope so.
Hope is not really good enough, there needs to be certainty in this.
>
> For this specific case we could add some flag to the command line like
> `--do-not-archive` or something like that.
`-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
of the bag privacy is lost. I really think this should be default behaviour, or
at least there should be a flag in the package definition. I would still be
uncomfortable with the last option, as everyone would be relying on the
collective of Guix maintainers to not screw up and accidentally leak private
data.
Dale
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 8:39 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Simon Tournier
@ 2024-06-21 9:12 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 9:46 ` Andreas Enge
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-21 9:12 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Simon Tournier; +Cc: Dale Mellor, Ian Eure, guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 10:39:50 +0200
Simon Tournier <zimon.toutoune@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey,
Just wanted to send a quick reply that as I have mentioned elsewhere I do not wish to see SWH go. I think they are doing great work.
and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
It was never my intent to make it seem like we need to burn all bridges with SWH. I do think they have done mistakes but that is not a reason to break apart.
We definetily need something like SWH and I do hope to see them come around to a consentual model.
MSavoritias
> Hi all,
>
> For the record, the Software Heritage initiative is supportive of the
> Guix project since years.
>
> It means that members of Guix community have or had interactions with
> Software Heritage (SWH) teams since years. For example, the blog post
> “Connecting reproducible deployment to a long-term source code archive”
> [1] published in 2019. And more recently, the scientific communication
> “Source Code Archiving to the Rescue of Reproducible Deployment” [2].
>
> Almost 6 years of friendly interactions and shared values.
>
> Could we avoid to express definitive opinions based on partial
> considerations about multi-dimensional topics?
>
> Since years, several members of Guix community are helped in one way or
> the other by SWH team members in improving free software ecosystem.
>
> Well, I speak for myself: I have been invited to several events
> organized by SWH and it’s up to you to trust me when I say: SWH team
> works very hard to embrace all the diversity of FOSS communities. For
> example, I recently attended to a talk organized by SWH about Commons;
> that talk had been a very good food for thought and maybe it could feed
> our current discussion about governance/sociocracy via comments here or
> there I could commit, I do not know, maybe.
>
> Well, I am very grateful for the opportunity to interact with SWH teams.
>
> For the record, SWH provided various supports for the organization of 10
> Years of Guix, back in 2022. Please remember that SWH team members were
> there and some stayed all the three days; probably because we are a nice
> community? All the video stream and good videos of the 10 Years of Guix
> event you probably watched or maybe watch again is because the tireless
> work of multi-hats person (Debian Developer, Debian Video Team, … and
> working at SWH) helped by Guix community members.
>
> Please check the Copyright header for the subcommand “guix locate”.
> Yes, it had been partly written by one SWH team member because, yes they
> run Guix. Yes, their day-job is at SWH and they are also part of our
> Guix community by contributing to Guix source code.
>
> Now, you take it as it is: I am sad by what people are concluding!
>
> Yes I understand why people are angry. Yes discussions must happen.
>
> However, I was expecting more benefit of the doubt considering history
> and track record. Hum, even, maybe, I am asking myself if Guix
> community is indeed nice or if this time the community is just harsh and
> unfair.
>
> Do we forget the track record and the common history?
>
> Then, for what my opinion is worth, fighting against SWH while thinking
> it’s fighting against LLM/AI is the wrong fight. Because 1. we are all
> in the team. And 2. because SWH could be a facilitator for helping in
> some regulations, maybe, I do not know. Somehow, I agree with Ekaitz.
>
> You take it as it is: I was expecting more humility by Guix community
> members. Do you really think that a collective of people involved in
> various FOSS communities with different roles, dedicating their free
> time to free software or open source movements, do you think they are
> the bad actors here?
>
> My humility tells me, as I expressed several times, nothing is ignored.
>
> Yes I also got the point about the lack of transparency. As I said
> above, FWIW, I am in touch with SWH team. Well, I do not have special
> information from SWH and I trust them to have listened or are still
> listening various communities. So my understanding is: work is in
> progress… Somehow, wait and see.
>
> Yes I know we cannot wait forever. Again, do we forget the track record
> and the common history? Do we consider that a multi-layers topic
> involving legal or ethics questions is straightforward to articulate?
>
> My humility tells me to wait to have clear and better understanding
> about SWH motivations, their rationale, the measures and
> counter-measures they maybe have in mind. Be patient and tolerant as I
> am with my friends.
>
> Long enough email and thread. That’s all from me! :-)
>
> My last message. Not because I am bored but because one week of
> holidays is starting now for me. ;-)
>
> 1: https://guix.gnu.org/en/blog/2019/connecting-reproducible-deployment-to-a-long-term-source-code-archive/
> 2: https://hal.science/hal-04586520v1
>
> Cheers,
> simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
@ 2024-06-21 9:19 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:33 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-21 9:19 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor; +Cc: Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge, guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 09:41:10 +0100
Dale Mellor <guix-devel-0brg6a@rdmp.org> wrote:
> On Thu, 2024-06-20 at 22:59 +0200, Ekaitz Zarraga wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > On 2024-06-20 22:54, Andreas Enge wrote:
> > > Am Thu, Jun 20, 2024 at 07:42:44PM +0100 schrieb Dale Mellor:
> > > > I'm sure guix lint tried to push my code out to them the last time I
> > > > tried.
> > >
> > > Ah indeed, there is this in guix/lint.scm:
> > >
> > > So it does not push code, but a URL from which the code can be downloaded.
> > > Thus it requires the code to be available from the Internet; local code
> > > is "safe" from SWH.
>
> But this is still leaking information.
>
> > > Now I do not know what will happen if you save your code as a git
> > > repository at a hidden URL. For instance, does SWH check the license?
> > > I would hope so.
>
> Hope is not really good enough, there needs to be certainty in this.
>
> >
> > For this specific case we could add some flag to the command line like
> > `--do-not-archive` or something like that.
>
> `-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
> of the bag privacy is lost. I really think this should be default behaviour, or
> at least there should be a flag in the package definition. I would still be
> uncomfortable with the last option, as everyone would be relying on the
> collective of Guix maintainers to not screw up and accidentally leak private
> data.
>
> Dale
Yeah very much agree this should be the default behavior. Archiving should be opt-in to avoid any surprises for the person running it.
I am surprised it became default actually.
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 9:12 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 9:46 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Andreas Enge @ 2024-06-21 9:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
Now the code may not be found by SWH, and the moment someone makes a Guix
package out of it and adds it to the Guix main channel, SWH will find and
archive it; but the opt-in has happened before at the moment I put the code
online with its license.
Maybe I misunderstood to what you want to apply the term "opt-in" (after
reading your other message in which you use the term, this seems to be
the case). If it is to source code of packages being used for AI training,
there is actually no need to have a separate opt-in. Either it is legal
under your license (and then you have effectively opted in), or it is
illegal (in which case explicit opt-in already is a requirement).
Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
> SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
Whether or not one agrees with the SWH policy on LLM training (and I have
not looked at it well enough to form my opinion), I do not think there
is anything we should change at the level of the Guix project. Maybe SWH
should put into place an opt-in procedure for feeding LLM; but I do not
think we in Guix should put into place an opt-in procedure for informing
SWH of the source code we package. (Which would be completely ineffective
anyway: One single person in the world would be enough to run the code in
"guix lint -c archival" on all Guix packages in all channels they have
access to. For instance, SWH themselves.)
Andreas
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 9:46 ` Andreas Enge
@ 2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
` (2 more replies)
0 siblings, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-21 10:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> > and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
>
> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people understand it.
See for example mirroring videos that creators have made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting posts for a search engine.
As I have been saying a lot in this thread (because there seem to be a lot of people in the Guix community not familiar that legal are not the same as social rules):
-Just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you SHOULD. In the sense that yes somebody can probably harvest all my posts from activitypub and post them somewhere else,
in practise they are an asshole tho and probably are going to be deferated pretty fast for breaking the social rules of common human decency :)
This is by design in activitypub btw the social rule of don't harvest stuff. Same way that it is in xmpp. Not that assholes don't exist of course, but nobody is exempt from common human decency and
a following the rules of a place. See also https://www.consentfultech.io/ for a good read. Hope it answers some questions.
- What you are saying even if it was true, is not indicated anywhere in the manual or the website. (which is part of what I want to do.) Add a warning for package authors and commiters and a proper procedure.
We are ultimately living in a society that we have some good faith by default that everybody acts respectfully (dont leak my messages that i sent to you in private for example). If they don't
we take measures to not include them anymore. I am not saying this for SWH mind you, its just an example.
Saying that I can do whatever I want is a very reductionist point of view that I doubt would be acceptable inside Guix and FSF even. Given that GPL itself doesn't allow you to do whatever you want.
TBH it seems you are not the only one in this thread not knowing that laws (legal rules of states) ie. the FSF licenses and work and whatever, are not the same as social rules.
But given that Guix has a CoC and social rules on top of that I am hopeful :)
> Now the code may not be found by SWH, and the moment someone makes a Guix
> package out of it and adds it to the Guix main channel, SWH will find and
> archive it; but the opt-in has happened before at the moment I put the code
> online with its license.
>
> Maybe I misunderstood to what you want to apply the term "opt-in" (after
> reading your other message in which you use the term, this seems to be
> the case). If it is to source code of packages being used for AI training,
> there is actually no need to have a separate opt-in. Either it is legal
> under your license (and then you have effectively opted in), or it is
> illegal (in which case explicit opt-in already is a requirement).
Again as I wrote above legal has nothing to do with it really. Its about our social rules and what we have as common understanding in Guix.
if you just do something just because you can, then that makes you an asshole in my book. See hostile forks for example that have happened.
> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> > Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
> > SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
>
> Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
> repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
> reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
This is bikeshedding and arguing on schemantics. Guix gives them a url to download the source code from, so ultimately we (the Guix project) is responsible for the code showing up in there.
Lets not argue over schemantics like this. It is even posted on their website in case you want to argue otherwise https://www.softwareheritage.org/2019/04/18/software-heritage-and-gnu-guix-join-forces-to-enable-long-term-reproducibility/
> Whether or not one agrees with the SWH policy on LLM training (and I have
> not looked at it well enough to form my opinion), I do not think there
> is anything we should change at the level of the Guix project. Maybe SWH
> should put into place an opt-in procedure for feeding LLM; but I do not
> think we in Guix should put into place an opt-in procedure for informing
> SWH of the source code we package. (Which would be completely ineffective
> anyway: One single person in the world would be enough to run the code in
> "guix lint -c archival" on all Guix packages in all channels they have
> access to. For instance, SWH themselves.)
Sure they can. But it starts with showing an example ourselves how it is done. If we wait on others we might as well shut guix down and go develop on macs or something :P
Putting it in Guix is the optimal way to act in good faith towards our community imo. Is it harder? sure. But its always harder to care about consent and privacy and such than otherwise.
MSavoritias
>
> Andreas
>
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem
2024-06-21 9:19 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 13:33 ` Luis Felipe
0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Luis Felipe @ 2024-06-21 13:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias, Dale Mellor; +Cc: guix-devel
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Hi,
El 21/06/24 a las 9:19, MSavoritias escribió:
> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 09:41:10 +0100
> Dale Mellor <guix-devel-0brg6a@rdmp.org> wrote:
>
>> `-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
>> of the bag privacy is lost. I really think this should be default behaviour, or
>> at least there should be a flag in the package definition. I would still be
>> uncomfortable with the last option, as everyone would be relying on the
>> collective of Guix maintainers to not screw up and accidentally leak private
>> data.
>>
>> Dale
> Yeah very much agree this should be the default behavior. Archiving should be opt-in to avoid any surprises for the person running it.
> I am surprised it became default actually.
MSavoritias, Dale, I think this is one specific point you could report
as an issue (https://issues.guix.gnu.org/), track it with a number and
maybe provide patches if you are able to.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 14:15 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-22 13:06 ` Richard Sent
2 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Luis Felipe @ 2024-06-21 13:45 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
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El 21/06/24 a las 10:44, MSavoritias escribió:
> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
>
>> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
>>> Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
>>> SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
>> Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
>> repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
>> reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
> This is bikeshedding and arguing on schemantics. Guix gives them a url to download the source code from, so ultimately we (the Guix project) is responsible for the code showing up in there.
> Lets not argue over schemantics like this. It is even posted on their website in case you want to argue otherwise https://www.softwareheritage.org/2019/04/18/software-heritage-and-gnu-guix-join-forces-to-enable-long-term-reproducibility/
I think the differentiation between sending code and sending a URL is
necessary. Saying that Guix sends your code or your source files to SWH
leads people to think that Guix *will* transmit those files from your
local machine over the Internet to SWH machines when you run "guix lint
YOUR_PRIVATE_PACKAGE". And that's not the case, is it?
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
@ 2024-06-21 14:15 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 16:33 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 16:34 ` Liliana Marie Prikler
0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-21 14:15 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Luis Felipe; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 13:45:04 +0000
Luis Felipe <sirgazil@zoho.com> wrote:
> El 21/06/24 a las 10:44, MSavoritias escribió:
> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> > Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
> >
> >> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> >>> Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
> >>> SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
> >> Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
> >> repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
> >> reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
> > This is bikeshedding and arguing on schemantics. Guix gives them a url to download the source code from, so ultimately we (the Guix project) is responsible for the code showing up in there.
> > Lets not argue over schemantics like this. It is even posted on their website in case you want to argue otherwise https://www.softwareheritage.org/2019/04/18/software-heritage-and-gnu-guix-join-forces-to-enable-long-term-reproducibility/
>
> I think the differentiation between sending code and sending a URL is
> necessary. Saying that Guix sends your code or your source files to SWH
> leads people to think that Guix *will* transmit those files from your
> local machine over the Internet to SWH machines when you run "guix lint
> YOUR_PRIVATE_PACKAGE". And that's not the case, is it?
But I didnt say that tho did I? the context you are reading as from the quote is Guix uploading all code from its packages to SWH.
Not any private repos. So i have no idea what you are reffering to here tbh.
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 14:15 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 16:33 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 17:04 ` Msavoritias
2024-06-21 16:34 ` Liliana Marie Prikler
1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Luis Felipe @ 2024-06-21 16:33 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
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El 21/06/24 a las 14:15, MSavoritias escribió:
> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 13:45:04 +0000
> Luis Felipe <sirgazil@zoho.com> wrote:
>
>> El 21/06/24 a las 10:44, MSavoritias escribió:
>>> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
>>> Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
>>>
>>>> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
>>>>> Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
>>>>> SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
>>>> Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
>>>> repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
>>>> reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
>>> This is bikeshedding and arguing on schemantics. Guix gives them a url to download the source code from, so ultimately we (the Guix project) is responsible for the code showing up in there.
>>> Lets not argue over schemantics like this. It is even posted on their website in case you want to argue otherwise https://www.softwareheritage.org/2019/04/18/software-heritage-and-gnu-guix-join-forces-to-enable-long-term-reproducibility/
>> I think the differentiation between sending code and sending a URL is
>> necessary. Saying that Guix sends your code or your source files to SWH
>> leads people to think that Guix *will* transmit those files from your
>> local machine over the Internet to SWH machines when you run "guix lint
>> YOUR_PRIVATE_PACKAGE". And that's not the case, is it?
> But I didnt say that tho did I? the context you are reading as from the quote is Guix uploading all code from its packages to SWH.
> Not any private repos. So i have no idea what you are reffering to here tbh.
No, you didn't.
What I'm trying to say is that I don't think specifying what Guix
sends/uploads to SWH is "bikeshedding". For example, when you say "Guix
uploading all code from its packages to SWH", it's ambiguous to me. I
don't understand whether you are referring to the package definitions or
to the source files those packages refer to. And, if I understand
correctly, Guix doesn't upload any of these to SWH.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 14:15 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 16:33 ` Luis Felipe
@ 2024-06-21 16:34 ` Liliana Marie Prikler
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Liliana Marie Prikler @ 2024-06-21 16:34 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias, Luis Felipe; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
Hi, MSavoritias,
Am Freitag, dem 21.06.2024 um 17:15 +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> But I didnt say that tho did I? the context you are reading as from
> the quote is Guix uploading all code from its packages to SWH.
> Not any private repos. So i have no idea what you are reffering to
> here tbh.
I hate to say that, but you kinda did. It was implicit on the mailing
list (at least in the OP), but very explicit in the XMPP room, where
you say
"it automatically sen[d]s your repo (and all your code) that is
reachable through the internet to Software Heritage […] with no way to
opt-out at any of the process and no flag with `guix lint` to disable
it"
Now, you stand corrected on both accounts (the automatic sending of
code and the inability to disable it), but I'd like to poke at another
tangent.
Currently, the StarCoder LLM endorsed by SWH, claims to only ingest
GitHub and to filter out both commercial and copyleft code, thus
training on non-copyleft "open source" software only [1]. So, at the
time of writing, you do have an "easy" opt-out by way of using the GPL.
Except, that, of course, their script to detect licenses is buggy –
what else did you expect? Just search for GNOME using their tool.[2]
It will print out repos like the unlicensed releng [3] – although for
some reason, being unlicensed appears to be fair game to them anyway
[1] – or the GPL'd devhelp [4].
So, in my opinion, the collaboration between SWH and StarCoder should
trigger some side-eyeing; and if only to exclude the archival lint for
the time being. We can still consider SWH as a software mirror if all
else fails, and they should probably be quick enough in updating as
well. Long term, we might want to look into options that do not openly
endorse tools which make such questionable decisions.
On the notion of consent, I do think that "I license my code under the
MIT license, because then companies will like me" ought to count as
consent here. [3] and [4] on the other hand very much don't. Also,
"sign up with GitHub, so that you can opt out" is not a great consent
model either – at the very least accept bleeping email.
As per Doctorow's law of enshittification, there is a good chance that
"ethical AI" to SWH will become "any AI" if we do nothing to
communicate that this is not what we as Guix expect.
Cheers
[1] https://arxiv.org/abs/2402.19173
[2] https://huggingface.co/spaces/bigcode/in-the-stack
[3] https://github.com/GNOME/releng
[4] https://github.com/GNOME/devhelp
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
@ 2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-21 17:22 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 17:25 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-22 13:06 ` Richard Sent
2 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Vagrant Cascadian @ 2024-06-21 16:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: guix-devel
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On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
>> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
>> > and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
>>
>> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
>> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
>> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
>
> That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people understand it.
> See for example mirroring videos that creators have made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting posts for a search engine.
I think the fundamental difference is that such videos or activitypub
posts are not necessarily released under a license that *expressly*
permits sharing.
In most cases, those posts and videos are often released without any
license at all, and the person retains the legal, social, moral and
ethical rights to decide how that content is shared if at all. (I am
speaking with those terms in the "plain" english sense, although they
may have specific legal meanings in some contexts)
> As I have been saying a lot in this thread (because there seem to be a
> lot of people in the Guix community not familiar that legal are not
> the same as social rules):
> -Just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you SHOULD. In the sense that yes somebody can probably harvest all my posts from activitypub and post them somewhere else,
> in practise they are an asshole tho and probably are going to be
> deferated pretty fast for breaking the social rules of common human
> decency :)
With something released under a Free Software license, calling someone
an "asshole" simply for using the permissions granted by that license,
by the very person who granted those permissions, starts to feel a bit
like a baited trap and honestly, maybe outright duplicitous. Certainly
rude, at the very least.
Again, that is different from some arbitrary post or video or cat
picture on the internet, which more likely than not has no explicit
permissions granted.
> TBH it seems you are not the only one in this thread not knowing that laws (legal rules of states) ie. the FSF licenses and work and whatever, are not the same as social rules.
> But given that Guix has a CoC and social rules on top of that I am hopeful :)
Well... free software ... is a bunch of social rules. Licenses are
social rules. Contracts are social rules. Laws are social
rules. Admittedly, a lot of the mechanics involved in law creation and
enforcement are dubious and suspect and weighted in the favor large,
wealthy and/or otherwise powerful entities...
I am not sure arguing about social vs. legal vs. whatever is even really
a useful direction... almost missing the point entirely.
I would rather ask... what is the intention of the Free Software
movement?
The licenses are merely imperfect tools to achieve those aims, and a
clever way to leverage some specific legal mechanisms, but the licenses
are not an end unto themselves.
For me personally, it is about creating a shared commons that can be
used to build healthy thriving local, regional, global and virtual
communities that do useful or interesting things... I dare dream that
some of those collaboration skills leak into other aspects of life too,
not just software!
I have a lot of doubts that the LLM training from SWH data is going to
further this vision for free software... while the overall work of SWH
most definitely does.
Given my crude understanding of how LLM training works, it seems hard to
imagine that it could actually produce models that comply with all of
the license terms of innumerable free software projects, some of which
have mutually incompatible terms. For just a handful of examples that
are incompatible with the GPL:
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/license-list.html#GPLIncompatibleLicenses
So unless they are very extremely exceedingly excruciatingly careful
about not including incompatible licenses... I have significant doubts.
The incentives are just not there.
I am a bit disappointed with the very optimistic take SWH has regarding
LLMs for code:
https://www.softwareheritage.org/2023/10/19/swh-statement-on-llm-for-code/
Even with all the identifiers to show which code a model was trained on,
the whole point of a large model is it is built from a huge
dataset... my guess is it takes significantly more effort to audit that
dataset than to create an LLM with it.
Which is to say license compliance, one of the few tools of the Free
Software movement, seems unlikely to be effective. It is barely
effective with more traditional software development.
In short, er, at length, I am really not sure what to do.
I find the opt-out/opt-in angle to be almost tangential.
I find all the hype, and more importantly, active harm done with LLMs to
be a very serious threat to free software, various disadvantaged
communities, and possibly the literal liveability of our biggest commons
so far, dear planet earth... to be appalling.
If some social pressure from the Guix community could improve things, by
all means, though I worry that it might be at best performative rather
than effective, especially if the pressure is placed N parties removed
from the source of the actual problem (e.g. those irresponsibly training
of LLMs without respecting the licenses).
Aaaaaand... I have to cut myself off now. :)
live well,
vagrant
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 16:33 ` Luis Felipe
@ 2024-06-21 17:04 ` Msavoritias
0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Msavoritias @ 2024-06-21 17:04 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Luis Felipe; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 16:33:40 +0000
Luis Felipe <sirgazil@zoho.com> wrote:
> El 21/06/24 a las 14:15, MSavoritias escribió:
> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 13:45:04 +0000
> > Luis Felipe <sirgazil@zoho.com> wrote:
> >
> >> El 21/06/24 a las 10:44, MSavoritias escribió:
> >>> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> >>> Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
> >>>
> >>>> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 11:14:18AM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> >>>>> Aside from that even Guix uploading all code from the packages to
> >>>>> SWH that basically feeds it to a LLM model is indeed not honoring consent of the author of the package.
> >>>> Guix does not upload code to SWH. It gives them a pointer to a public git
> >>>> repository that SWH then harvests or not according to their rules (see my
> >>>> reply to Dale yesterday). These are not the same things at all.
> >>> This is bikeshedding and arguing on schemantics. Guix gives them a url to download the source code from, so ultimately we (the Guix project) is responsible for the code showing up in there.
> >>> Lets not argue over schemantics like this. It is even posted on their website in case you want to argue otherwise https://www.softwareheritage.org/2019/04/18/software-heritage-and-gnu-guix-join-forces-to-enable-long-term-reproducibility/
> >> I think the differentiation between sending code and sending a URL is
> >> necessary. Saying that Guix sends your code or your source files to SWH
> >> leads people to think that Guix *will* transmit those files from your
> >> local machine over the Internet to SWH machines when you run "guix lint
> >> YOUR_PRIVATE_PACKAGE". And that's not the case, is it?
> > But I didnt say that tho did I? the context you are reading as from the quote is Guix uploading all code from its packages to SWH.
> > Not any private repos. So i have no idea what you are reffering to here tbh.
>
> No, you didn't.
>
> What I'm trying to say is that I don't think specifying what Guix
> sends/uploads to SWH is "bikeshedding". For example, when you say "Guix
> uploading all code from its packages to SWH", it's ambiguous to me. I
> don't understand whether you are referring to the package definitions or
> to the source files those packages refer to. And, if I understand
> correctly, Guix doesn't upload any of these to SWH.
From the `guix lint` documentation:
archival ¶
Checks whether the package’s source code is archived at Software Heritage.
When the source code that is not archived comes from a version-control system (VCS)—e.g., it’s obtained with git-fetch, send Software Heritage a “save” request so that it eventually archives it. This ensures that the source will remain available in the long term, and that Guix can fall back to Software Heritage should the source code disappear from its original host. The status of recent “save” requests can be viewed on-line.
When source code is a tarball obtained with url-fetch, simply print a message when it is not archived. As of this writing, Software Heritage does not allow requests to save arbitrary tarballs; we are working on ways to ensure that non-VCS source code is also archived.
Software Heritage limits the request rate per IP address. When the limit is reached, guix lint prints a message and the archival checker stops doing anything until that limit has been reset.
This is run for all packages in the Guix tree in case you didnt know. (and by default in guix lint)
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
@ 2024-06-21 17:22 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 20:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-21 17:25 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
1 sibling, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-21 17:22 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vagrant Cascadian; +Cc: guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 09:51:30 -0700
Vagrant Cascadian <vagrant@debian.org> wrote:
> On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> > Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
> >> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> >> > and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
> >>
> >> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
> >> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
> >> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
> >
> > That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people understand it.
> > See for example mirroring videos that creators have made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting posts for a search engine.
>
> I think the fundamental difference is that such videos or activitypub
> posts are not necessarily released under a license that *expressly*
> permits sharing.
>
> In most cases, those posts and videos are often released without any
> license at all, and the person retains the legal, social, moral and
> ethical rights to decide how that content is shared if at all. (I am
> speaking with those terms in the "plain" english sense, although they
> may have specific legal meanings in some contexts)
Its not actually. License doesn't matter to fediverse communities (I am talking ones that are part of the BadSpace here)
It is a social issue and treat accordinly. As in defederate (dont assosiate) with people who dont respect your community rules.
Laws, and licenses have nothing to do with it.
Also bear in mind that the same communities opposed and blocked search engines that tried to make the posts searchable.
That is why it became opt-in in the end :D
> > As I have been saying a lot in this thread (because there seem to be a
> > lot of people in the Guix community not familiar that legal are not
> > the same as social rules):
>
> > -Just because you CAN do something doesn't mean you SHOULD. In the sense that yes somebody can probably harvest all my posts from activitypub and post them somewhere else,
> > in practise they are an asshole tho and probably are going to be
> > deferated pretty fast for breaking the social rules of common human
> > decency :)
>
> With something released under a Free Software license, calling someone
> an "asshole" simply for using the permissions granted by that license,
> by the very person who granted those permissions, starts to feel a bit
> like a baited trap and honestly, maybe outright duplicitous. Certainly
> rude, at the very least.
>
> Again, that is different from some arbitrary post or video or cat
> picture on the internet, which more likely than not has no explicit
> permissions granted.
See about fediverse again. Its understood socially to be a bad thing not legally.
Because after all mostly nobody has the time and money for state laws to work.
> > TBH it seems you are not the only one in this thread not knowing that laws (legal rules of states) ie. the FSF licenses and work and whatever, are not the same as social rules.
> > But given that Guix has a CoC and social rules on top of that I am hopeful :)
>
> Well... free software ... is a bunch of social rules. Licenses are
> social rules. Contracts are social rules. Laws are social
> rules. Admittedly, a lot of the mechanics involved in law creation and
> enforcement are dubious and suspect and weighted in the favor large,
> wealthy and/or otherwise powerful entities...
>
> I am not sure arguing about social vs. legal vs. whatever is even really
> a useful direction... almost missing the point entirely.
>
> I would rather ask... what is the intention of the Free Software
> movement?
>
> The licenses are merely imperfect tools to achieve those aims, and a
> clever way to leverage some specific legal mechanisms, but the licenses
> are not an end unto themselves.
>
> For me personally, it is about creating a shared commons that can be
> used to build healthy thriving local, regional, global and virtual
> communities that do useful or interesting things... I dare dream that
> some of those collaboration skills leak into other aspects of life too,
> not just software!
That is all well and good but sadly Free Software says nothing about social rules.
For example what is Guix supposed to do when racists come in the chat?
or what if there is a hostile fork with the same name and submits itself for Guix inclusion?
or what if like a few months ago you have a trans person saying in the mailing list that you deadnamed them? Do we not change the software even if FSF free software says we can do whatever we want?
I doubt the last case would go well with a lot of people in the Guix community.
These are just some examples that Free Software can't solve for better or for worse. So it is up to social rules to decide what to do.
That is to say I agree we need collaboration and shared commons and such. But to create said collaborations we need to create safe spaces, protect people, value consent.
> If some social pressure from the Guix community could improve things, by
> all means, though I worry that it might be at best performative rather
> than effective, especially if the pressure is placed N parties removed
> from the source of the actual problem (e.g. those irresponsibly training
> of LLMs without respecting the licenses).
Maybe, maybe not. Its not only about "changing" SWH tho. That would be nice indeed by itself.
What it also accomplishes is that it signals that Guix cares about consent and about its community.
> Aaaaaand... I have to cut myself off now. :)
>
>
> live well,
> vagrant
Regards,
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-21 17:22 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 17:25 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution. @ 2024-06-21 17:25 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vagrant Cascadian, guix-devel
Hi Vagrant,
On Fri, Jun 21 2024, Vagrant Cascadian wrote:
> I have to cut myself off now.
Please feel free to keep going. Out of the dozens of comments here,
including my own, yours was the most valuable.
+1 to your fatigue with LLM hype; to the critique of the excess
expenditure of precious resources; to the legal/social observations; and
also to the balance of your message.
Thank you for saving me from having to write all that myself!
Kind regards
Felix
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH]
2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-21 9:19 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 17:51 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
` (2 more replies)
1 sibling, 3 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-21 17:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor, Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 250 bytes --]
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 at 09:41, Dale Mellor <guix-devel-0brg6a@rdmp.org> wrote:
> `-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget
[...]
> at least there should be a flag in the package definition.
See attached the patch implementing that.
[-- Attachment #2: p.patch --]
[-- Type: text/x-diff, Size: 9894 bytes --]
From 8cb162bcde91d3b39453de576caadb9a6f8f8733 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
Message-ID: <8cb162bcde91d3b39453de576caadb9a6f8f8733.1718990517.git.zimon.toutoune@gmail.com>
From: Simon Tournier <zimon.toutoune@gmail.com>
Date: Fri, 21 Jun 2024 19:17:57 +0200
Subject: [PATCH] guix: lint: Honor 'no-archival?' package property.
* guix/lint.scm (check-archival): Skip the checker if the package is marked.
* doc/guix.texi: Document it.
Change-Id: I2e21b60ee4f02255f298740a2e9ebb1717e490ff
---
doc/guix.texi | 15 ++++-
guix/lint.scm | 154 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++------------------------
2 files changed, 93 insertions(+), 76 deletions(-)
diff --git a/doc/guix.texi b/doc/guix.texi
index 769ca1399f..5c1cb89686 100644
--- a/doc/guix.texi
+++ b/doc/guix.texi
@@ -71,7 +71,7 @@
Copyright @copyright{} 2019 Alex Griffin@*
Copyright @copyright{} 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022 Guillaume Le Vaillant@*
Copyright @copyright{} 2020 Liliana Marie Prikler@*
-Copyright @copyright{} 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023 Simon Tournier@*
+Copyright @copyright{} 2019, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023, 2024 Simon Tournier@*
Copyright @copyright{} 2020 Wiktor Żelazny@*
Copyright @copyright{} 2020 Damien Cassou@*
Copyright @copyright{} 2020 Jakub Kądziołka@*
@@ -15380,6 +15380,19 @@ Invoking guix lint
prints a message and the @code{archival} checker stops doing anything until
that limit has been reset.
+Sometimes it is not desired to send a request for archiving each time
+@command{guix lint} is run. The package might be marked to skip the
+@code{archival} checker by honoring the @code{no-archival?} property in
+package definition:
+
+@lisp
+(define-public python-scikit-learn
+ (package
+ (name "python-scikit-learn")
+ ;; @dots{}
+ (properties '((no-archival? . #t)))))
+@end lisp
+
@item cve
@cindex security vulnerabilities
@cindex CVE, Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures
diff --git a/guix/lint.scm b/guix/lint.scm
index 68d532968d..4c33ec6598 100644
--- a/guix/lint.scm
+++ b/guix/lint.scm
@@ -1717,84 +1717,88 @@ (define (check-archival package)
(lookup-directory-by-nar-hash (content-hash-value hash)
(content-hash-algorithm hash)))
- (parameterize ((%allow-request? skip-when-limit-reached))
- (catch #t
- (lambda ()
- (match (package-source package)
- (#f ;no source
- '())
- ((and (? origin? origin)
- (= origin-uri (? git-reference? reference)))
- (define url
- (git-reference-url reference))
- (define commit
- (git-reference-commit reference))
- (define hash
- (origin-hash origin))
-
- (match (or (lookup-by-nar-hash hash)
- (if (commit-id? commit)
- (or (lookup-revision commit)
- (lookup-origin-revision url commit))
- (lookup-origin-revision url commit)))
- ((or (? string?) (? revision?))
- '())
- (#f
- ;; Revision is missing from the archive, attempt to save it.
- (save-package-source package))))
- ((? origin? origin)
- (if (and=> (origin-hash origin) ;XXX: for ungoogled-chromium
- content-hash-value) ;& icecat
- (let ((hash (origin-hash origin)))
- (match (or (lookup-by-nar-hash hash)
- (lookup-content (content-hash-value hash)
- (symbol->string
- (content-hash-algorithm hash))))
- (#f
- ;; If ORIGIN is a version-control checkout, save it now.
- ;; If not, check whether HASH is in the Disarchive
- ;; database ("Save Code Now" does not accept tarballs).
- (if (vcs-origin origin)
- (save-package-source package)
- (match (lookup-disarchive-spec hash)
- (#f
- (list (make-warning package
- (G_ "source not archived on Software \
+ (if (not (assq 'no-archival? (package-properties package)))
+ (parameterize ((%allow-request? skip-when-limit-reached))
+ (catch #t
+ (lambda ()
+ (match (package-source package)
+ (#f ;no source
+ '())
+ ((and (? origin? origin)
+ (= origin-uri (? git-reference? reference)))
+ (define url
+ (git-reference-url reference))
+ (define commit
+ (git-reference-commit reference))
+ (define hash
+ (origin-hash origin))
+
+ (match (or (lookup-by-nar-hash hash)
+ (if (commit-id? commit)
+ (or (lookup-revision commit)
+ (lookup-origin-revision url commit))
+ (lookup-origin-revision url commit)))
+ ((or (? string?) (? revision?))
+ '())
+ (#f
+ ;; Revision is missing from the archive, attempt to save it.
+ (save-package-source package))))
+ ((? origin? origin)
+ (if (and=> (origin-hash origin) ;XXX: for ungoogled-chromium
+ content-hash-value) ;& icecat
+ (let ((hash (origin-hash origin)))
+ (match (or (lookup-by-nar-hash hash)
+ (lookup-content (content-hash-value hash)
+ (symbol->string
+ (content-hash-algorithm hash))))
+ (#f
+ ;; If ORIGIN is a version-control checkout, save it now.
+ ;; If not, check whether HASH is in the Disarchive
+ ;; database ("Save Code Now" does not accept tarballs).
+ (if (vcs-origin origin)
+ (save-package-source package)
+ (match (lookup-disarchive-spec hash)
+ (#f
+ (list (make-warning package
+ (G_ "source not archived on Software \
Heritage and missing from the Disarchive database")
- #:field 'source)))
- (directory-ids
- (match (find (lambda (id)
- (not (lookup-directory id)))
- directory-ids)
- (#f '())
- (id
- (list (make-warning package
- (G_ "\
+ #:field 'source)))
+ (directory-ids
+ (match (find (lambda (id)
+ (not (lookup-directory id)))
+ directory-ids)
+ (#f '())
+ (id
+ (list (make-warning package
+ (G_ "\
Disarchive entry refers to non-existent SWH directory '~a'")
- (list id)
- #:field 'source))))))))
- ((? content?)
- '())
- ((? string? swhid)
- '())))
- '()))
- ((? local-file?)
- '())
- (_
- (list (make-warning package
- (G_ "\
+ (list id)
+ #:field 'source))))))))
+ ((? content?)
+ '())
+ ((? string? swhid)
+ '())))
+ '()))
+ ((? local-file?)
+ '())
+ (_
+ (list (make-warning package
+ (G_ "\
source is not an origin, it cannot be archived")
- #:field 'source)))))
- (match-lambda*
- (('swh-error url method response)
- (swh-response->warning package url method response))
- ((key . args)
- (if (eq? key skip-key)
- '()
- (with-networking-fail-safe
- (G_ "while connecting to Software Heritage")
- '()
- (apply throw key args))))))))
+ #:field 'source)))))
+ (match-lambda*
+ (('swh-error url method response)
+ (swh-response->warning package url method response))
+ ((key . args)
+ (if (eq? key skip-key)
+ '()
+ (with-networking-fail-safe
+ (G_ "while connecting to Software Heritage")
+ '()
+ (apply throw key args)))))))
+ (list
+ (make-warning package
+ (G_ "skip archiving as marked by package")))))
(define (check-haskell-stackage package)
"Check whether PACKAGE is a Haskell package ahead of the current
base-commit: bc8a41f4a8d9f1f0525d7bc97c67ed3c8aea3111
--
2.41.0
[-- Attachment #3: Type: text/plain, Size: 466 bytes --]
Well, thinking about indeed it could helpful in some context to specify
the checkers to exclude at the package definition level. Other said,
this patch could be generalized. Work in progress… :-)
Cheers,
simon
PS: I am on the train and the network connection is poor… I have sent
the guix-patches but it does not appear. Hum, weird?! Is
debbugs.gnu.org having issues?
Because the issue rings a bell… but I do not find the message.
^ permalink raw reply related [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH]
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
@ 2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-21 18:44 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:42 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-22 15:54 ` Draft: dry-run + Exclude checker with package properties Simon Tournier
2 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution. @ 2024-06-21 18:37 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Simon Tournier, Dale Mellor, Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
Hi Simon,
On Fri, Jun 21 2024, Simon Tournier wrote:
> Is debbugs.gnu.org having issues?
Yes, the community0p server crashed this morning. Luckily, Debbugs
appears to be back online and added messages I sent during the outage.
Maybe yours will get there, too.
> See attached the patch implementing that.
Thank you! Do you see a chance we can amend the patch so I can block
such package definitions from being used by 'guix deploy', 'guix system
reconfigure' and 'guix home reconfigure'?
The new field looks to me like an amendment of the license terms,
especially if the field was added by the author pursuant to the
objections raised in this thread. I would rather not pollute my systems
with potentially unfree software.
Also, for all the controversy surrounding LLMs, which I read with great
interest, SHW still provides a valuable service by making sure the
sources I depend upon to configure my systems do not disappear. Due to
my custom patches, I regularly bootstrap Guix. I cannot be caught in a
situation from which I cannot recover.
Kind regards
Felix
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH]
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
@ 2024-06-21 18:42 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-22 15:54 ` Draft: dry-run + Exclude checker with package properties Simon Tournier
2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-21 18:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor, Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 at 19:51, Simon Tournier <zimon.toutoune@gmail.com> wrote:
> Well, thinking about indeed it could helpful in some context to specify
> the checkers to exclude at the package definition level. Other said,
> this patch could be generalized. Work in progress… :-)
Done here: https://issues.guix.gnu.org/71697#1
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH]
2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
@ 2024-06-21 18:44 ` Simon Tournier
0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-21 18:44 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Felix Lechner; +Cc: Dale Mellor, Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge, guix-devel
Hi Felix,
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 at 20:37, Felix Lechner <felix.lechner@lease-up.com> wrote:
> > Is debbugs.gnu.org having issues?
>
> Yes, the community0p server crashed this morning. Luckily, Debbugs
> appears to be back online and added messages I sent during the outage.
> Maybe yours will get there, too.
Thanks. Yeah the message reached issues.guix.gnu.org so I guess all
is fine. :-)
> > See attached the patch implementing that.
>
> Thank you! Do you see a chance we can amend the patch so I can block
> such package definitions from being used by 'guix deploy', 'guix system
> reconfigure' and 'guix home reconfigure'?
My input of this will wait after my holidays. ;-)
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 17:22 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-21 20:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-22 15:46 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Vagrant Cascadian @ 2024-06-21 20:51 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 6790 bytes --]
On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
> On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 09:51:30 -0700
> Vagrant Cascadian <vagrant@debian.org> wrote:
>
>> On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
>> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
>> > Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
>> >> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
>> >> > and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
>> >>
>> >> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
>> >> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
>> >> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
>> >
>> > That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people understand it.
>> > See for example mirroring videos that creators have made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting posts for a search engine.
>>
>> I think the fundamental difference is that such videos or activitypub
>> posts are not necessarily released under a license that *expressly*
>> permits sharing.
>>
>> In most cases, those posts and videos are often released without any
>> license at all, and the person retains the legal, social, moral and
>> ethical rights to decide how that content is shared if at all. (I am
>> speaking with those terms in the "plain" english sense, although they
>> may have specific legal meanings in some contexts)
>
> Its not actually. License doesn't matter to fediverse communities (I am talking ones that are part of the BadSpace here)
> It is a social issue and treat accordinly. As in defederate (dont assosiate) with people who dont respect your community rules.
> Laws, and licenses have nothing to do with it.
What is a license other than an explicit set of community rules
pertaining to the community around which that license is relevent
(e.g. a specific piece of software)?
When people break community rules, there may be consequences... and
whatever relevent community figures out what to do about it, with
whatever explicit or ad-hoc process they have at hand... some of those
methods work out better than others.
I see no notable difference with the way the fediverse works; people or
communities choose to associate or disassociate from other people or
communities when a common set of norms cannot be established. If you
repeatedly or severely break the rules (a.k.a. laws) of a particular
community, you probably will no longer be welcome in that community.
>> With something released under a Free Software license, calling someone
>> an "asshole" simply for using the permissions granted by that license,
>> by the very person who granted those permissions, starts to feel a bit
>> like a baited trap and honestly, maybe outright duplicitous. Certainly
>> rude, at the very least.
>>
>> Again, that is different from some arbitrary post or video or cat
>> picture on the internet, which more likely than not has no explicit
>> permissions granted.
>
> See about fediverse again. Its understood socially to be a bad thing not legally.
> Because after all mostly nobody has the time and money for state laws to work.
If I tell you "go ahead and do X with this cool thing I made, as long as
you respect Y, forever, honest" and then you say "stop doing X now, I
take it back because Z" ... that might come across as socially
inappropriate weather there are laws involved or not; the law is
irrelevent as far as I am concerned.
Of course, context matters; maybe Z is something nobody had ever thought
of before, and it is a surprise to everyone... and maybe even pretty
undesireable. Maybe Z is a pretty arbitrary whim... and everything
in-between. Maybe, just maybe, there is a big ambiguous grey area or
even a gray area...
A license is just a social arrangement, a codified set of social rules,
promises and expectations, just because it has some codified legal
enforcement mechanism does not change that. Obviously, due to systematic
power imbalances, it is probably different than breaking a promise to
meet someone for a picnic tomorrow afternoon.
>> > TBH it seems you are not the only one in this thread not knowing that laws (legal rules of states) ie. the FSF licenses and work and whatever, are not the same as social rules.
>> > But given that Guix has a CoC and social rules on top of that I am hopeful :)
>>
>> Well... free software ... is a bunch of social rules. Licenses are
>> social rules. Contracts are social rules. Laws are social
>> rules. Admittedly, a lot of the mechanics involved in law creation and
>> enforcement are dubious and suspect and weighted in the favor large,
>> wealthy and/or otherwise powerful entities...
>>
>> I am not sure arguing about social vs. legal vs. whatever is even really
>> a useful direction... almost missing the point entirely.
>>
>> I would rather ask... what is the intention of the Free Software
>> movement?
>>
>> The licenses are merely imperfect tools to achieve those aims, and a
>> clever way to leverage some specific legal mechanisms, but the licenses
>> are not an end unto themselves.
>>
>> For me personally, it is about creating a shared commons that can be
>> used to build healthy thriving local, regional, global and virtual
>> communities that do useful or interesting things... I dare dream that
>> some of those collaboration skills leak into other aspects of life too,
>> not just software!
>
> That is all well and good but sadly Free Software says nothing about
> social rules. For example what is Guix supposed to do when racists
> come in the chat? or what if there is a hostile fork with the same
> name and submits itself for Guix inclusion? or what if like a few
> months ago you have a trans person saying in the mailing list that you
> deadnamed them? Do we not change the software even if FSF free
> software says we can do whatever we want?
>
> I doubt the last case would go well with a lot of people in the Guix
> community. These are just some examples that Free Software can't
> solve for better or for worse. So it is up to social rules to decide
> what to do.
Sure, this is why we have a whole toolbox with things like a code of
conduct, documentation, and mailing lists to discuss and hash these
things out when something unforseen comes up...
> That is to say I agree we need collaboration and shared commons and
> such. But to create said collaborations we need to create safe spaces,
> protect people, value consent.
I agree, though still might come to different conclusions (or lack
thereof) about how exactly to achieve that.
live well,
vagrant
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
@ 2024-06-22 13:06 ` Richard Sent
2024-06-22 14:42 ` MSavoritias
2 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Richard Sent @ 2024-06-22 13:06 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
Hi MSavoritias,
MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
>> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
>> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
>> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
> That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people
> understand it. See for example mirroring videos that creators have
> made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting
> posts for a search engine.
>
> As I have been saying a lot in this thread (because there seem to be a
> lot of people in the Guix community not familiar that legal are not
> the same as social rules):
I feel the need to jump in here because that first paragraph, to me,
implies that the silent members of the community agree with you. I do
not.
Mirroring/archiving code released under a free license is different then
copying videos or posts that were not licensed. The two are so different
that opposition to the latter can't be compared to opposition to the
former. And yes, I do mean from a ethical perspective. These are wildly
different issues.
> Saying that I can do whatever I want is a very reductionist point of
> view that I doubt would be acceptable inside Guix and FSF even. Given
> that GPL itself doesn't allow you to do whatever you want.
Restrictions for the purpose of maximizing freedom are different then
restrictions for the purpose of limiting freedom.
> Again as I wrote above legal has nothing to do with it really. Its
> about our social rules and what we have as common understanding in
> Guix.
To some people (myself included), ensuring software is and remains free
IS an ethical rule (along with the contents of Guix's Contributor
Covenant of course). I do not believe any rules in said code of conduct
are being violated here.
>> `-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
>> of the bag privacy is lost. I really think this should be default behaviour,
>> or
>> at least there should be a flag in the package definition. I would still be
>> uncomfortable with the last option, as everyone would be relying on the
>> collective of Guix maintainers to not screw up and accidentally leak private
>> data.
>>
>> Dale
> Yeah very much agree this should be the default behavior. Archiving
> should be opt-in to avoid any surprises for the person running it. I
> am surprised it became default actually.
It is not my responsibility to ensure publicly available code released
under a FOSS license is not archived. It is the developers
responsibility to not release it under a FOSS license. (Perhaps nonfree
private channels would benefit from a change in the default behavior but
Guix should not tailor its defaults around such a use case.)
I am opposed to any theoretical change in Guix's packaging policy that
restricts software freedom. This would include a system that allows for
marking individual packages as "do not upload to software heritage".
To clarify. I am specifically opposed to a change in official Guix
packages that allows for this statement:
"Do not upload automatically to software heritage, and no one else can
either."
I have no objection to disabling archival for technical reasons. And of
course, 3rd party channels are free to do whatever they want.
As Felix said:
> The new field looks to me like an amendment of the license terms,
> especially if the field was added by the author pursuant to the
> objections raised in this thread. I would rather not pollute my
> systems with potentially unfree software.
Nonfree software does not belong in Guix proper.
I believe [1] is a relevant piece on this topic. It discusses some of
the issues with adding additional restrictions to a GPL license. Here's
a choice quote from the GPL:
> All other non-permissive additional terms are considered "further
> restrictions" within the meaning of section 10. If the Program as you
> received it, or any part of it, contains a notice stating that it is
> governed by this License along with a term that is a further
> restriction, you may remove that term.
And the rationale:
> Here we were particularly concerned to address the problem of program
> authors who purport to license their works in a misleading and
> possibly self-contradictory fashion, using the GPL together with
> unacceptable added restrictions that would make those works non-free
> software.
[1]: https://www.fsf.org/blogs/licensing/protecting-free-software-against-confusing-additional-restrictions
--
Take it easy,
Richard Sent
Making my computer weirder one commit at a time.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-22 13:06 ` Richard Sent
@ 2024-06-22 14:42 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-22 19:53 ` Ricardo Wurmus
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-22 14:42 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Richard Sent; +Cc: Andreas Enge, guix-devel
On Sat, 22 Jun 2024 09:06:20 -0400
Richard Sent <richard@freakingpenguin.com> wrote:
> Hi MSavoritias,
>
> MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
>
> >> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
> >> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
> >> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
> > That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people
> > understand it. See for example mirroring videos that creators have
> > made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting
> > posts for a search engine.
> >
> > As I have been saying a lot in this thread (because there seem to be a
> > lot of people in the Guix community not familiar that legal are not
> > the same as social rules):
>
> I feel the need to jump in here because that first paragraph, to me,
> implies that the silent members of the community agree with you. I do
> not.
>
> Mirroring/archiving code released under a free license is different then
> copying videos or posts that were not licensed. The two are so different
> that opposition to the latter can't be compared to opposition to the
> former. And yes, I do mean from a ethical perspective. These are wildly
> different issues.
>
> > Saying that I can do whatever I want is a very reductionist point of
> > view that I doubt would be acceptable inside Guix and FSF even. Given
> > that GPL itself doesn't allow you to do whatever you want.
>
> Restrictions for the purpose of maximizing freedom are different then
> restrictions for the purpose of limiting freedom.
Thank you for proving my point :)
That what "limits freedom" is very subjective that is. You have your opinion other people have yours.
GPL has been called bad for restricting freedom after all if you dont know.
> > Again as I wrote above legal has nothing to do with it really. Its
> > about our social rules and what we have as common understanding in
> > Guix.
>
> To some people (myself included), ensuring software is and remains free
> IS an ethical rule (along with the contents of Guix's Contributor
> Covenant of course). I do not believe any rules in said code of conduct
> are being violated here.
Does you ethics not include privacy and consent? Because mine do.
see -> https://www.consentfultech.io
> >> `-x archival` does it, but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
> >> of the bag privacy is lost. I really think this should be default behaviour,
> >> or
> >> at least there should be a flag in the package definition. I would still be
> >> uncomfortable with the last option, as everyone would be relying on the
> >> collective of Guix maintainers to not screw up and accidentally leak private
> >> data.
> >>
> >> Dale
> > Yeah very much agree this should be the default behavior. Archiving
> > should be opt-in to avoid any surprises for the person running it. I
> > am surprised it became default actually.
>
> It is not my responsibility to ensure publicly available code released
> under a FOSS license is not archived. It is the developers
> responsibility to not release it under a FOSS license. (Perhaps nonfree
> private channels would benefit from a change in the default behavior but
> Guix should not tailor its defaults around such a use case.)
>
> I am opposed to any theoretical change in Guix's packaging policy that
> restricts software freedom. This would include a system that allows for
> marking individual packages as "do not upload to software heritage".
>
> To clarify. I am specifically opposed to a change in official Guix
> packages that allows for this statement:
>
> "Do not upload automatically to software heritage, and no one else can
> either."
Let me put this more clear Richard, the statement above that archiving should be off by default means:
- Guix respects the consent of the person using guix lint and their expectations. (that lint actually lints)
- Respects their privacy
- Respects their autonomy.
Now if you want to disagree that people should have privacy or expectations then I fear we are becoming the next Google.
Personally I do not want Guix to become the next google but I instead want to respect privacy, autonomy and consent.
If you do not believe in these then I fear we have a fundamental disagreement here.
Regards,
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-21 20:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
@ 2024-06-22 15:46 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-22 17:55 ` Breath, let take a short break :-) Simon Tournier
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-22 15:46 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Vagrant Cascadian; +Cc: MSavoritias, guix-devel
On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 13:51:17 -0700
Vagrant Cascadian <vagrant@debian.org> wrote:
Hey,
I am really tempted to just write this off as a bad faith argument (which it mostly is) but either way i replied some things more down because I am trying to believe you are
arguing in good faith.
If its not a bad faith argument, please consider the time and place and the context of things before arguing next time.
> On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 09:51:30 -0700
> > Vagrant Cascadian <vagrant@debian.org> wrote:
> >
> >> On 2024-06-21, MSavoritias wrote:
> >> > On Fri, 21 Jun 2024 11:46:56 +0200
> >> > Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> wrote:
> >> >> Am Fri, Jun 21, 2024 at 12:12:13PM +0300 schrieb MSavoritias:
> >> >> > and as I mention in my first email I want to apply social pressure and make it clear to package authors what is happening so we can move to an opt-in model.
> >> >>
> >> >> Well, the opt-in model is in place: As soon as I put my code under a free
> >> >> license on the Internet, I opt in for it to be harvested by SWH (and anybody
> >> >> else, including non-friendly companies and state actors).
> >> >
> >> > That may be how you have understood it but that is not how most people understand it.
> >> > See for example mirroring videos that creators have made online, or more recently some activitypub software harvesting posts for a search engine.
> >>
> >> I think the fundamental difference is that such videos or activitypub
> >> posts are not necessarily released under a license that *expressly*
> >> permits sharing.
> >>
> >> In most cases, those posts and videos are often released without any
> >> license at all, and the person retains the legal, social, moral and
> >> ethical rights to decide how that content is shared if at all. (I am
> >> speaking with those terms in the "plain" english sense, although they
> >> may have specific legal meanings in some contexts)
> >
> > Its not actually. License doesn't matter to fediverse communities (I am talking ones that are part of the BadSpace here)
> > It is a social issue and treat accordinly. As in defederate (dont assosiate) with people who dont respect your community rules.
> > Laws, and licenses have nothing to do with it.
>
> What is a license other than an explicit set of community rules
> pertaining to the community around which that license is relevent
> (e.g. a specific piece of software)?
A license is a state instrument that compels somebody to do something otherwise they may get taken to state courts and have violence used against them by police
> The simplest definition is "A license is a promise not to sue", because a license usually either permits the licensed party to engage in an illegal activity, and subject to prosecution, without the license
From https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/License
You may equate license as social rules but outside of FSF and/or GNU nobody else really does. I havent seen it used anywhere like this.
Also nobody is using licenses as social rules (not Gnu, not Guix, not Debian) nobody really. And GPL would make a horrible community anyway because it doesnt say anything about racism or sexism for example.
> >> With something released under a Free Software license, calling someone
> >> an "asshole" simply for using the permissions granted by that license,
> >> by the very person who granted those permissions, starts to feel a bit
> >> like a baited trap and honestly, maybe outright duplicitous. Certainly
> >> rude, at the very least.
> >>
> >> Again, that is different from some arbitrary post or video or cat
> >> picture on the internet, which more likely than not has no explicit
> >> permissions granted.
> >
> > See about fediverse again. Its understood socially to be a bad thing not legally.
> > Because after all mostly nobody has the time and money for state laws to work.
>
> If I tell you "go ahead and do X with this cool thing I made, as long as
> you respect Y, forever, honest" and then you say "stop doing X now, I
> take it back because Z" ... that might come across as socially
> inappropriate weather there are laws involved or not; the law is
> irrelevent as far as I am concerned.
What somebody "tell you" is not only the license. You may try to make it simpler to make your life easier feel free.
But what "somebody told you" is literally that. Just ask the person :) Anything else is pretending its all good to yourself.
> Of course, context matters; maybe Z is something nobody had ever thought
> of before, and it is a surprise to everyone... and maybe even pretty
> undesireable. Maybe Z is a pretty arbitrary whim... and everything
> in-between. Maybe, just maybe, there is a big ambiguous grey area or
> even a gray area...
>
> A license is just a social arrangement, a codified set of social rules,
> promises and expectations, just because it has some codified legal
> enforcement mechanism does not change that. Obviously, due to systematic
> power imbalances, it is probably different than breaking a promise to
> meet someone for a picnic tomorrow afternoon.
Its an legal agreement on a specific thing yes. Specifically it deals with code.
But we don't deal with code everyday. We deal with people writing code. And surprise everybody has their own wants and needs.
So no you can't make your life easier by only following a legal document and ignoring the human factor in it.
And the human factor is talking, CoC, Community Guidelines, Community rules, social rules etc. SWH learned this the hard way with the trans incident recently.
> >
> > That is all well and good but sadly Free Software says nothing about
> > social rules. For example what is Guix supposed to do when racists
> > come in the chat? or what if there is a hostile fork with the same
> > name and submits itself for Guix inclusion? or what if like a few
> > months ago you have a trans person saying in the mailing list that you
> > deadnamed them? Do we not change the software even if FSF free
> > software says we can do whatever we want?
> >
> > I doubt the last case would go well with a lot of people in the Guix
> > community. These are just some examples that Free Software can't
> > solve for better or for worse. So it is up to social rules to decide
> > what to do.
>
> Sure, this is why we have a whole toolbox with things like a code of
> conduct, documentation, and mailing lists to discuss and hash these
> things out when something unforseen comes up...
Exactly yes. You can't build a community on Free Software after all :)
community as in: How do people collaborate and coexist in a safe space.
> > That is to say I agree we need collaboration and shared commons and
> > such. But to create said collaborations we need to create safe spaces,
> > protect people, value consent.
>
> I agree, though still might come to different conclusions (or lack
> thereof) about how exactly to achieve that.
Different ways to achieve that is fine and more than welcome.
What doesn't help is questioning that we need these, CoCs dont matter or debating on the definition of words.
I would have welcomed more of the former than the latter in this thread. (which is not what i got.)
MSavoritias
> live well,
> vagrant
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Draft: dry-run + Exclude checker with package properties
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-21 18:42 ` Simon Tournier
@ 2024-06-22 15:54 ` Simon Tournier
2 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-22 15:54 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Dale Mellor, Ekaitz Zarraga, Andreas Enge; +Cc: guix-devel
Hi,
Patch #71697 [1] introduces dry-run for the checkers and a way to
exclude some checkers directly in the package definition. In addition
to exclude checkers from the command-line.
FWIW, I think it covers:
> but it is too easy to forget and once the cat is out
> of the bag privacy is lost
Well, the way to display can be improved, IMHO.
1: https://issues.guix.gnu.org/71697#4
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Breath, let take a short break :-)
2024-06-22 15:46 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-22 17:55 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-24 7:30 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Simon Tournier @ 2024-06-22 17:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: MSavoritias, guix-devel
Hi MSavoritias,
This message is not to cut any discussion but maybe it could be helpful
or a bit saner if you refrain to rehash again and again the same to all
messages, replying the same (or almost) to each person expressing
different opinions.
No blame, and I also include myself: being very enthusiastic to defend
ideas and values. However, a storm of replies is maybe not the best
mean to achieve such defense. :-)
I think people got your points and your opinion, quickly summarized as:
1. SWH broke “implicit social rules”,
2. Because of that, Guix must make a clear public “pressure” against SWH.
Let look how the thread looks like:
https://yhetil.org/guix/87a5jfjoey.fsf@gmail.com/T/#rc72a0743026006ee9d4758cfa794df42a9964a55
(or this other one: https://yhetil.org/guix/87il1mupco.fsf@meson/#r)
Then, for what my humble point of view is worth here, I think that your
opinion is maybe not the consensus. Obviously, the discussion is still
open and your opinion is welcome – yeah obviously welcome! – but maybe
not by replying to all, each time.
You are advocating for a safe place, right? From my eyes, when I see
the structure of the thread, it does not generate a safe place where
collaboration is encouraged.
My feeling, when I do a step back and look to the structure of the
thread, is that some opinions are silent because it’s hard to have the
space to express them.
Sometimes, a breath is helpful. Somehow, FWIW, I suggest you to let the
discussion aside, then some days later read again some messages, try to
differently understand what other peers are trying to express, and
comment to few on a fresh mindset.
All opinions are very welcome. We are all here because we value Free
Software, community, people, etc. and not necessary in that order. And
that’s very important to be able to express all the diversity.
Again, this message is not a mean to cut any discussion. Instead, this
message is a call to slow down. :-)
WDYT?
Cheers,
simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-22 14:42 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-22 19:53 ` Ricardo Wurmus
2024-06-24 7:55 ` MSavoritias
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: Ricardo Wurmus @ 2024-06-22 19:53 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Richard Sent, Andreas Enge, guix-devel
MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
>> To clarify. I am specifically opposed to a change in official Guix
>> packages that allows for this statement:
>>
>> "Do not upload automatically to software heritage, and no one else can
>> either."
>
> Let me put this more clear Richard, the statement above that archiving should be off by default means:
>
> - Guix respects the consent of the person using guix lint and their expectations. (that lint actually lints)
> - Respects their privacy
> - Respects their autonomy.
User autonomy is not curtailed by informing an aligned service's crawler
that an update has occurred. You have a first class option to disable
whatever checks you don't want to run. That's autonomy.
Since time immemorial "guix lint" has done more than strictly checking
that code is formatted correctly. "guix lint" is a contributor's tool.
Its features encode values that "we" want to preserve as new packages
are added. The intended purpose of "guix lint" is to encourage "high
quality" packages. We arrived at this meaning of "high quality" (as
approximated by the workings of "guix lint") through years of collective
work on packages. Since we've seen source code disappear, which negates
Guix reproducibility guarantees by robbing users of Guix of their
practical freedoms to the software, the modules of "guix lint" include
discouraging the use of volatile URLs (like generated tarballs),
suggesting the use of mirrors, and relatedly notifies SWH that the Guix
software collection is about to change to increase your chances of
getting identical source code years from now. All that because software
freedom is void without source code.
Here is a list of other checks that talk to the internet:
--8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
- home-page: Validate home-page URLs
- source: Validate source URLs
...
- cve: Check the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) database
- refresh: Check the package for new upstream releases
- archival: Ensure source code archival on Software Heritage
--8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
Are these all privacy leaks? Are they in opposition of the goals of
"guix lint"? In opposition to the goals of those who use "guix lint"?
If so: why?
> Now if you want to disagree that people should have privacy or
> expectations then I fear we are becoming the next Google.
This is jumping the shark, and I think it is a statement that is
(unintentionally?) rather insulting to those of us who have been
contributing to Guix for a long time and have spent many excess calories
wringing their brains to make sure Guix is not your average tech bro
project.
It is disappointing to see the levity with which statements of this
severity are dropped here. The Guix community that I choose to remember
was less prone to making inflammatory statements when disagreements
became apparent.
--
Ricardo
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Breath, let take a short break :-)
2024-06-22 17:55 ` Breath, let take a short break :-) Simon Tournier
@ 2024-06-24 7:30 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-24 10:23 ` Tomas Volf
2024-06-24 11:56 ` Lets cut this off Efraim Flashner
0 siblings, 2 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-24 7:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Simon Tournier; +Cc: guix-devel
On Sat, 22 Jun 2024 19:55:05 +0200
Simon Tournier <zimon.toutoune@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey Simon,
I would suggest to take a step back as you said and consider whether what you are doing is in fact tone-policing here.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tone_policing
> A tone argument (also called tone policing) is a type of ad hominem aimed at the tone of an argument instead of its factual or logical content in order to dismiss a person's argument. Ignoring the truth or falsity of a statement, a tone argument instead focuses on the emotion with which it is expressed. This is a logical fallacy because a person can be angry while still being rational. Nonetheless, a tone argument may be useful when responding to a statement that itself does not have rational content, such as an appeal to emotion.
I will elaborate below.
> Hi MSavoritias,
>
> This message is not to cut any discussion but maybe it could be helpful
> or a bit saner if you refrain to rehash again and again the same to all
> messages, replying the same (or almost) to each person expressing
> different opinions.
Its not really different tho is it? In the sense that since the beginning of this thread there has been 2 opinions.
The one for consent was supressed pretty fast with arguments appealing on "ethics" and "you just don't understand free software is all the rules we have" both of them bad faith arguments of course.
So if you look at the thread actually its the people that have already phrased their support have stopped replying, and I am the one replying to one opinion.
I invite you to think about 3 things:
1. Why did you felt to point it out to me instead of the same bad faith argument been written again and again?
2. What happened to the people that wanted consent but now don't reply anymore.
3. Does that a culture like this stop more voices from coming forward?
> No blame, and I also include myself: being very enthusiastic to defend
> ideas and values. However, a storm of replies is maybe not the best
> mean to achieve such defense. :-)
>
> I think people got your points and your opinion, quickly summarized as:
>
> 1. SWH broke “implicit social rules”,
> 2. Because of that, Guix must make a clear public “pressure” against SWH.
>
>
> Let look how the thread looks like:
>
> https://yhetil.org/guix/87a5jfjoey.fsf@gmail.com/T/#rc72a0743026006ee9d4758cfa794df42a9964a55
> (or this other one: https://yhetil.org/guix/87il1mupco.fsf@meson/#r)
Again see above.
> Then, for what my humble point of view is worth here, I think that your
> opinion is maybe not the consensus. Obviously, the discussion is still
> open and your opinion is welcome – yeah obviously welcome! – but maybe
> not by replying to all, each time.
As mentioned above you probably missed the first few replies before this thread was taken over so please go read again the first few hours :)
As another point please dont gaslight me :) I know how many people have replied in support both in this thread and in xmpp.
So this thread being flooded by people who dont think CoC or consent or privacy matters doesn't really make me question if I am right.
It makes me question that of course nobody else is going to reply to get storm of replies saying how "unethical" they are.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gaslighting
> Gaslighting is a colloquialism, loosely defined as manipulating someone into questioning their own perception of reality.
> You are advocating for a safe place, right? From my eyes, when I see
> the structure of the thread, it does not generate a safe place where
> collaboration is encouraged.
>
> My feeling, when I do a step back and look to the structure of the
> thread, is that some opinions are silent because it’s hard to have the
> space to express them.
Yes exactly. So lets see what opinions were expressed the first few hours of this thread. And what opinions have been expressed after mostly.
And lets see what kind of arguments were against these initial points. (hint: its not good faith arguments most of them :) )
I do agree that the mailing list is not a safe space for a host of reasons that I already knew going in (and believe me its not easy try to write and persist) but that is an argument for another time.
> Sometimes, a breath is helpful. Somehow, FWIW, I suggest you to let the
> discussion aside, then some days later read again some messages, try to
> differently understand what other peers are trying to express, and
> comment to few on a fresh mindset.
>
> All opinions are very welcome. We are all here because we value Free
> Software, community, people, etc. and not necessary in that order. And
> that’s very important to be able to express all the diversity.
If we value diversity then we need to ask:
Where are the different opinions really and why did they left? Have you asked yourself that Simon?
This is not meant of course to say that it is your fault. Its meant to be a wider discussion of:
1. Why did the moderation fail in this thread?
2. Where are the diversity of voices?
3. Why was the piling on of a single view point that is again the Guix CoC allowed in this thread?
MSavoritias
> Again, this message is not a mean to cut any discussion. Instead, this
> message is a call to slow down. :-)
>
> WDYT?
>
> Cheers,
> simon
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-22 19:53 ` Ricardo Wurmus
@ 2024-06-24 7:55 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-24 9:13 ` Ricardo Wurmus
0 siblings, 1 reply; 49+ messages in thread
From: MSavoritias @ 2024-06-24 7:55 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: Ricardo Wurmus; +Cc: Richard Sent, Andreas Enge, guix-devel
On Sat, 22 Jun 2024 21:53:27 +0200
Ricardo Wurmus <rekado@elephly.net> wrote:
> MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
>
> >> To clarify. I am specifically opposed to a change in official Guix
> >> packages that allows for this statement:
> >>
> >> "Do not upload automatically to software heritage, and no one else can
> >> either."
> >
> > Let me put this more clear Richard, the statement above that archiving should be off by default means:
> >
> > - Guix respects the consent of the person using guix lint and their expectations. (that lint actually lints)
> > - Respects their privacy
> > - Respects their autonomy.
>
> User autonomy is not curtailed by informing an aligned service's crawler
> that an update has occurred. You have a first class option to disable
> whatever checks you don't want to run. That's autonomy.
It is in the sense that you haven't gotten the consent of the person running the linter on something that happens outside the context of "linting code".
I have posted this elsewhere but see https://www.consentfultech.io/
Its about not assuming things on behalf of the person running the tool. Specifically for stuff that are more "sensitive" like operations that don't involve linting code.
> Since time immemorial "guix lint" has done more than strictly checking
> that code is formatted correctly. "guix lint" is a contributor's tool.
> Its features encode values that "we" want to preserve as new packages
> are added. The intended purpose of "guix lint" is to encourage "high
> quality" packages. We arrived at this meaning of "high quality" (as
> approximated by the workings of "guix lint") through years of collective
> work on packages. Since we've seen source code disappear, which negates
> Guix reproducibility guarantees by robbing users of Guix of their
> practical freedoms to the software, the modules of "guix lint" include
> discouraging the use of volatile URLs (like generated tarballs),
> suggesting the use of mirrors, and relatedly notifies SWH that the Guix
> software collection is about to change to increase your chances of
> getting identical source code years from now. All that because software
> freedom is void without source code.
Maybe then the tool needs to be renamed? Or more ideally a new subcommand `guix lint contribute` should be added.
Because from the places I asked in xmpp and here it seems everybody that is not reading the docs or knee deep in guix project, assumes it just lints and is surprised it does more things.
> Here is a list of other checks that talk to the internet:
>
> --8<---------------cut here---------------start------------->8---
> - home-page: Validate home-page URLs
> - source: Validate source URLs
> ...
> - cve: Check the Common Vulnerabilities and Exposures (CVE) database
> - refresh: Check the package for new upstream releases
> - archival: Ensure source code archival on Software Heritage
> --8<---------------cut here---------------end--------------->8---
>
> Are these all privacy leaks? Are they in opposition of the goals of
> "guix lint"? In opposition to the goals of those who use "guix lint"?
> If so: why?
This has actually been mentioned yeah. In the xmpp room I have there were a lot of people surprised that a linter was added and would like to see it being opt-in.
Lets be honest here irc is a tech place exclusively these days so you will rarely find new arguments. Maybe putting a poll in activitypub/masto would help :)
> > Now if you want to disagree that people should have privacy or
> > expectations then I fear we are becoming the next Google.
>
> This is jumping the shark, and I think it is a statement that is
> (unintentionally?) rather insulting to those of us who have been
> contributing to Guix for a long time and have spent many excess calories
> wringing their brains to make sure Guix is not your average tech bro
> project.
>
> It is disappointing to see the levity with which statements of this
> severity are dropped here. The Guix community that I choose to remember
> was less prone to making inflammatory statements when disagreements
> became apparent.
>
You are right I did assume things about your opinions when I shouldn't. I apologize.
I am glad that you and others have been trying to make this into a welcoming project, its one of the reasons I joined after all :D
Of course that doesn't mean we can't do better, and this thread has made that pretty apparent. In a whole set of different terms that is.
I would say also that as the Guix community becomes larger its going to be necesserily less homogenous. Especially if we (the Guix Project) are doing our it right.
As a counterpoint I know a lot of people who choose not to join the mailing lists specifically due the culture so to speak.
Seeing how this thread has devolved I am wondering what the next steps would be to address this. Seeing as diversity and a welcoming environment wasn't kept.
Open to suggestions of course :)
MSavoritias
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion
2024-06-24 7:55 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-24 9:13 ` Ricardo Wurmus
0 siblings, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Ricardo Wurmus @ 2024-06-24 9:13 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Richard Sent, Andreas Enge, guix-devel
MSavoritias <email@msavoritias.me> writes:
>> > - Guix respects the consent of the person using guix lint and their expectations. (that lint actually lints)
>> > - Respects their privacy
>> > - Respects their autonomy.
>>
>> User autonomy is not curtailed by informing an aligned service's crawler
>> that an update has occurred. You have a first class option to disable
>> whatever checks you don't want to run. That's autonomy.
>
> It is in the sense that you haven't gotten the consent of the person
> running the linter on something that happens outside the context of
> "linting code".
But look: here you switch from "autonomy" to "consent". You mentioned
"autonomy" before, and that's what I responded to. Irrespective of
whether I agree with your assertion on consent here, I think it is
important not to conflate very different concepts when attempting to
build consensus in a community discussion (lopsided as it may be). It's
how we end up talking past each other as one word points to another, and
we're led in circles.
It's also why I think it was a valuable contribution to the discussion
to draw a distinction between sending a URL and sending code. It may
seem like nitpicking, but for me (in the role of the jaded observer
whose detachment is either the result of having attained enlightenment
or being uprooted by depression) it's a world of a difference: I'm okay
with a notification containing a public URL being sent, but I'd be
furious if my bytes were siphoned off.
While I have my nit-picking hat on, allow me to but-ackshually: "Linting
code" is not really what this is about, because we're dealing with
*packages*, not arbitrary *code*. Within the context of Guix (which is
not, for example, a general purpose programming language where the unit
of interest is "code") I do think the assumption is a little too eagerly
impressed by prior experience with programming tools. I'm not saying
it's somebody's *fault* for having an assumption like this, I just think
it's an unfortunate conflation of related but distinct concepts.
> Because from the places I asked in xmpp and here it seems everybody
> that is not reading the docs or knee deep in guix project, assumes it
> just lints and is surprised it does more things.
Yes, we've had similar problems in the past where documentation is not
considered and individual assumptions (developed by other the use of
other tools, because intuition is a lie) are used as the yard stick
against which the behavior of tools is judged. Examples include "guix
refresh", "guix package", "guix container", "guix archive", and even
"guix repl".
"Nuance" is an emergent property; no single word can be nuanced, so in
my opinion a command name cannot possibly carry enough information to
accurately represent the gamut of its behaviors. We can only hint at a
general direction and use the term as an index into documentation. We
have several layers of documentation; the first pointer would be into
the output of "guix help". Perhaps changing the short description shown
next to "guix lint" would reach those averse to documentation, to colour
the pointer in ways that better hint at the concepts it points to in the
manual?
> Seeing how this thread has devolved I am wondering what the next steps
> would be to address this. Seeing as diversity and a welcoming
> environment wasn't kept.
> Open to suggestions of course :)
I think it is very difficult to feel welcome when people don't
understand or disagree with you. I've been there myself, countless
times before. The very attempt to express myself clearly is intensely
uncomfortable; it's like walking on egg shells, but not because of a
community failing, but because any error in representing my view point
is going to make the waters more turbulent, confuse the issue, spawn
requests for clarification, or sub-threads on issues that really don't
matter to the originally intended point.
And yet, all the properties of a pleasant community are exemplified in
the process of untangling the knots of disagreement. I think it is
dangerous to label the attempts to argue an opposing point of view and
the attempts to define boundaries as "arguments in bad faith". This is
a sure fire way of sabotaging one's own goals. We're all operating
under very limited information about other people's points of view,
their amount of information, their values and the amount of overlap with
our own. For some of us, defining a topics boundaries is a precondition
to understanding details within them.
Passionate people often run the risk of steam rolling a budding
discussion. [And this is my cue to disconnect from it again.] The sheer
volume of messages can intimidate people and keep them from making their
voice heard. (I, too, have been intimidated by this thread, even though
there is no reasonable threat to my standing in the community if/when I
make a fool of myself.) I read that in Sociocracy meetings, people
speak up one after the other, in turns, and not again before everyone
else has been heard. Here we don't even know who is in attendance, so
that's not easily modeled. Also, email with its ever-branching
sub-threads easily devolves into the average emacs-devel "discussion".
Simon's proposed RFC process (which I support) aims to improve this by
putting a consent-seeking process first. I think it would be a good
alternative to whatever this is :) This topic would benefit from a
declaration of statements (which members of the community can refute or
agree with) and an actionable proposal.
--
Ricardo
PS: Unless specifically addressed, the above is not directed at any one
person in particular. I'm only capable of seeing stories and themes,
but the actors and their actions are all a big blur to me. Such is
looking out from this here brain, smoothened by age and defeat.
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Re: Breath, let take a short break :-)
2024-06-24 7:30 ` MSavoritias
@ 2024-06-24 10:23 ` Tomas Volf
2024-06-24 11:56 ` Lets cut this off Efraim Flashner
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Tomas Volf @ 2024-06-24 10:23 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: guix-devel
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On 2024-06-24 10:30:05 +0300, MSavoritias wrote:
> [..]
> > You are advocating for a safe place, right? From my eyes, when I see
> > the structure of the thread, it does not generate a safe place where
> > collaboration is encouraged.
> >
> > My feeling, when I do a step back and look to the structure of the
> > thread, is that some opinions are silent because it’s hard to have the
> > space to express them.
>
> Yes exactly. So lets see what opinions were expressed the first few hours of this thread. And what opinions have been expressed after mostly.
I do not think this is a fair test. People might have other things to do than
to respond to fairly heavy email during "the first few hours"...
> [..]
> If we value diversity then we need to ask:
> Where are the different opinions really and why did they left? Have you asked yourself that Simon?
>
> This is not meant of course to say that it is your fault. Its meant to be a wider discussion of:
> 1. Why did the moderation fail in this thread?
Did it though? I feel like I could have expressed my opinion if I wanted to do
so.
Could you please describe how would you envisioned this thread to be handled
with regards to the moderation? Ideally in specific, actionable steps.
> 2. Where are the diversity of voices?
Who knows. Maybe they said their piece and were satisfied with it. Maybe they
were convinced my (some) arguments of the other side to just wait a bit longer.
Maybe they were indeed scared away by people expressing different opinion.
My point is that (afaik) you do *not* know where they are, so the way you put it
(implying their absence is caused solely by failure of moderation) feels bit
underhanded. At least without some actually investigation into the topic (which
you do not mention here, so I assume it was not performed).
> 3. Why was the piling on of a single view point that is again the Guix CoC allowed in this thread?
I do not believe expressing opinion different from yours is CoC violation. The
"piling on" part can just be viewed as expression of the fact that many people
disagree with you, not a harassment. If you believe any particular message
violated CoC, you should report it according to the CoC. That will move it
outside of "in *your* opinion it was a violation" into "we know whether it was".
Have a nice day,
Tomas Volf
--
There are only two hard things in Computer Science:
cache invalidation, naming things and off-by-one errors.
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
* Lets cut this off
2024-06-24 7:30 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-24 10:23 ` Tomas Volf
@ 2024-06-24 11:56 ` Efraim Flashner
1 sibling, 0 replies; 49+ messages in thread
From: Efraim Flashner @ 2024-06-24 11:56 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: MSavoritias; +Cc: Simon Tournier, guix-devel
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1604 bytes --]
It seems to me that there are two assertions in this (long) thread:
* Consent should be required before letting SWH know there's new
source code in the wild.
* The license of the code gives SWH all the legal rights it needs to use
the code however they see fit.
As for the second one, I don't recall reading any arguments that SWH
doesn't have the *legal* right to slurp up all Free Software source code
they want and to use it how they want. I'm going to move right past this
one.
As far as the consent-required assertion, it seems to come down to "I
don't like what they're doing with the code so they should be required
to get my consent". This runs directly counter to the license.
Another reading could be "SWH may find the code later on their own, but
I don't want to make it easy for them because I disagree with how they
handle the code". I don't see this as running counter to the licenses in
question, but it does run counter to Guix's integration with the SWH.
The Software Heritage already acts as a fallback location to recreate
missing tarballs and this is something we want to continue to happen. I
see removing the SWH linter tie-in as shooting ourselves in the foot and
not likely to make any difference to the SWH.
On a personal level it is always possible to run 'guix lint' with the
'--no-network' flag or the '--exclude=archival' flag.
--
Efraim Flashner <efraim@flashner.co.il> רנשלפ םירפא
GPG key = A28B F40C 3E55 1372 662D 14F7 41AA E7DC CA3D 8351
Confidentiality cannot be guaranteed on emails sent or received unencrypted
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 49+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2024-06-24 11:56 UTC | newest]
Thread overview: 49+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed
-- links below jump to the message on this page --
2024-06-18 8:37 Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem MSavoritias
2024-06-18 14:19 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-19 8:36 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-20 17:00 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-20 18:42 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-20 20:54 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-20 20:59 ` Ekaitz Zarraga
2024-06-20 21:12 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-21 8:41 ` Dale Mellor
2024-06-21 9:19 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:33 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 17:51 ` Exclude checker with package properties [draft PATCH] Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:37 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-21 18:44 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 18:42 ` Simon Tournier
2024-06-22 15:54 ` Draft: dry-run + Exclude checker with package properties Simon Tournier
2024-06-20 21:27 ` Next Steps For the Software Heritage Problem Simon Tournier
2024-06-18 16:21 ` Greg Hogan
2024-06-18 16:33 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-18 17:31 ` Greg Hogan
2024-06-18 17:57 ` Ian Eure
2024-06-19 7:01 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-19 9:57 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-20 2:56 ` Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-20 5:18 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-19 10:10 ` Efraim Flashner
2024-06-21 8:39 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Simon Tournier
2024-06-21 9:12 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 9:46 ` Andreas Enge
2024-06-21 10:44 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 13:45 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 14:15 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 16:33 ` Luis Felipe
2024-06-21 17:04 ` Msavoritias
2024-06-21 16:34 ` Liliana Marie Prikler
2024-06-21 16:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-21 17:22 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-21 20:51 ` Vagrant Cascadian
2024-06-22 15:46 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-22 17:55 ` Breath, let take a short break :-) Simon Tournier
2024-06-24 7:30 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-24 10:23 ` Tomas Volf
2024-06-24 11:56 ` Lets cut this off Efraim Flashner
2024-06-21 17:25 ` About SWH, let avoid the wrong discussion Felix Lechner via Development of GNU Guix and the GNU System distribution.
2024-06-22 13:06 ` Richard Sent
2024-06-22 14:42 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-22 19:53 ` Ricardo Wurmus
2024-06-24 7:55 ` MSavoritias
2024-06-24 9:13 ` Ricardo Wurmus
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