Dramacow Coraline Ada Ehmke / Corey Dale Ehmke - tl;dr Rules for thee but not for me

This guy pisses me off, he's just some orbiter with no real talent who only (((contributes))) through licensing. He's now demonstrated that he has such a minimal grasp on the concept of FOSS that he's proposing non-FOSS licenses as FOSS. Truly Orwellian. Trannies get the gas.

All this new license is going to do is be used by politically motivated people ingrained in the software industry to claim that people using their code are "harming" others. It's going to kill FOSS if it spreads.
 
This guy pisses me off, he's just some orbiter with no real talent who only (((contributes))) through licensing. He's now demonstrated that he has such a minimal grasp on the concept of FOSS that he's proposing non-FOSS licenses as FOSS. Truly Orwellian. Trannies get the gas.

All this new license is going to do is be used by politically motivated people ingrained in the software industry to claim that people using their code are "harming" others. It's going to kill FOSS if it spreads.
Turns out Microsoft had the wrong idea back in the late 90's. It didn't need to embrace, extend and extinguish or spread FUD to kill Linux (and FOSS in general). It just needed to sponsor some trannies and dangerhairs to work on it, then sit back and wait.
 
Here is a project he's been working on over the course of a few years. It's in Ruby, which automatically makes a fair amount of people hate him, but it's also not very good Ruby in ways that would make most Ruby developers hate him too. He is a poor developer and deserves every shitcanning he has gotten and will get. I know that in his head, he's a true leader in the industry, but as we can see from her activity on rubylang itself, he doesn't even try to compete with the autistic japs and slavs that make the language itself. he only tries to control them.
 
Screenshot_2019-09-29 Coraline Ada Ehmke ( CoralineAda) Twitter.png


Ah yes, everyone knows that fascists are deathly afraid of modified software licenses.
 
i was honestly not expecting free software initiative to tell her license to fuck off

is there still hope or are the people doing this going to just get slowly replaced like torvalds and stallman were?
 
This guy pisses me off, he's just some orbiter with no real talent who only (((contributes))) through licensing. He's now demonstrated that he has such a minimal grasp on the concept of FOSS that he's proposing non-FOSS licenses as FOSS. Truly Orwellian. Trannies get the gas.

All this new license is going to do is be used by politically motivated people ingrained in the software industry to claim that people using their code are "harming" others. It's going to kill FOSS if it spreads.

Yeah, obviously this is a pretty transparent grasp for more power and notoriety. His first thing was the code of conduct. He soon realized it didn't give him the control he wanted, since it was largely symbolic and largely unenforceable (by him directly for his own purposes) so he decided to up the ante with this thing.

I don't think this will go anywhere.

Adding a silly Code of Conduct document to a repo might ruffle some feathers but it doesn't really carry any kind of legal implication, and it probably isn't going to be the type of thing that will bother most contributors who don't like to get involved in the politics. It's effectively just a PR move. Changing the license on a big project with a lot of contributors can be a big deal. The majority of the people who do the actual work on these projects are not going to go for this bullshit.
 
Here is a project he's been working on over the course of a few years. It's in Ruby, which automatically makes a fair amount of people hate him, but it's also not very good Ruby in ways that would make most Ruby developers hate him too. He is a poor developer and deserves every shitcanning he has gotten and will get. I know that in his head, he's a true leader in the industry, but as we can see from her activity on rubylang itself, he doesn't even try to compete with the autistic japs and slavs that make the language itself. he only tries to control them.
Most of the Ruby devs also hate him for the same reasons everybody else does: sticking his CoC in and getting pissy when people don't like it (https://archive.li/XK02F), and massive Twitter spergouts where he blasts the community he's ostensibly a part of.

He also tried going after Ruby's fearless leader Yukihiro 'Matz' Matsumoto too (https://archive.li/1n9cy). I'm sure that move didn't win him any favors. Thankfully, Matz is (for now) pretty based, and knows not to capitulate (https://archive.li/pS4KC):
basedmatz.png
 
Thankfully, Matz is (for now) pretty based

Thankfully Matz is on the ball with that kind of thing, in classic Japanese fashion he won't just bow out because some 2-bit developer has a cry.... and Ruby still seems to be pretty driven from its Japanese community. But people respect Matz because he does what a leader should actually do.... and lead.
 
The only thing that has kept ruby safe from corey's troonery is the fact that it is run as a dictatorship controlled by the japs. if that ever changes, ruby will die because the only thing making it worth using is that it is a nice language to develop in. there is superior tooling for nearly any specific task in other languages, but ruby is quick and easy.

i don't know much longer it'll be until corey tries again, but his next attempt to slam Matz will be better prepared and hit a lot harder. i hope matz keeps his balls about him. i bet it'll be a #metoo bullshit with some no-name japanese female planted in for it.
 
The only thing that has kept ruby safe from corey's troonery is the fact that it is run as a dictatorship controlled by the japs. if that ever changes, ruby will die because the only thing making it worth using is that it is a nice language to develop in. there is superior tooling for nearly any specific task in other languages, but ruby is quick and easy.

i don't know much longer it'll be until corey tries again, but his next attempt to slam Matz will be better prepared and hit a lot harder. i hope matz keeps his balls about him. i bet it'll be a #metoo bullshit with some no-name japanese female planted in for it.
The quicker more tech communities throw this toady's useless ass on the road, the better.
 
Screenshot_2019-10-02 Coraline Ada Ehmke ( CoralineAda) Twitter.png

Screenshot_2019-10-02 Coraline Ada Ehmke ( CoralineAda) Twitter(2).png


They've been riding off the idea for the last week that the Open Source Initiative's big spooky enemy of 2007 was big businesses, and that since they are choosing who is the big boogieman, that they should change their definition to target big spooky government entity.

Which they are then proven wrong, throwing the entire argument they've been pushing out the window, and yet they claim that their point still stands.
 
Has there ever been any hint that government immigration officials have ever used any software he's been involved with?
 
Has there ever been any hint that government immigration officials have ever used any software he's been involved with?
Nah, that would have to imply that they've made some code that someone would want to use.

The whole discussion started because of this https://www.vice.com/en_au/article/...e-sold-to-ice-immigration-customs-enforcement.

This tard just jumped on like a few others so they could manipulate their way into gaining some control over things.
 
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Corey has taken it a step further. Since the OSI wouldn't bow down to him, he's made a new "movement" called ethical source. Sure, people like the cDc tried it before back in the 2000s only to get told that ain't free by the FSF. This means that the old FOSS guard has to go.
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Wired has written a fluff piece/blowfile on Corey:
Klint Finley
Business
10.04.2019 08:00 AM
An Open Source License That Requires Users to Do No Harm
Open source software can generally be freely copied and reused. One developer wants to impose ethical constraints on the practice.

China uses facial recognition technology to track Uyghur Muslims. The US military uses drones to kill suspected terrorists—any nearby civilians. US Immigration and Customs Enforcement—which has locked children in cages near the Mexican border—relies on software for communications and coordination, like all modern organizations.


Someone had to write the code that makes all of that possible. Increasingly, some developers are calling on their employers and the government to stop using their work in ways they believe are unethical. Google employees convinced the company to stop its drone footage analysis work and cancel plans to bid on a cloud computing contract with the Pentagon. Microsoft employees have protested the company's work for ICE and the military, though with little success thus far.

But it's hard to stop a company or government from using software that it already has, especially if that software is open source. Last month, for example, programmer Seth Vargo deleted some of his open source code from online repositories to protest its potential use by ICE. But because open source code can be freely copied and distributed, his code was soon back online elsewhere.

Coraline Ada Ehmke wants to give her fellow developers more control over how their software is used. Software released under her new "Hippocratic License" can be shared and modified for almost any purpose, with one big exception: "Individuals, corporations, governments, or other groups for systems or activities that actively and knowingly endanger, harm, or otherwise threaten the physical, mental, economic, or general well-being of individuals or groups in violation of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights.”

Defining what it means to do harm is inherently contentious, but Ehmke hopes that tying the license to existing international standards will reduce the uncertainty. The declaration of human rights "is a document that's 70 years old and is pretty well established and accepted for its definition of harm and what violating human rights really means," she says.

It's a bold proposal, but it's exactly the sort of thing Ehmke is known for. In 2014 she wrote the first draft of a code of conduct for open source projects called the "Contributor Covenant." She was met with skepticism at first, but more than 40,000 open source projects have adopted it, ranging from Google's artificial intelligence platform TensorFlow to the Linux kernel.

For now, few are using the Hippocratic License. Ehmke herself isn't even using it yet. It still needs to pass a legal review, for which she's hired a lawyer, and there are plenty of potential pitfalls, such as compatibility with other licenses, to be addressed. But Ehmke says the license is less about getting people to use it, and more to start a conversation about ethics in open source and programmers’ control over their work.

Ehmke acknowledges that changing the way technologists license their work won't in and of itself stop human rights abuses. But she wants to give technologists a tool to inhibit companies, governments, or other bad actors from using their code while committing those abuses.

The nonprofit Open Source Initiative says open source software "must not discriminate against any person or group of persons" and "must not restrict anyone from making use of the program in a specific field of endeavor."

Whether human rights violations qualify as a "specific field of endeavor" under that definition is something of an open question, because Ehmke hasn't formally submitted the Hippocratic License to the OSI for review. But in a tweet last month, the organization suggested that the license doesn't fit its definition of open source. OSI cofounder Bruce Perens also wrote on his blog that the license conflicts with the organization's definition.

Ehmke hopes to rally the open source community to either pressure the OSI to change its definition or to devise a new one. "I think the Open Source Initiative definition is horribly dated," Ehmke says. "Right now as an open source community we don't have the tools to make sure our technology isn't used by fascists."

Ehmke's concerns are resonating with other technologists. Michael Cafarella, the cocreator of the popular open source data crunching platform Hadoop, has seen his work used in ways he didn't expect, including by the National Security Agency.

"It’s a good idea for people to be very concerned about abuse of their software," he says. "I’m personally most concerned by abuse by non-democratic governments, who have substantial engineering resources they can use to modify and deploy these projects. I don’t have enough background to know if [the Hippocratic License] will be effective with that kind of abuse."

Trying to change the definition of open source to accommodate ethical concerns has a long and controversial history. Ehmke is far from the first to write a license aimed at stopping harmful uses of freely available code. Peer-to-peer computing application GPU was released in 2006 under a license forbidding its use by the military. That’s had little effect thus far, but that could be changing. Earlier this year dozens of software projects adopted the "Anti-996 License," which requires users to comply with both local and international labor standards, in response to reports of grueling working conditions at Chinese technology companies. Ehmke believes that the backlash against ICE, which extends beyond the technology community, might be a tipping point.

Others point to the possibility of establishing a new term for code that is open for most uses but restricted for others. "Maybe we stop calling it 'open source' and start calling it 'open for good source,'" tweeted Vargo, the programmer who deleted code to protest ICE, last month.
The term "open source" was adopted in the late 1990s as an alternative to "free software," which was tied to more ideological aims. As developers become more ideological, it would be only fitting for yet another term to emerge.

BoingBoing also wrote a blowfile on him as well.

Nah, that would have to imply that they've made some code that someone would want to use.

The whole discussion started because of this https://www.vice.com/en_au/article/...e-sold-to-ice-immigration-customs-enforcement.

This tard just jumped on like a few others so they could manipulate their way into gaining some control over things.
Corey won't make an account here to yell at you, preferring to "screenshot dunk" instead. Hi Corey.
1570913517789.png
 
What he says: "I literally have code in space."

What he means: "I used to be a functional engineer. Now that I've cut my dick off, I spend all my time overdosing on hard drugs while my sad daughter takes care of her miserable, mentally ill father."

Corey: please double the dose of every medication you take, regardless of legality, and continue doubling dosage until you meet your JPL code in space. The open-source community thanks you in advance for this act of kindness.
 
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