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Facebook Open Source Privacy Social Networks Software

Interview With Facebook's Head of Open Source 29

Czech37 writes Facebook may be among the world's most well-known tech companies, but it's not renowned for being at the forefront of open source. In reality, they have over 200 open source projects on GitHub and they've recently partnered with Google, Dropbox, and Twitter (among others) to create the TODO group, an organization committed to furthering the open source cause. In an interview with Opensource.com, Facebook's James Pearce talks about the progress the company has made in rebooting their open source approach and what's on the horizon for the social media network.
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Interview With Facebook's Head of Open Source

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  • PR Stunt (Score:1, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Because FB supports open source I'm signing up for FB today! I was so wrong about them, this proves their not creepy after all....

    • by Anonymous Coward
      I recently went to an open house at a software company hoping to hire hundreds of developers. They actually said "We believe strongly in open source. Well, using it anyway. Maybe one day we will contribute back." And that pretty much sums it up for most companies these days. Facebook might be creepy and Zuckerberg is the NSA's bitch, but at least they do contribute something back. I can't fault them for that last part.
    • Please, facebook doesn't want more programmer registered users. They want you to do more free work for them.

    • Re:PR Stunt (Score:4, Interesting)

      by SourceFrog ( 627014 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @12:27PM (#48028035)

      In some ways, it's worse than just a PR stunt, because patents effectively neutralize many of the benefits of open source - this effectively allows these companies like Google andF B to recruit developers to fix their bugs for free, while they make billions from the improved software - because they know the fact that it's open source doesn't matter when the big software 'parent cartels' own all the patents and cross-license, ring-fence and regulate to keep real competition out the market anyway. The serfs work for free while the lords live the high life.

      Abolishing software patents would do more to benefit the software industry (and everyone on earth) than making every last piece of code open source.

      • Sorry for typos, 'parent cartels' should be 'patent cartels'
      • While I agree with your view about abolishing software patents, I disagree about your view that "these companies recruit developers to fix their bugs for free".

        First, unless the project is widely used, the bugs are rarely fixed in open source projects, except when someone is paid to do that.

        Secondly, from my experience, I know that working on an open source project increases your chances to find a job, since you both demonstrate that you know how to code, and that you can improve a collective project.

        But I

  • by Anonymous Coward

    90% of them are specific to Facebook with no particular applications for anyone who doesn't have a massive server farm.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      90% of them are specific to Facebook with no particular applications for anyone who doesn't have a massive server farm.

      So the NSA and facebook will be helping each other out to optimize their code?

    • Speak for yourself. Some of these are of interest to me and my company.

    • by Agrippa ( 111029 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @12:37PM (#48028109)

      While I would agree with the OP that a lot of these projects target the needs of large, FB-like companies, Reactjs and Flux (Flux is a pseudo-framework for React) are really nice alternatives to heavier options like Angular and Backbone. If you're building with JS on the front end then definitely take a look; the speed advantage over Angular is ridiculous.

    • You do realize their implementation of PHP is the only secure form of PHP out there? The one they released as a virtual machine?

  • by SourceFrog ( 627014 ) on Tuesday September 30, 2014 @12:33PM (#48028085)
    The TODO group's motto. If the members of this group really cared about "talk openly, develop openly", they would release all their collectively owned software patents into the public domain. Until then, open source means 'you fix bugs for us, we still own the patents on the final product'.
  • In TFA (yes I read it this time)

    Q. Do you have advice for young open source enthusiasts?
    A. I'll fall back to one of Facebook's mottos: Think about "what would you do if you weren't afraid?"

    How can I not be afraid of what FB does?

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