Some experiences of open source rest on the OSD, but not all. If your experience does, that doesn't invalidate your experience. But your experience doesn't invalidate others', either. Browbeat or excommunicate all the heretics, I think you'll find yourself preaching to a much smaller choir.
Granted: OSD, or rather the OSI-approved license list, rules in enterprise procurement at a particular and fairly common level of sophistication. At the same time, I've had conversations with sponsoring companies, prolific contributors, investment types, and others, mentioned OSD, received blank stares, explained, and then heard they don't care. Not relevant. Does not resonate. Different experiences.
I have never seen any good evidence to back your claim of a quiet OSI majority, except if you count open source consumers as an inevitable majority over open source producers, and ascribe the former to OSI. My own direct experience of open source licensing news and work has been a constant drumbeat of interest in refining and expanding licensing models. HESSLA. Fair Source. Now Commons Clause. Experiments. They're coming faster and faster.
Many of the folks advancing those proposals, like the one linked here, are also creating relevant software. From their point of view, claims that their work is "destructive" ring hollow, since they're constructing lots of code for others to use. They're especially irked by criticism in consumer-centric terms, like those of the OSD. After all, the OSD isn't a _license_ compatibility guide, but an _institutional_ compatibility list. It doesn't tell you which code you can get into an open project. By corporate handbook fiat, it tells you which code you can get into your company.
What's the point of preaching to a larger choir, if they don't speak the same language? You're just straining your voice in vain.
HESSLA and Fair Source both clearly state they are not open source, so I don't see how they go against rectang's point; the problem is not the existence of different models, but muddling the language to conflate them with the preceding one. That's essentially an EEE attack, and it's no wonder that existing OSS developers refuse to participate in it.
We invoke "open source" in many more ways and places than dry terms like "express patent license" and "copyleft license". The latter have near-zero community, marketing, or ideological meaning. They aren't the names of movements to identify with.
The push and pull between what doing open source is and what open source is supposed to mean has always gone two ways. If the status quo serves your needs, it's natural to cast "open source" as a rigorously bounded definitional category in the vein of "copyleft", and to downplay its social aspects. From a frustrated developer's point of view, it's natural to cast "open source" as a community first and foremost, and elide theory.
One point of view says, "We have this great definition to reference and rely upon, and you're trying to skim value and prestige off it." The other says, "We have all these people to celebrate and work with, and you're trying to claim their support while ignoring their needs."
Granted: OSD, or rather the OSI-approved license list, rules in enterprise procurement at a particular and fairly common level of sophistication. At the same time, I've had conversations with sponsoring companies, prolific contributors, investment types, and others, mentioned OSD, received blank stares, explained, and then heard they don't care. Not relevant. Does not resonate. Different experiences.
I have never seen any good evidence to back your claim of a quiet OSI majority, except if you count open source consumers as an inevitable majority over open source producers, and ascribe the former to OSI. My own direct experience of open source licensing news and work has been a constant drumbeat of interest in refining and expanding licensing models. HESSLA. Fair Source. Now Commons Clause. Experiments. They're coming faster and faster.
Many of the folks advancing those proposals, like the one linked here, are also creating relevant software. From their point of view, claims that their work is "destructive" ring hollow, since they're constructing lots of code for others to use. They're especially irked by criticism in consumer-centric terms, like those of the OSD. After all, the OSD isn't a _license_ compatibility guide, but an _institutional_ compatibility list. It doesn't tell you which code you can get into an open project. By corporate handbook fiat, it tells you which code you can get into your company.