
Mandy asks…
How do open source companies avoid harmful contributions and find the useful ones?
Because wikipedia is open source, I can modify anything I want. But what happens if someone deletes, adds bad content, modifies useful content ? What does wikipedia do to prevent that ?
The last question is available for any other open source software: linux, php etc. How do they know which contribution is useful and which is harmful ?
Thank you.

admin answers:
As far as Wikipedia, there have been wars fought (on Wikipedia) over content. NEVER take an entry there as the definitive source on a subject. 99.999% of Wikipedia is opinion – some of it extremely accurate, some highly biased (to the point of uselessness).
Programs? There’s one official release of a version. The people maintaining it test contributions before adding them. If you want to add a module to Linux, you’re free to do so – as long as you put your name in the source. Then if it turns out to be the worst thing since the Plague, you get all the credit. (Anonymous source is considered about as useful as yesterday’s fish wrapping.)

Susan asks…
What will have happened if open source software becomes open standard?
Also, what is the difference between open source and open standards?

admin answers:
The term “open” has been used and abused by the purveyors of technology for a couple of decades now, so it should come as no surprise that technology users are taking their turn. Today, the term has become associated with software source code, industry standards, developer communities and a variety of licensing models–four distinct phenomena that are often intermingled in indistinct ways.
Each of these phenomena has a role to play, but it’s important to understand what each one is–and isn’t. Of the four, open standards are the most critical, because making a choice today shouldn’t preclude you from making a different choice tomorrow.
That’s what open standards are all about. They’re documents that outline agreed-upon conventions to enable different programs to work together, along with some means to ensure that they actually do–a process or set of tests. With open standards, your company can pick and choose among competing vendors and not be locked in to any one of them.
Many people seem to think that open-source software offers the same advantages. Not necessarily.
Open source simply means that the underlying software code is available for inspection and modification. Perhaps the most famous example is the Linux kernel, but there are many others: the Apache Web server, the Gnome windowing environment, the Mozilla browser, the Grid Engine resource management, and OpenOffice.org, to name just a few. In fact, the open-source phenomenon goes back more than 20 years to Unix and the BSD license originated by Bill Joy.
The best open-source projects are the ones that actually amplify a standard, increasing its acceptance in the marketplace and enhancing
Many people seem to think that open-source software offers the same advantages as open standards. Not necessarily.
Cross-platform compatibility. Which is why the company I work for, Sun Microsystems, has contributed more than 8 million lines of code to various projects, including those named above.
The thing to remember is that licensing terms vary. If you’re a CIO, you’ll want to make sure you understand how each kind of open-source license works–GPL, Lesser GPL, Apache, Mozilla, BSD, modified BSD– so you can determine whether it’s right for the job at hand.
If you’re in a brokerage, for example, and want to combine a chunk of open-source code with your own home-grown trading application, you can do that–but you may then be required to publish the code for your application and make it freely available. Or you may simply need to meet certain compatibility requirements. It all depends on the license. Sun, for example, licenses software in a variety of ways and believes that each type of license is valid in the proper context.
The most important thing about both open standards and open source is whether there’s an open community behind it. What’s the process? Can anyone join–competitors, customers, students? After all, innovations can come from anywhere–and frequently do.
I think open-source software owes a great deal of its popularity to that inclusive process and the richness it tends to bring to the technology.
The thing to remember is that licensing terms vary.
The fact that you can download it free doesn’t hurt either. But the process also presents challenges.
You can have people and companies contributing code, but that code doesn’t necessarily become part of the mainstream. It may simply end up in the individual company’s products. Making the source code open and available is good, but it doesn’t necessarily mean that everything the community produces will be compatible.
Again, that’s why standards are the most important factor. They give the CIO something to test against, to ensure compatibility and choice.
The key, after all, is to keep your options open.

Sandra asks…
What is the difference between source code and binary version distribution in open source?
I want to know about the difference between the source code and binary versio in open source software?Which of these should be downloaded to customize the open source product?

admin answers:
The source, obviously. The binary is already compiled, and thus cannot be customized unless you are handy with a hex editor.

Lisa asks…
Is google documents open source and what does open source actually mean?
I need to know if it’s open source because in ict in school we have to use open source software so I thought google documents would be great because you don’t need to install anything which is great. If it’s not open source do you know anything like google documents that you don’t have to install which allows word processing?

admin answers:
No. Open source means that the source code is free. This means that people who program and edit software can edit the source code and make certain programs that work with the software. Open source software is also free. Google documents is free but that does not mean it is open source. An open source program similar to Microsoft Office or Google Documents would be Open Office. Look that one up. It is free and open source.
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