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What is Forks

Handbook of Research on Open Source Software: Technological, Economic, and Social Perspectives
In software engineering, a project fork or branch happens when a developer (or a group of them) takes a copy of source code from one software package and starts to independently develop a new package. The term is also used more loosely to represent a similar branching of any work, particularly with FLOSS. Associated with hacker culture, this chapter argues that forking usually happens because people improve the software based on their local needs which implicitly entails different interpretations and practices of what a hacker is and how to become a hacker alternatively.
Published in Chapter:
Hacker Culture and the FLOSS Innovation
Yu-Wei Lin (University of Manchester, UK)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-59140-999-1.ch004
Abstract
This chapter aims to contribute to our understanding of the free/libre open source software (FLOSS) innovation and how it is shaped by and also shapes various perceptions on and practices of hacker culture. Unlike existing literature that usually normalises, radicalises, marginalises, or criminalises hacker culture, I confront such deterministic views that ignore the contingency and heterogeneity of hacker culture, which evolve over time in correspondence with different settings where diverse actors locate. I argue that hacker culture has been continuously defi ned and redefi ned, situated and resituated with the ongoing development and growing implementation of FLOSS. The story on the development of EMACSen (plural form of EMACS—Editing MACroS) illustrates the consequence when different interpretations and practices of hacker culture clash. I conclude that stepping away from a fi xed and rigid typology of hackers will allow us to view the FLOSS innovation from a more ecological view. This will also help us to value and embrace different contributions from diverse actors including end-users and minority groups.
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