Problem with package managers are they are quite expensive to run, so hard to manage in an otherwise open source ecosystem. There was some controversy around NPM before the GitHub acquisition https://www.businessinsider.com/npm-cofounder-laurie-voss-re..., which I guess is the exact problem a non-profit such as RubyCentral tried to solve.
I would GitHub would be quite well-positioned to set up infrastructure around a fork of RubyGems if things fall apart.
I think what you’re describing is a race to the bottom, and I also think a Country A(merica) focused on its soft power would believe Country C could be a part of a multilateral agreement to exclude the practices demonstrated by Country B from competition
If the owners overlap with the employees, then what part of the revenue is divided between salary, benefits and profit is often a tax-optimization question, which I think is the point in the GP. A single-person company paying themselves 200k in yearly wages or 100k in wages and 100k in dividends from 200k in revenue can look like a “non-profit” or a high-margin company with the same effect for the owner.
> I've been running an open source, libre project for closing in on 24 years now, and generating revenue from it for about 17 years. There's never been any "profit", but there has been revenue.
I regard profit as what's left of the revenue after you pay the people who work on the project and any expenses, which is the way most corporations and accountants would view it.
Because priority number one is getting you to watch their originals, so that you will keep subscribing as the market for movies produced outside the streaming services gets more competitive.
The big events gets featured on the home page, for anything you are probably better of searching for directors or reading reviews, and then finding where you can see it.
That is part of the less pretty side of how unions perform their capitalistic functions. Killing companies that threaten established worker rights, so as to not get races to the bottom. For another example they should also cull companies or even industries that have become so unproductive that they can no longer compete on compensation.
> Accounting for selection effects and the potential endogeneity of unionisation, the results show that increasing union density at the firm level leads to a substantial increase in both productivity and wages.
> After controlling for differences between studies, a negative association between unions and produc- tivity is established for the United Kingdom, whereas a positive association is established for the United States in general and for U.S. manufacturing.
I would GitHub would be quite well-positioned to set up infrastructure around a fork of RubyGems if things fall apart.