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Aryan J
Aryan J

Posted on • Originally published at thewebdevcoach.com

In Defense of Quincy Larson and freeCodeCamp

In case you missed, it freeCodeCamp News has moved to Medium. Since then, there has been a slight uproar about copyright infringement and @ossia ’s motivations.

Before we start this discussion, let’s recap.

Recap

Medium Threatens freeCodeCamp

Quincy Describes Actions Taken By Medium in an Email

As seen in the image above, Quincy describes steps Medium took to get freeCodeCamp behind their paywall to capitalize on the traffic the freeCodeCamp News blog brings. The email clearly states that:

They pressured us to put our articles behind their paywalls. We refused. So they tried to buy us. […] We refused. Then they started threatening us with a lawyer.

The motivation to get freeCodeCamp away from Medium is clear: Medium sole interest is money. Even @ben explains that:

freeCodeCamp Moves off Medium

On May 27th, 2019, freeCodeCamp announces their move off Medium. It is impossible for me to describe freeCodeCamp’s move off Medium better than @ossia himself: https://www.freecodecamp.org/forum/t/we-just-moved-off-of-medium-and-onto-freecodecamp-news-heres-how-you-can-use-it/279929.

To summarize, freeCodeCamp used the Ghost blog platform to serve as the home of freeCodeCamp News. He admits that the freeCodeCamp team is “still fixing quite a few bugs.”

@ben Writes About the freeCodeCamp Move to Medium

In

explains that:

FreeCodeCamp seems to have just pulled the plug and taken everyone’s Medium content with them, to be displayed in a different context, wiping out the canonical URLs, while depriving the authors their ability to edit, delete, or manage in any way.

He tweets his article:

to 29K+ of his followers. In the thread, he accuses freeCodeCamp of literally stealing content without the consent of the copyright holder: and breaking the law

Personal Opinion

@ossia has made his motivations for moving off of Medium very clear. It is obvious that Medium wants to monetize the freeCodeCamp blog posts while freeCodeCamp (in their usual fashion) believes in an open internet and blog posts that are free to read.

@ben is concerned about freeCodeCamp and those who have created content for the freeCodeCamp publication. However, I don’t understand why that concern needed to be made public in front of the entire developer community. If the concern is real, why blast it? Why not approach @ossia in private or, better yet, schedule an open discussion with @ossia present? Why accuse @ossia of being “super flippant in addressing the issue?”

Tyler McGinnis points out that @ben ’s article “feels a little premature and virtue signally.":

and I completely agree.

This uproar on the @ben ’s part comes off as a play against the perceived competition (though @ossia promises it will not be a competitor to dev.to) and to promote his position as a content creator advocate.

The freeCodeCamp migration from Medium to their own platform did not go so well. There are issues with the author link that are being patched up. Mistakes were made. However, given everything that freeCodeCamp has done for the developer community (read: provide a FREE platform for ANYONE to learn web development), we as a developer community should give their small, non-profit organization the benefit of the doubt.

Lastly, please feel at liberty to share your thoughts on this issue. Don’t let “content creators,” tell you that it’s hard to understand if “you’ve never been a content creator”

or that you’re not at liberty to criticize @ben

Most of all, don’t let “content creators” make you feel as if your questions and concerns are “costing a lot of time.”

Don’t let your voice be stifled.

I’m with @ossia . ✊

Top comments (2)

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shindakun profile image
Steve Layton

I'm not really for or against, and "stealing" is a bit nebulous when it comes to content and copyright (I'm not a lawyer).

However, I think if FCC moved content from the service before alerting users then they went about it poorly - after all users are the heart and sole of FCC. From what I understand that is the heart of the issue - that peoples content was moved between services without their knowledge or consent.

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scottishross profile image
Ross Henderson

Which, as Ben pointed out, is likely against the Terms of Service. Ben has clearly been understanding of why the move happened but is just concerned about the ramifications of how the move happened.