Openwashing
Term to describe presenting something as open
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Openwashing or open washing (a compound word modeled on "whitewash" and derived from "greenwashing") is a term to describe presenting something as open, when it is not actually open. In the context of openwashing, "open" refers to transparency, access to information, participation, and knowledge sharing.[1]
Usage
The term was coined by Michelle Thorne, an Internet and climate policy scholar, in 2009.[2] Thorne used Berlin Partner as an example of openwashing when their marketing campaign featured the slogan "be open. be free. be Berlin," despite terms of use that contradict principles of openness.[2]
In 2016, openwashing was discussed at the Open Exchange for Social Change Unconference in Madrid.[3] This familiarized international scholars to the term but did not result in a universal or changed definition.
Evgeny Morozov criticized the term openwashing because of its failure to concretely define what openness means.[4] Morozov argued that with many definitions of openness, open source, and open data, openwashing can be used in many contexts and "helps us question the authenticity of open initiatives" but does not indicate the barrier to openness itself.[4]
Openwashing by governments
Ana Brandusescu of the World Wide Web Foundation wrote that governments practice openwashing "when information released about government contracts is not detailed enough for the public to have a full picture of what that contract means."[3] This could mean excluding information about how governments decide who contracts are awarded to or how money was spent after allocation.
Maximilian Heimstädt researched open data initiatives in New York City, London, and Berlin to study possible cases of openwashing.[5] Heimstädt found that in all three cities, governments were selective in what they publish to maintain secrecy of sensitive information and transparency.[clarification needed] This form of openwashing is known as decoupling.[5]
Examples of openwashing in private industry
VMWare and Microsoft
In 2012, Red Hat Inc. accused VMWare Inc. and Microsoft Corp. of openwashing in relation to their cloud products.[6] Red Hat stated that VMWare and Microsoft were marketing their cloud products using the term "open" although the software was not licensed under an open-source license. Around 2012, one example of non-open-source terms in the license was the addition of a requirement to pay fees for the use of virtual machines running on its cloud products.[6]
Llama
Since 2023, Meta has described its Llama large language model as open-source, which has been disputed by the Open Source Initiative (OSI) and some academics and journalists. The OSI stated that Llama's licenses do not meet several provisions of its policy document The Open Source Definition (OSD), which prohibits open-source software licenses from discriminating against "persons or groups" and "fields of endeavor", and accused Meta of openwashing Llama. According to the OSI, Llama 2's license prevented the software from being used commercially in some cases and restricted use in fields including controlled substances and critical infrastructure, while later versions of Llama's license also disallowed use by any individual in the European Union.[7][8][9] In November 2024, a Nature article asserted that describing Llama 3 as "open" is a case of "'openwashing' systems that are better understood as closed", as Llama 3 provides "little more than an API or the ability to download a model subject to distinctly non-open use restrictions".[10]
Regulation
In the 2000s and 2010s, there were no explicitly defined regulations or bans of openwashing. Some regulations surrounding deceptive marketing may legally prevent openwashing. For example, in the United States, the Federal Trade Commission protects customers from fraud and deceptive messaging.[11] In Canada, the Competition Act prevents businesses from misleading or deceiving customers about their products and services, including about their open business practices.[12]
Other forms of "washing" have caused legal action to be taken. In 2022, international fast fashion company H&M was sued by Chelsea Commodore for greenwashing, with ongoing reviews of other fast fashion companies by domestic competition bureaus potentially causing further legal action.[13]