> cen·tral·i·zation: the concentration of control of an activity or organization under a single authority.
I mean people try to motte and bailey this all the time. You have someone proposing or defending a monopoly by putting it up against the false dichotomy alternative where no party trusts any other party whatsoever and then everyone is required to do everything on their own because no delegation is possible.
There is an alternate which is neither of those things, and it's a competitive market. You have neither a single authority nor the total absence of trust. Instead there are numerous alternatives that each try to maintain a good reputation for themselves because people can choose freely among them without their choice being coerced by tying it to numerous otherwise-unrelated factors.
Notice how this is importantly different. If you have a PC, you can install Debian or Arch or Windows; if you install Debian, you can install software with apt or flatpak or snap; if you use apt, you can use the official repositories or numerous third party ones. If you have an iPhone, you get iOS and you get Apple's store and everything else is anti-competitively excluded.
My point was that Debian, etc. as conceptually distinct organizations, and so there’s no point in centralizing beyond their organizational boundaries. Each already performs centralized key management, but nobody would particularly benefit from a single global keyring for all Linux distributions, because nobody (?) is transferring package formats across distribution families.
That literally is what centralization means:
> cen·tral·i·zation: the concentration of control of an activity or organization under a single authority.
I mean people try to motte and bailey this all the time. You have someone proposing or defending a monopoly by putting it up against the false dichotomy alternative where no party trusts any other party whatsoever and then everyone is required to do everything on their own because no delegation is possible.
There is an alternate which is neither of those things, and it's a competitive market. You have neither a single authority nor the total absence of trust. Instead there are numerous alternatives that each try to maintain a good reputation for themselves because people can choose freely among them without their choice being coerced by tying it to numerous otherwise-unrelated factors.
Notice how this is importantly different. If you have a PC, you can install Debian or Arch or Windows; if you install Debian, you can install software with apt or flatpak or snap; if you use apt, you can use the official repositories or numerous third party ones. If you have an iPhone, you get iOS and you get Apple's store and everything else is anti-competitively excluded.