Hey no bother at all, I think it's just because I'm an admin in my instance
live to help you declutter
Me ready to clutter even more 😈
I don't know if I should "come" just yet O-O
So what was the right shortcut for the screenshot in the end?
Fully agreed, though I must say this, if you truly believe in the spirit of free software and, let's also be honest and add, can afford not to bend for the convenience of others (maybe you get funded through donations and/or grants), then you have the opportunity to make a piece of software so good, be it application or library, that it'll be hard for competition to come up with something better and proprietary, that's how it is for those instances where companies were sued for using them and not providing the source, e.g. Linux and John Deere is the last I remember.
It is that nature of copyleft that the more it spreads, the more it will enable for a culture shift, when people are faced with the inevitable conflict of the idea of keeping everything behind closed doors and not being allowed to if they want to take the easy way out, they might give it an actual thought or they'll try to be unfair and use without giving back, showing their true greedy colours. I'm not a purist by any means, as much as I'd like to, but that is the kind of world I'd like to live in
Ok that's good, I was thinking that since Rossman had thrown the term around many times in the video
Interesting, I understand where they're coming from, but as others have said, I still feel like it's shady to keep calling it "open source" when open source is already well defined.
I think they have a noble mission, yet I can't really say I like their means. Maybe in that "finding a middle ground", since they're mostly making consumer software, a lot of that payment part could have been covered by simply providing their releases under a payment on the app distribution channels (Play Store, their website, others?), most people that would pay would do so to avoid going through hoops to get the app for free through other means. That way they could have afforded to be actually open source. Maybe it wouldn't be as effective though, I can't know for sure, at the end of the day it's a battle of ideals
Oi mate, you got a loicense for that dick?
Delete this 😭
About the part on SaaS, the outcry is solely because the licences used by those projects weren't approved neither by OSI or the FSF, they have clauses that specifically affect the economic aspect, and that can never fit in with either movement, but it is exactly that problem that the software authors want to tackle, preventing big corporations that already have the means to deliver a large scale service based on their software from making even more money than they already have, even if those corporations published possible modifications, the author would benefit little, because they most likely won't have the infrastructure to run it on at the same scale and profiting from it.
Hot take: the real issue there is that those authors clearly don't care for free software, because if they did, they'd have started off with AGPL or the like, instead they choose MIT exactly because of the possible economic prospect for themselves, when at some point they could implement vendor lock-in by baiting the users into believing that it was a community-run project at the start. Don't get me wrong, they deserve to be paid for what they do, and corporations dropping by to profit from all that hard work feels wrong (but not illegal, and so it is fair), but exploiting the visibility and help of the community to reach popularity and credibility and eventually going private is a major dick move
Aww best wishes!
Now that's my kinda thing!
There is only solace in chaos