Hmm, guess I did… now I clearly see a troll. Thanks!
Who cares what I comment? I’m mostly a happy lurker
Hmm, guess I did… now I clearly see a troll. Thanks!
Who cares what I comment? I’m mostly a happy lurker
Low effort comment != low effort post.
I clicked to see what reasoning led to your assessment and got nothing. Lemmy is fine once we get bury low effort posts.
Low effort posts sure do help :/
Suck rocks you worthless git!
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I, too, tried to give this a fair read. But, there is nothing in this article except opinionated media bashing and quite stretching “conclusions”.
Move along, trash.
Please. Climate change has been a well-lnown phenomena for a very long time. Scientists in the 19th century were warning that rising CO2 from human-caused emissions could harm the climate.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_climate_change_science
We can agree to disagree. “The Software” was delivered, source included. And you as end consumer are free to redistribute and maintain as you wish.
However, I cannot see any contract law judgement that would force continuation of a subscription model on the vendor (in perpetuity!) if they do not wish to remain under contract.
Best TL;DR yet!
A finer detail is that Swift was contractually prohibited from new recordings for two years after original contract ended — that time has now passed.
Here’s a great article that covers it quite well:
Re-Recording Your Old Songs: How Taylor Swift is “Shaking Off” Her Old Record Company
That’s a fair point, and worthy of deliberation.
However, I would continue to argue that if Redhat does not restrict parties’ rights to the source code they’ve been given, then they’ve satisfied the GPL.
It is my understanding (at least initially) that the GPL was meant to solidify the end user’s rights to the software they have, so that they’re not left with an unfixable binary executable.
And again, there are no rights granted by the GPL for FUTURE versions.
I can’t believe how many people fundamentally misunderstand the spirit behind the GPL.
It helps to consider “the software” as a single snapshot in time, with the GPL’s intention that the consumer may make their own fixes, rebuild, and redistribute. Check.
Remember: “Free as in freedom, not free as in beer.” Selling open source software has always been explicitly allowed, as long as you make the source available to those who receive it. Check.
What the GPL does NOT provide is guaranteed access to maintenance and future versions of said software. Again, it applies to a snapshot, as delivered.
In a nutshell, the customer receives open source everything they FOR A PARTICULAR VERSION.
I see no problem — either in spirit or letter — in Redhat’s approach here.
Perhaps. At least I’m not junking up the feed.