MyNameIsFred to Technology@beehaw.org • 11 months agoRed Hat Tries To Address Criticism Over Their Source Repository Changeswww.phoronix.comexternal-linkmessage-square43fedilinkarrow-up154arrow-down10cross-posted to: news@lemmy.linuxuserspace.showRedHat@kbin.sociallinux@kbin.social
arrow-up154arrow-down1external-linkRed Hat Tries To Address Criticism Over Their Source Repository Changeswww.phoronix.comMyNameIsFred to Technology@beehaw.org • 11 months agomessage-square43fedilinkcross-posted to: news@lemmy.linuxuserspace.showRedHat@kbin.sociallinux@kbin.social
minus-squareKerblink5•edit-211 months agoFrom what i get, It seems like they are pissed at oracle specifically, Selling a oracle branded rhel clone with minor tweaks and a oracle certified sticker. And the other downstream distros are just collateral damage. Obviously wouldn’t make it better (But imo more understandable)
minus-squareconciselyverboselinkfedilink5•11 months agoThe literal point of GPL is that Oracle is explicitly entitled to do exactly that. You don’t own the code.
minus-squareJeenalinkfedilink1•11 months agoWe had this already with mongodb, Elastic search and AWS. It’s not sustainable to give away your work to your competitors so they can make the money.
minus-squareaes linkfedilink3•11 months agoThen just write proprietary code. Open source philosophy to me seems about creation for a “greater good”. What’s the point if you’re not even going to be open? The organisation just becomes a massive corporation like any other at that point.
From what i get,
It seems like they are pissed at oracle specifically,
Selling a oracle branded rhel clone with minor tweaks and a oracle certified sticker.
And the other downstream distros are just collateral damage.
Obviously wouldn’t make it better
(But imo more understandable)
The literal point of GPL is that Oracle is explicitly entitled to do exactly that. You don’t own the code.
We had this already with mongodb, Elastic search and AWS. It’s not sustainable to give away your work to your competitors so they can make the money.
Then just write proprietary code. Open source philosophy to me seems about creation for a “greater good”. What’s the point if you’re not even going to be open? The organisation just becomes a massive corporation like any other at that point.