• @cm0002@lemmy.world
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    353 months ago

    Google was a company of engineers that you could trust, however, like Boeing (which was another “Company of Engineers”) they were slowly replaced by business execs who probably haven’t written a line of code in their life (Save for maybe some VBA for some businessy excel spreadsheet)

    • BreakDecks
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      113 months ago

      This is why I love FOSS products. You get the advantage of using well engineered code, without the risk of that code falling into the hands of exploitive capitalists.

      • @grue@lemmy.world
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        153 months ago

        Permissively-licensed stuff (e.g. MIT, BSD) still has that risk. What you really want is copyleft (e.g. GPL) specifically, not just FOSS.

        • Possibly linux
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          23 months ago

          You can change the license at any point. You just can’t make people change the license of past copies

            • @blind3rdeye@lemm.ee
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              33 months ago

              gpl does not prevent the owner from changing the licence later. (Unless it is also making use of someone else’s gpl components.)

              For example, Qt has a free version which is under the GPL; and a paid version which is not. So if you were making software with Qt, if you were using the free version, you’d be compelled to also release your product under GPL. But you could then later switch to a paid subscription and rerelease under some other licience if you wanted to.

              • @Blisterexe@lemmy.zip
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                23 months ago

                doesnt it require any modified versions of the code be shared, preventing a change to a non-copyleft liscence?

                • Possibly linux
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                  33 months ago

                  Not if the copyright owner changes the license. When you are the creator you can do what you please. With that being said you can not do that if the public writes code. That’s why you see CLAs (contributor license agreement)

                  • BreakDecks
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                    13 months ago

                    Important to note that this only applies to future releases by the legal copyright owner. If the community doesn’t like it (and they often don’t), someone else can fork it from the last time it was GPL, and contributors can abandon the original codebase in favor of the GPL fork. As a result, it is extremely unwise to try to de-GPL software with a lot of contributors, as the copyright holder doesn’t have a great chance at competing with a fork if contributors jump ship.

                    Linus Torvalds could legally pivot Linux to a proprietary license if he wanted to, but we’d probably see it replaced with a fork called “Binix” or something within a few months, and he’d be in charge of abandonware at that point.