this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2024
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Why? I read most of the article and he seems interested in benefitting common users, even if the licensing system has to be more complex than the current state. He cites the same abuses that have driven enshitification.
Because modern proprietary software is built on the backs of open source projects, but the devs who manage them are poorly compensated (if at all) — essentially doing thousands of hours of unpaid labor that the private sector exploits for profit.
That seems to be what this guy wants to address.
Sure, enforcement is important or the license is meaningless. But that's not what the article is about. This is about the current Redhat situation. And libraries and databases which are legally correctly used by big tech and simultaneously struggling to pay for their servers. And people not being able to make an income with such projects.
I need to think about it some.