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submitted 2 years ago by [email protected] to c/[email protected]

The new license terms for RHEL are structured to stop subscribers from exercising their rights under the GPL. For now they are still providing source code albeit in a less convenient form, but technically they only need to do this for GPL licenses packages and they could remove code for BSD /MIT / Apache licensed packages.

Do these developments make you more.inclined to distribute your software under a copyleft license or are you happy with something more open?

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[-] [email protected] 0 points 2 years ago* (last edited 2 years ago)

So as a casual fedora user what does this mean? Closed sourced code/apps? No more updates? Tx

[-] [email protected] 6 points 2 years ago

For Fedora users it changes nothing at all. Fedora is upstream from Enterprise Linux. There's no practical reason you'd want to switch to a different distribution, just maybe a personal one if you strongly dislike what Red Hat is doing to the RHEL clones.

[-] [email protected] 1 points 2 years ago

Tx bud ๐Ÿ‘ I only use fedora due to newer apps compared to linux mint. I guess opensuse can do the same. Arch not a fan.

this post was submitted on 06 Jul 2023
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