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InitialsDiceBearhttps://github.com/dicebear/dicebearhttps://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/„Initials” (https://github.com/dicebear/dicebear) by „DiceBear”, licensed under „CC0 1.0” (https://creativecommons.org/publicdomain/zero/1.0/)DR
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2 yr. ago

  • The 8 richest people in the world according to investopedia have a combined net worth of about $1,369 billion. Divide that by 3.6 billion and it is about $380 per person. Idk what the average net worth of the poorest half of the world's population is, but I doubt it is below $380.

    TL;DR: I'm calling bullshit.

  • P.S: you are still talking about "other people". Can you try to make any value judgement and own it? How about "I don't care about software freedom and prefer to get free stuff"?

    Why? Because your argument has failed beyond redemption so you need something else to impotently insult?

    Which is completely besides the point of the post

    🤡

  • I disagree. Sure, for some larger crucial projects, companies would pay. But for the majority of (small) projects, we would just handwrite an inferior solution from scratch rather than handle the bureaucracy. The result would be wasted additional effort, inferior features and more bugs.

    And even if that was not the case and bureaucracy was not an issue, the question is how much better would the paid for "professional" FOSS software be compared to the free one. If it was so much better, that it justified the price, it would outcompete the free one anyway. And if it is not, then by definition it is better we use the free one.

  • The "problem" is that those contributions can be taken and exploited by large corporations.

    You say exploited, I say used. Or on the other hand, you can argue that large FOSS projects like Linux distros are exploiting smaller projects they package, since they don't share their donations...

    IMO there is no issue if the wishes of the author are respected. The authors wishing for companies to use their code is just as valid as wishing to restrict it to FOSS.

  • you are working for freedom.

    Which is still working for free.

    If you use MIT, you make products (paid or foss) better for everyone, in a sense making the world better.

    If you use GPL, you push FOSS to be more prevalent, arguably making the world better in a different way.

    What I don't like is that the title minimizes the contributions of the MIT developers.

  • Great. No corporation is working on software for the freedom of its users

    A lot of people don't care.

    Or pay the developer to dual license, which can and should be the preferred way for FOSS developers to fund their work?

    Not everyone wants to deal with that (setting up payment methods, filling tax forms, ...)

    In addition, as a developer for a corp, I can tell you having to pay for a license would prevent me from using most smaller libraries because the process of getting it approved and paid is too difficult, even if the money is not an issue.

  • Two reasons:

    1. public domain is not very well legally recognized, so code licensed under MIT is easier to use internationally than code in public domain.
    2. MIT includes disclaimer of liability, which as an author you want just to be safe.