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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/)LE
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  • Since you seem so reasonable…

    The restriction that some people object to is that the GPL restricts the freedom of the software developers (the people actually writing and contributing the code).

    Most people would agree at first glance that developers should be able to license code that they write under whatever license they like. MIT is one option. Some prefer the GPL. Most see the right to choose a proprietary license for your own work as ok but some people describe this as unethical. I personally see all three as valid. I certainly think the GPL should be one of the options.

    That said, if we are talking about code that already exists, the GPL restricts freedom without adding any that MIT does not also provide.

    MIT licensed software is “free software” by definition. Once something has been MIT licensed, it is Open Source and cannot be taken away.

    The MIT license provides all of the Free Software Foundations “4 freedoms”. It also provides freedoms that the GPL does not.

    What the MIT license does not provide is guaranteed access to “future” code that has not yet been written. That is, in an MIT licensed code base, you can add new code that is not free. In a GPL code base, this is not possible.

    So, the GPL removes rights from the developers in that it removes the right to license future code contributions as you want. Under the GPL, the right of users to get future code for free is greater than the right of the developer to license their future contributions. Some people do not see that as a freedom. Some even see it as quite the opposite (forced servitude). This “freedom” is not one of the “4 freedoms” touted by the FSF but it is the main feature of the GPL.

  • I believe that NTsync delivers better compatibility. I do not remember the details but Fsync can cause problems sometimes. So this is more like performance without compromise.

    Now that it is in the kernel, I would expect Wine to move to it and for Proton to follow suit.

    One less hack to maintain.

  • Somewhat ironic example.

    X (Xorg) has been MT licensed for 40 years. So is Wayland. So is Mesa.

    I think Xorg is a good example of the real world risks for something like core utils. If you did not know or care until now that X and Wayland were MIT licensed, you probably do not need to care too much about utils licensing either.

  • To choose this level of disunity given what is going on is staggering.

    Do we need to boycott Alberta too?

    BC should put a toll on the million barrels of oil Alberta pipes through BC every day. You want our coast? We have a list of demands…

  • It never occurred to me that when people talk about “wife factor”, they mean setup. I also thought they just meant use.

    My wife uses Jellyfin and complains about it less than Netflix or Prime.

    My wife is an iPhone and Mac user and asks me to set all her Apple stuff up. I get asked to fix things all the time.

    Apparently neither Apple or Jellyfin have sufficient “wife factor” if we include setup.

  • The US will not invade Canada. At some point, it would require political integration. It would be a generation after that before the Republicans won an election.

    There are 40 million people in Canada and more land area than the entire US. At least 75% of Canadians would vote Democrat and that is before the bitterness of an invasion. Even as a single state Canada would swing the House and every President. As multiple states, Canada would swing the Senate. Think of the Supreme Court that would be appointed. The GOP would be completely locked out.

    Just allowing Canadians already in the US to vote would have cost the Republicans every presidential race since Reagan.

    For the above reasons alone, somebody will stop Trump from pulling the trigger. The US will not invade Canada. Even if they did, they would give it back.

    That said, Trump may wage an unbelievably destructive trade war. And the end game for that may be for Canada to submit to total subservience to the US.

    We are in a negotiation. The threat of war is just part of that. We hold some decent cards. By appeasing Trump, we start to lose cards. We can get more cards by aligning with the rest of the world both economically, militarily, and socially as fast as possible. The good news is, the world seems to be there for it.

  • There are always those that assist or even support their own genocide right until the bitter, fatal end. It is a normal human behaviour. As such, the presence of such people in no way implies that their are legitimate reasons for their position.

    If fewer than 20% support something, it should be interpreted as essentially zero.

  • Permanently Deleted

    Jump
  • The world will only be a better place if these people self identify more quickly. I mean, it would be better if they do not exist but, since they do, I am very supportive of them expressing their opinions so that I do not have to waste time discovering them.

  • In Canada, a somewhat Trump inspired populist right leaning party had 100% of winning the next election.prediction markets had it at 93%.

    since the beginning of Trumps tarring stacks, the center left party had surged in popularity to a degree not even thought possible. If the election was today, they would win.

    Trump is giving people somebody to rally against. And the “us” vs “them” is the the world vs the US.