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by e1ven 2663 days ago
I'm very glad that they've done this.

The code was open, and the company decided to close it for the new versions, so it forks. Forks are common when people don't like the corporate direction of an OSS project - It's a strength, not a weakness. Openoffice/Libreoffice, Hudson/Jenkins etc.

Imagine if Linus said that the next version of Linux would be paid-only.

Within 15 minutes there'd be a new librelinux repo that people could contribute to instead.

Someone was going to make a new fork anyway - This is Amazon putting their money where their mouth is to fund and support that new fork.

2 comments

To be clear, no Elasticsearch code or features that were OSS were closed. As new Elasticsearch features are developed, some of them are now released as OSS and others are released with a commercial license.
Okay, are you glad that Amazon now owns Elasticsearch?