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But I can't fork it, not where it matters, that's the point. Me forking it doesn't get it distributed to all the services I use, some provided by the government for example. This is my point, as a customer, my forking doesn't affect my usage, usage that may be completely out of my control. There have been times when society has decided that some utility was important enough to "transfer ownership" (imminent domain for example). Obviously that is an extreme case, and I am not advocating for that (in fact I am against that), but I am demonstrating that precedent exists for the feeling that some things ingrain themselves enough such that if you want to abdicate responsibility you should perhaps consider abdicating ownership. More than anything, I am trying to help explain how the other side feels. But, as a trivial example, it's certainly not the case that they owe you nothing in the strictest sense. Under that model, they could technically put in code to forward all data to their servers and fall back to "well, as is, that's how we wanted it". I think that wouldn't hold up in court. There appears to be at least the basic expectation of good faith (and lack of criminality). Given that, perhaps it can be extended to negligence too. Perhaps not. My position is actually a rather soft one, it's "If you heavily pitched your project and it ended up in the control systems of nuclear reactors, you should maybe expect people to be pissed at you if you willingly block critical fixes because you deem them boring". See, I'm not even saying what you should do, just more of a like "well, what do you expect". |