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by Confusion
5598 days ago
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Your approach is unpractical and I doubt you follow it yourself. Almost nobody that uses opensource libraries reads all of the code. As with journalism, science and many other things in life, you have to trust upon others to deliver work that conforms to certain standards. Even though every newspaper article and scientific paper that you accept is 'your responsibility', you would be pretty miffed if an article in the free local paper was completely false. If you give away toilets for free, it's your responsibility to make sure they aren't lined with sodium and will blow up after the first flush. If you give away a toilet for free, you are an asshole if you know it has a huge hidden hole and you don't warn takers about it. If you write a piece of software that claims to be doing something, but it actually contains malware, then you are violating the law (as much as when you give me a nice statue that contains a spy camera). It has never been possible or allowed to give just anything you want away for free, without you being liable in any way. That hasn't changed with software and no license in the world can exempt you from certain basic responsibilities concerning your 'gift'. |
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