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by skybrian
2024 days ago
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I don't think it's an important difference. If you're doing open source at all, you're losing control over what's done with your code, including allowing it to be used by competitors and "bad guys" however you define that. See (5) and (6) in the open source definition: no discrimination against persons or groups, and no discrimination against fields of endeavor. If you're unwilling to relinquish control, no open source license is going to be good enough. At best you might scare some risk-adverse companies away from using it, but there are still going to be a lot of people you dislike who can use your software to nefarious ends. |
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