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by kube-system
1521 days ago
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That’s not because of the license, though. Both the license choice and the hostile formats are caused by the author being hostile. The authors point here isn’t that all companies that use proprietary licenses are good. It’s that a proprietary license doesn’t have to make you bad. For B2B users, there are often FOSS terms that they find to be hostile. Limitations of liability being a big one. Waiving one’s right to use the legal system is a big deal to some people. FOSS programmers like this because it protects them. But for non-developers, this only limits their own rights. |
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That's only if you don't pay someone for a support contract. I've never seen a support contract for FOSS that waived liability.
If you want someone to be liable, you can pay them for the privilege, just like with proprietary software. And you don't have to just choose the original developers. This gives the end users more rights, not less as you're suggesting.