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by sjs
5321 days ago
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> they can do whatever they want with the software What if they want to build something on top of it that is not open source? They cannot and that is a restriction. It is the definition of a restriction. > When someone closes the source, it's restricting others freedom, not his. How so? No one is restricted if somebody makes a private fork of a codebase. That's like saying that if I don't go to the bar down the street tonight the people there are restricted from having fun. |
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Is the constitution restricting your freedom? NO, that's not your freedom, that's power on taking others' life.
Another example - a less extreme and more realistic one - is a judge (or a jury). Are they "freerer" than you because they can put you on jail? Is your freedom "less" than theirs? No, you have the same freedom, what they have is power over you in a circumstance already """agreed""".
If someone wants to build on top of it, if he can't find a link like some closed drivers do with GPL software, then they are improving it. If they use your code as a base, why don't give back?
Note that this only affects you when you provide the service (AGPL) or distribute the software (GPL).
As long as you don't distribute it and use it "internally" (as US Army and DoD does) you don't have to show the source. If you provide public access to the system, then you have to show the code. So, you become another giant to step on his shoulders.
As for money, you only need (IMO) the amount for doing what you enjoy, not more (it isn't a goal per se, it's a way, not a goal). If you want to have an empire and build a sphinx with your face on it, then you have a problem with your brain's reward system, not with money - nothing will fill you up (stop using cocaine! :D hahahah! =P)