|
|
|
|
|
by invalidname
1344 days ago
|
|
That isn't accurate. Let's look at Linux. Yes you can download it and compile it yourself but typically you would download from a website that tracks you. You would get a distro that typically has a business model. Yes, there's debian (and others) but even they have sponsors that pay the salaries of people working on the software. The free portion are things that are already written. Services are the thing that costs money and they include features, hosting, adapting, etc. Those aren't free. Maybe I'm cynical but I see things that are technically free all residing within environments that aren't. I don't have a problem with that, I'm OK with commercial interests. They pay my salary. But we need to be realistic about the scope of free and how financially viable would it be to be "free". |
|