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by omoikane
1317 days ago
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I wonder if AGPL is exactly the problem. There are certain large corporations that wouldn't touch anything with AGPL, and thus have little incentive to sponsor projects like mold because they see little benefit from it. Dropping AGPL might be a step in making friends with some corporations while losing some open source friends, but the latter don't pay the bills. |
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The AGPL does not prevent Amazon from linking their proprietary code with mold. It prevents you from selling a linker service that is built on mold without giving people the source code to mold.
My understanding of AGPL is that Amazon wouldn't even have to open source their service. So the license is not in the way of commercial exploitation.
In fact, OP makes exactly that point, that he is thinking about needing a more restrictive license, not a less restrictive one.