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by toomuchtodo
1027 days ago
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Right, so it prevented freeloading. It’s working as intended. Still usable for those who want to eject from the hosted platform, but if you make money from it, n8n should get paid for that value. You’ve proved the point of why open source would’ve been a suboptimal license for them to use. Open source was intended as free as in speech, not free as in beer. “Open source because I don’t want to pay something” is…not great. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gratis_versus_libre |
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We weren’t really expecting to make any money out of it. We already have a Zapier integration that our customers were using. We just wanted things to be a little bit easier for our customers. Does this have an indirect impact on our profits? Sure, I guess marginally. Enough to justify a $50k/yr license fee? Nope, not even remotely close. Our customers can carry on using Zapier.
> You’ve proved the point of why open source would’ve been a suboptimal license for them to use.
They didn’t get paid either way, the only difference was we send all our customers to their competitor now. Which also isn’t open source, of course, but Zapier has the brand recognition and reach n8n doesn’t. Everybody knows Zapier, a lot of customers ask for it specifically. Nobody asks for n8n. I don’t want to make the “you’ll get paid in exposure” argument, but in practical terms, the only difference to n8n in our particular case was they had a chance to stop us sending customers to Zapier. They never had the opportunity to earn money from us directly, only to get us to stop sending customers to their competitor.
If n8n want to license their product in that way, that’s up to them. It’s totally their right to do so. But it’s not open source and this is a big issue for some potential users here. Discussion about that belongs here, especially when people are saying that it’s open source.
> Open source was intended as free as in speech, not free as in beer.
You’ve misunderstood that. Open source and Free Software includes both. Open source was originally promoted as the commercially-attractive alternative to Free Software.