| > what matters is promotion of the idea & usage of free software It's not a mere technicality, it's an important point of principle. The FSF used to use the term semifree for such licences, but now just call them proprietary or nonfree. [0] Similarly the OSI page you linked shows that the OSI considers non-commercial restrictions to breach criterion 6, No Discrimination Against Fields of Endeavor. > you'd agree that everything-as-a-service and tivoized products do not make users free, even if they technically don't violate the terms of FOSS-licensed code Tivoization was addressed in GPLv3. The SASS point is less clear-cut as it's not obvious how to define the relevant boundaries, but roughly speaking the AGPL addresses this. Not all problems can be addressed by software licences though. > a group of independent contributors realizing "hey, we've made something big, let's protect our work (and potentially get rewarded for our efforts)" and creating a more formal entity around it The point remains that if they adopt a licence that prohibits commercial use, the project is no longer Free and Open Source software. There's certainly a place for formal organisations though, and there are many of them in the FOSS world: FSF and GNU, OSI, SFLC, Linux Foundation, Apache, Mozilla, Eclipse Foundation. There's also TideLift which seems to be doing well raising funds for FOSS contributors while also improving software quality. [1] [0] https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/categories.en.html [1] https://medium.com/general-catalyst-amplified/introducing-ti... (I would link to their official About page but it's pretty uninformative) |