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by jpc0
813 days ago
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> My landlord and Tesco doesn't accept code contributions as payment Your landlord and Tesco aren't an open source project. If for instance I get paid $X to specifically work on Redis by Y. The open source project now has effectively a full time engineer they aren't paying for, one that likely would not be a full time engineer for redis otherwise. You cannot have "Amazon engineers contribute to redis" and "Amazon pays redis $X every month" and Amazon is only an example here, it could be Costco or IKEA or whatever. So your argument is that instead of having OSS contributions from some of the best engineers in the world, redis (and other now OSS software) should compete with FAANG to pay those engineers. Guaranteed one of the FAANG companies would just develop the tools internally instead if paying redis. |
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Wouldn't be better for both Redis, community and OSS movement if
1) Redis was fully OSS
2) AWS has a deal with Redis Labs were they share some X% of the revenue of their income for managed Redis (ElastiCache)
3) Redis Labs with that revenue can hire more maintainers
3a) Redis Labs with that revenue can pursue a competitive offering to ElastiCache (booom!)
4) AWS can still hire their developers and try to make them core maintainers to steer Redis development into implementing features they want/need
It's really impossible for me to paint AWS as the good citizen here and Redis Labs as the villain.
EDIT: I also wonder what history would have been if antirez started or moved to an AGPL3 licensing early on.