this post was submitted on 31 Mar 2024
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I see you quoting "Free as in Freedom" but you seem to imply that FOSS also means "Free as in gratis". That is not true. FOSS does not grant you the freedom of receiving everything for free (gratis).
FOSS doesn't mean that you get the software for free, but it does mean that once you have it, it's yours to do with however you want. No?
To change the deal of that license under a specific condition (profit made) after that software is effectively the user's (after they got the software paid or free) would conflict with how FOSS works.
The software is free to be used in any way whatsoever once the user has it, that's what free means. Altering the deal under a specific condition after that is not free. You may as well dual license the software instead.
Are you free to distribute something if someone charges you a fee to do that distributing?
Yes. You are free to distribute it in any way you wish. Some methods, like printing books, have a raw material cost. You can choose to pay someone to distribute via that method, or if you really want to, you can do the printing yourself at no cost but your own time and effort.
If it's a service, sure, but if you charge money for access to the software itself, that is non-free.
If Ubuntu charged money per seat for running a prod server I'd call foul. But I have no problem with Ubuntu Pro.
@BreakDecks FOSS allows you to charge money per seat. But FOSS compels you to pass the freedoms on to others, so essentially, they will pay, then they will get the software with the license which gives them the freedoms, then they can decide to share it further without any payment. It's no longer up to you. That's what freedom means.
The level of misunderstanding of OSS licenses is astounding, and dangerous.
Honestly, this community is full of childish trolls who dogpile on someone just to be right. There were like 5 people who actually cared and wanted to discuss and educate the rest was condescending children without any real world experience in life.