I love the idea of a privacy-focused fronend for YouTube, but every time I visit a piped link, it just spins forever. Both on my Linux desktop and my Android phone.

Maybe I’m doing something wrong?

Here is the latest one I tried and failed to load.

  • @TootSweetOP
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    1 year ago

    I’m afraid if it’s not a) FOSS and b) on F-Droid, I’m not interested. Grayjay appears not to qualify on either front.

    Edit: Oh damn. Louis Rossmann made Grayjay. Now I’m a little disappointed in Louis Rossmann.

    • @over_clox
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      21 year ago

      Also, check the FUTO About page

      https://futo.org/what-is-futo/

      Check their ‘Our Three Pledges’, particularly the third one regarding open source…

      Quoted from their site, pledge #3

      “We will always be transparently devoted to making delightful software. All FUTO-funded projects are expected to be open-source or develop a plan to eventually become so. No effort will ever be taken to hide from the people what their computers are doing, to limit how they use them, or to modify their behavior through their software.”

      • @TootSweetOP
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        31 year ago

        All FUTO-funded projects are expected to be open-source or develop a plan to eventually become so.

        Huh. Well, if it even lands in F-Droid, maybe I’ll give it a try.

        • @over_clox
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          11 year ago

          The app is so relatively new that initially it wasn’t even on any of the app stores, only straight from their site. But now it’s also on Google Play and APKPure, possibly other alternative app stores as well. Give it some time, I’m pretty sure F-Droid is on their radar as well sooner or later.

          The app is still labeled as being Under Construction, but so far I’m rather pleased with it and would recommend giving it a try.

          • @TootSweetOP
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            21 year ago

            F-Droid won’t host it unless/until it is FOSS.

            • @over_clox
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              11 year ago

              You may (likely do) have a point there.

      • @TootSweetOP
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        31 year ago

        I saw that. It’s not FOSS, though if that’s what you’re implying.

        Just reading over the license, it allows neither making modifications to the source nor commercial use. Allowing both of those would be necessary for it to qualify as either Free Software or Open Source. (And I’m not sure those are the only things in the license preventing it from qualifying as FOSS.)

        Source available ≠ FOSS. And Grayjay isn’t FOSS even if its source can be perused.

        • @MigratingtoLemmy
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          11 year ago

          TBH I don’t really care that much as long as the source is available. Some talented dev can fork it if the project goes sideways. I’d like a webapp/desktop app too

          • @TootSweetOP
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            21 year ago

            Some talented dev can fork it

            Not without infringing copyright. At least not the way the license is written now.

        • @over_clox
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          -11 year ago

          They don’t give a flying crap if you modify the source and compile it privately for yourself, they just don’t want people or companies making profit from their works or distributing said modifications without their approval.

          • @TootSweetOP
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            21 year ago

            They don’t give a flying crap if you modify the source and compile it privately for yourself

            Then why do they leave permission to do so out of their license? (So far, at least.)

            they just don’t want people or companies making profit from their works or distributing said modifications without their approval.

            That’s called “proprietary.”

            • @over_clox
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              -11 year ago

              They’re not worried about individuals like ourselves making our own private modifications if we so care to. They know 95%+ of individuals out there aren’t even coders anyways, they just expect the few that do happen to go out of their way to modify their apps don’t distribute their mods without authorization.

              The main infrastructure of their license is to make sure the big companies out there can’t legally rip off their code, alter it and sell it under their own branding or such.

              • @TootSweetOP
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                21 year ago

                They’re not worried about individuals like ourselves making our own private modifications if we so care to.

                Apparently they are, because they don’t allow it in their license and the way the license is written makes its absence seem rather conspicuous and intentional.

                If they do eventually make good on their promise (from “pledge #3”) to make it Open Source, then maybe I’ll be interested. Until then, I’m not taking the word of a random Lemmy user what they are “worried about individuals like ourselves” doing. I’m taking their own (legal department’s) word.

                they just expect the few that do happen to go out of their way to modify their apps don’t distribute their mods without authorization.

                The main infrastructure of their license is to make sure the big companies out there can’t legally rip off their code, alter it and sell it under their own branding or such.

                You have to understand that every piece of FOSS software out there allows anyone to “legally rip off their code, alter it and sell it under their own branding or such.” Any piece of software out there that doesn’t allow that does not qualify as Open Source or Free Software.

                (It rustles my jimmies to use the term “rip off” in this context, but I hoped quoting your exact words directly would make it clearer)

                If Grayjay’s license doesn’t allow that and if they see doing that as “ripping off”, then I have no interest in supporting or using that software unless/until that changes.

                When I say “I won’t use it unless it’s FOSS,” I mean among other things that I won’t use it unless its license allows anyone to redistribute it and/or any derivative works of it either for profit or not and under a different brand. That’s how FOSS works.

                (Ok. One caveat to the above that applies to some FOSS licenses (but probably not all.) I believe if someone violates the terms of, for instance, the GPL, then the permission to continue redistributing is revoked until they’re back in compliance with the terms of the license.)

                • @over_clox
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                  -21 year ago

                  That sounds like a you problem. I respect the terms of their license, and have no intent or desire to distribute any modified versions of their software, should I ever even care to try modifying anything in the first place.

                  If you do happen to find ways to improve their software, maybe consider applying with FUTO…