• @gedaliyah
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    431 month ago

    There seems to be this very unpleasant new model of development, where companies start off as nonprofits, often employing open source or permissive licenses. Then at a certain point once they have leveraged that to scale, and they snap back permissions and licenses or close new development. Then they transfer ownership or organizational structure to be for profit.

    I think it’s a really toxic and damaging approach that jeopardizes the social contract making open source software possible.

    I almost feel like we need a new system for open source that examines organizational structure. An open source project that’s receiving millions in VC should not be in the same category as an open source project that’s funded on Patreon or directly by users.

    • @[email protected]
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      141 month ago

      Exactly, permissive licenses such as MIT allow for other people to do a rugpull and change the deal (pray I don’t alter it any further). With open source licenses the community can just fork.

      That’s why I always pick AGPL for my projects. Then I can be certain that the code can be freed from greedy hands, and the actual users get all the value of the effort I put in.

      VC funding really is making a deal with the devil, because you suddenly have a huge amount of cash, so the startup starts living large (hire more devs, run on expensive cloud infrastructure). But sooner or later they want their money back, plus interest; and few services are profitable, let alone that profitable. So the only thing that startups are usually capable of is to squeeze their users for all they’re worth.

      Take a look at all the big startups and see:

      • how long it took for them to be profitable
      • how much VC funding they got until then

      Companies need to pay that back and then some.

      And don’t forget that VC’s see this as a perpetual investment, so your revenue must grow year after year, even if you’ve saturated the market.

      • @gedaliyah
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        61 month ago

        Fair… but recognizable. I meant in the generic sense like Kleenex or bandaids.

        There is also liberapay, etc.

  • @orclev
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    241 month ago

    WordPress powers nearly half the Internet

    One of the most depressing things I’ve read today. This is why we can’t have nice things.

  • @vzq
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    91 month ago

    I would have expected a fork by now. A mariadb situation.

    What’s stopping the users from just pushing everything to GitHub and work from there?

    • @[email protected]
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      231 month ago

      Nothing is stopping anyone from doing that, other than perhaps the scale.

      WordPress is like 40-something% of all websites: it’s the most used blog/cms/whatever platform by a huuuuge margin.

      If you wanted to fork it, you’d need pretty substantial resources, a lot of committed people, and the willingness to head a giant-ass project that has millions of users, all who want different things.

      It really isn’t a trivial undertaking, if you’re serious about it.

      I would, however, expect that the big providers (Flywheel, Cloudways, WPEngine, etc.) will probably make a corpo-sponsored fork sooner rather than later, since their business depends on it, and they’ve got the aforementioned money and people to do it.