Comments on: Dual licenses and open source: Best of both worlds?
Dual licenses in open source provide the best of both worlds: open software without the requirement to open source one's own code.
Dual licenses in open source provide the best of both worlds: open software without the requirement to open source one's own code.
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Matt Asay brings a decade of in-the-trenches open-source business and legal experience to the Open Road, with an emphasis on emerging open-source business strategies and opportunities. Matt is general manager of the Americas division and vice president of business development at Alfresco, a company that develops open-source software for content management. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
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I think it is simultaneously hilarious and pathetic that brain dead corporate drones need a restrictive and expensive license to feel better about a piece of software.
What proof do you have that selling a part of a business "might well trigger the contribution requirement of open-source licensing"? As long as it stays in house, and not released to outside users they wouldn't have to.
This is not the same scenario, but the sale of MySQL didn't seem to effect its price at all.
I find it amusing that you often take companies to task for not contributing to OSS, yet here you are defending dual licensing so companies don't have to contribute to OSS.
A little consistency in your opinions is not a bad thing.
Open source development does reduce redundancy, I am not sure what relevance your rant has to the topic at hand.
- by TimBowden August 20, 2008 7:22 PM PDT
- Wow Balderdash12, you must have done some heavy duty research to come up with that post! If you want to troll, you must at least make it believable. The skill is to twist a few key facts in your favour, then bury it in otherwise true statements. That way it has a better chance of getting overlooked. Making every statement obviously false just leads people to dismissing you as a crank and a fraud. Of course, you're still a crank and a fraud when you do troll, it's just that done properly not everyone will see your lack of integrity.
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