Originally posted by justinkb
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AlmaLinux No Longer Aims For 1:1 Compatibility With RHEL
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Originally posted by fitzie View Post
nice bait and switch. an epel contributor does something, and just because they are also working on alma doesn't give alma project credit for the work. whatever value inside alma is 100% created by redhat and upstream. all alma does is give it out there, and host a couple mailing lists.
I am willing to admit that event this might not go down to IBM's benefit, but I think this idea that the community can build or maintain an enterprise distro is foolish.
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Originally posted by tildearrow View Post
The automatic moderation system takes effect during the first 5 posts a user makes.
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Originally posted by kpedersen View PostI find it a little bit sad that newbies feel that people shouldn't be able to repackage Red Hat's work without giving a second thought to the fact that Red Hat repackages *everyone's* work. That is literally what the RHEL product is. A distribution of open-source (OUR!) work. I find this train of thought a little insulting to the wider open-source community who has designed and developed the majority of your software for them. Not companies like Red Hat.
Tell me, would Linux be better or worse off wo RH?
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Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post
did you just call alma of all people a leech? Alma and oracle are very active contributors to the rhel and linux ecosystem at large, people can hate on them all they like, but oracle especially, linux would be in a far worse state, and this includes rhel, without oracle, and alma have been good contributors to the larger rhel ecosystem.
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Originally posted by panikal View PostThat's not true - GPL removes rights and restricts freedoms of *individuals* while simultaneously ensuring freedom of access for all. An MIT/BSD style license gives you the freedom to do whatever you damn well please, including modifying and hiding the changes while redistributing binaries - GPL takes away that right.
I'm all for GPL and <3 open source but lets not be disingenuous about the intentions of the GPL...people who want to hide their changes and/or make money off those changes find their rights are heavily restricted by the GPL. (I think its most people you find on forums who hate on GPL that are in this category..)
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Originally posted by novideo View PostHating the GPL more than proprietary licenses that give you less rights is bizarre...
I'm all for GPL and <3 open source but lets not be disingenuous about the intentions of the GPL...people who want to hide their changes and/or make money off those changes find their rights are heavily restricted by the GPL. (I think its most people you find on forums who hate on GPL that are in this category..)
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Originally posted by sophisticles View Post3) I can separate Linux use from the GPL. There's no question I despise the GPL, but there are a number of Linux based distros that i think are on the right track but I do think the GPL has hurt the Linux ecosystem way more than it ever helped.
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