Originally posted by sophisticles
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Fedora COSMIC Desktop Spin Being Considered
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Originally posted by mmstick View Post
That would require that every contributor sign a CLA in order to change the license. There's more than one person involved with development. You need permission from all copyright holders to change the license.
git makes it very easy to strip out individual contributions.
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Originally posted by mSparks View Post
or just not include/use 3rd party contributions.
git makes it very easy to strip out individual contributions.
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Originally posted by sophisticles View Post
Forget about proprietary, you want to release the software as GPL, fine.
Why do you also have to release the distribution in binary format?
Why not release PoP_OS and COSMIC as source only and keep the binary version for your paying customers?
While your at it can you answer another question for me?
What happens if someone buys one of your systems, an expensive system, say a top of the line, fully configured system that costs over 30 grand.
They get it after you have released COSMIC and so they receive the system, with PoP_OS installed running COSMIC.
After using the system for a couple of weeks, they download Fedora COSMIC and decide they like that better and so install it.
During the install either something goes wrong or they screw up the system after the install, so they reach out to your company demanding that you fix it, what do you do?
Lastly, what is your plan if the Fedora COSMIC spin turns out buggy as hell and so it reflects badly on your company?
You have been around these forums long enough, you see people complaining about Gnome, KDE, Mate, XFCE, because of their experiences with the DE on a given distro, how are you going to deal with the negative associations when the desktop your company spent 2 years developing is getting raked over the coals because some distro put together a buggy release?
At the very least, consider protecting your trademark, release the code as GPL but make it clear that anyone that wants to offer a COSMIC based spin is not allowed to call it XYZ COSMIC where XYZ is the name of the based distro.
Example, do not allow them to call it Fedora COSMIC or Ubuntu COSMIC or Whatever COSMIC, they can call their spin Rusty Fedora or Ubuntu Rust or something like that.
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Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post
Copy and paste works fine. Drag and drop not yet. but to be fair, cosmic-files is super basic, but wayland already allows applications to handle drag and drop. iced supports drag and drop too, not sure if libcosmic does yetLast edited by ssokolow; 18 February 2024, 06:51 AM.
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Originally posted by sophisticles View Post
Incorrect, they can re-license it at any point they choose.
If you want precedent look at x264 and x265, both started as GPL's open source projects, both eventually spun off x264llc and x265llc under different licenses.
If I write something and release it as GPL, i can say the next version is closed source any time i want.
For you though, I agree, you can change the license any time. Nobody will notice.
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Originally posted by Quackdoc View Post
since you need one person to remove the code,
more common usecase is deleting contributions made by someone found to be making malicious contributions or pirating other peoples code.
won't necessarily leave it in a functional state, and how hard it is to get it functional after that depends on how much they contributed, but deleting people and changes is pretty straight forward. Outside of a few core developers most commits tend to be only a few lines with negligable impact.
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Originally posted by You- View Post
you do realise this is how opensource works? Without it System76 could only ever have been a Windows laptop reseller.
They still have first mover and integrator advantage. They know the code, they have the developers, they also have the laptops and desktops they primarily target it towards so they can make sure it works exceedingly well there and then anyone else gets best of the rest. Its like the Apple advantage - their OS only runs on a handful of systems so they can focus and integrate better instead of designing for a multitude of hardware and situations that they may not even be aware of exists.
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Originally posted by mmstick View Post...
I think i have a clear understanding of how you view your company's positioning in the overall market and within the Linux ecosystem.
You have my word that I will offer no more unsolicited advice regarding how your company does things.
In a related note, when can we expect a Pop!_OS ISO, doesn't matter if it's Alpha or Beta quality, that features COSMIC?
Once again, thank you for taking the time to converse with me and good luck on your COSMIC launch.Last edited by sophisticles; 18 February 2024, 02:23 PM.
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