Nobody likes being rugpulled. But lately, it's going around like a virus.Why are so many former open source darlings selling out or relicensing? And is there...
I believe they mean that vendors support the FOSS since it’s economically advantageous for them to do so (usually bc implementing an alternative is not economically viable). The proprietary part finances their contributions to Foss, which is usually the platform that they run on top of.
There is a more detailed explanation on the economics of Foss here, for instance: https://hachyderm.io/@anthrocypher/112315622785685958, but as I understand it it’s a common good that companies try to build on top of (and in some/most cases supplant with their own proprietary versions).
But yeah, I’d love to see the OP’s thoughts on this.
While Linux itself isn’t proprietary, it supports loading proprietary firmware/microcode blobs and running on proprietary hardware. Thus, part of the Linux hardware/software stack is proprietary.
What part of the Linux kernel is proprietary? genuinely curious.
I believe they mean that vendors support the FOSS since it’s economically advantageous for them to do so (usually bc implementing an alternative is not economically viable). The proprietary part finances their contributions to Foss, which is usually the platform that they run on top of.
There is a more detailed explanation on the economics of Foss here, for instance: https://hachyderm.io/@anthrocypher/112315622785685958, but as I understand it it’s a common good that companies try to build on top of (and in some/most cases supplant with their own proprietary versions).
But yeah, I’d love to see the OP’s thoughts on this.
I just replied to the other person’s comment.
While Linux itself isn’t proprietary, it supports loading proprietary firmware/microcode blobs and running on proprietary hardware. Thus, part of the Linux hardware/software stack is proprietary.