Comment by reflexe
4 years ago
It it quite funny, elasticsearch is also kind of wrapping an open source library (Apache Lucene) and selling it as their own product.
4 years ago
It it quite funny, elasticsearch is also kind of wrapping an open source library (Apache Lucene) and selling it as their own product.
Very good point.
Could Elastic's business model survive if lucene adopted the SSPL license that Elastic has, saying it's the "spirit" of open source?
That is an interesting question.
The problem is, that AWS is not really sharing the internals of their fork. Big corps always say that there's no point in open sourcing their fork, because it depends so much on internal systems. Which might be true, but in case of AWS and infrastructure the possibility of an AWS competitor similarly implementing those internal services would probably help the market...
MySQL for example took a proprietary API (the mSQL API) and implemented an open software for it. Then Oracle bought MySQL. MariaDB started and it quickly dropped full compatibility. Options for the developers/users. Great.
AWS/GCP/Azure on the other hand distorts the market. Just as Google/Apple/MS fund Chrome/Safari/Edge development from other sources, thereby distorting the market, forcing browsers to be free as in beer. (Which arguably hurts the market.)
The announcement says "All of the software in the OpenSearch project is released under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (ALv2)."
You are suggesting this is not correct?