Comment by borplk
1 day ago
Yes! I despise how the open source and free software culture turns into just free labour for freeloading million-dollar and billion-dollar companies.
The culture made sense in the early days when it was a bunch of random nerds helping each other out and having fun. Now the freeloaders have managed to hijack it and inject themselves into it.
They also weaponise the culture against the devs by shaming them for wanting money for their software.
Many companies spend thousands of dollars every month on all sorts of things without much thought. But good luck getting a one-time $100 license fee out of them for some critical library that their whole product depends on.
Personally I'd like to see the "give stuff to them for free then beg and pray for donations" culture end.
We need to establish a balance based on the commercial value that is being provided.
For example I want licensing to be based on the size and scale of the user (non-commercial user, tiny commercial user, small business, medium business, massive enterprise).
It's absurd for a multi-million company to leech off a random dev for free.
I have no idea how much of this stuff is volunteer written, and how much is paid work that is open-sourced.
No one if forced to use these licences. Even some FOSS licences such as AGPL will not be used by many companies (even the GPL where its software that is distributed to users). You could use a FOSS license and add an exemption for non-commercial use, or use a non-FOSS license that is free for non-commercial use or small businesses.
On the other hand a lot of people choose permissive licenses. I assume they are happy to do so.
I only use copyleft licenses, it keeps away most of them I imagine.