https://www.rollapp.com/ — complete SaaSS to the extreme (see https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/who-does-that-server-really-serve.html ).
They aren't illegal, and they do mention "Open Source" at least (which isn't absolutely legally required), but they avoid even linking to the websites of the software they host. We need better ways for people to run their own servers to get functionality across devices this way. And even though AGPL wouldn't stop this SaaSS, it would require that people who see it be made aware that they can actually run the software themselves. The only legitimate reason for GPL (without the A) today is to preserve compatibility with existing GPL projects. All new projects, and all projects that can feasibly switch without forking problems need to move to AGPL. It has *nothing* to do with whether or not the software is *designed* to be run on a server, *all* software should be AGPL. All the best, Aaron Wolf Task Coach (a GPLv3+ program I am involved with but not main dev of where a user just requested be added to RollApp, which is how I heard of this) Snowdrift.coop (an AGPL3+ effort to make a better economy to support the real freedom we need)