On Sun, Oct 04, 2020 at 02:51:01PM +0200, Al Le via rockbox-dev wrote: > For me, they are sort of like of snitch.
This is only a portion of what they do. (FWIW, I agree with it though) > Observing of licence infringement is needed if a company's business is > creating an open source software and selling licenses for it. I think, > such companies do that themselves. > > Rockbox is not of this sort. Correct, but it is heavily reliant on hardware made by folks that are actively violating the licenses to the software they include, by virtue of not releasing their source code. > The best appreciation sign for a piece of software (or anything) is if's > being stealt. (V. Nabokov, changed by me) Strong GPL enforcement makes Rockbox a lot more sustainable in the long run. Not because folks are violating Rockbox's license (tbh, I wish we actually had that problem; to your point it would mean we're being shipped in new DAPs!) But more down to earth, with that source code, I wouldn't have had to spend several days trying to work around some "quirks" in the audio driver on a couple of hosted targets -- I could have just fixed the issue in the kernel and moved on immediately. Or better yet, I could use that kernel source as a sort of software-based schematic to _greatly_ ease the process of making rockbox run natively on that hardware. Reverse engineering hardware was always Rockbox's achilles heel -- It generally means that by the time we get a new port working reasonably well, it's already obsolete and off the market, forcing users to rely on decade-old devices on the secondhand market. If rockbox is going to survive in the long term, we have to make the process of porting to new hardware much faster. Without reasonably modern hardware, we're not going to gain the userbase (and thus higher profile) we need. So, while strong enforcement of the Linux licence makes Rockbox more sustainable in the long run, we wouldn't need to be a member of the SFC for this, and it's not why I proposed applying to join them. It's the "other" aspects of their mission; to provide a long-term stable financial and legal umbrella to operate under. It's also an inroad to a great deal of additional exposure in the nonprofit space. For example, perhaps they could help us get grants (and/or developers) tasked with further improve our accessibility features? Or maybe they could help us out with legal advice and contracts if we were to try and commission our own hardware? More pessimistically, what happens if I start acting against (What other developers consider to be) Rockbox's interests? Or if a tornado drops a house on me? These are all questions of long-term sustainability, and I think the likes of the SFC would be of great help in helping us answer and implement them. ...ANYway. Back to the bit mines. - Solomon -- Solomon Peachy pizza at shaftnet dot org (email&xmpp) @pizza:shaftnet dot org (matrix) High Springs, FL speachy (freenode)
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