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The people actually making the GNU stuff aren't happy with RMS either. We need to extricate it from the FSF & RMS, not embrace a takeover by Google.
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GNU projects and the free software movement are *far* bigger than one individual. Demanding people stop using GNU software due to association is just the mirror take of those claiming the FSF can't survive without him. He is not that important. Hold him accountable.
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Google is far from controlling LLVM. They were contributing a comparable amount to GCC, binutils, etc. back when they still used it and before they'd decided to migrate to LLVM. The binutils replacements were a lot more focused on macOS and Windows before caring about Linux too.
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The libc project fits into the overall ambitions of LLVM beyond Google. They're very open to incubating those projects and accepting substantial code drops from big companies. LLD and LLDB are pretty good examples. Originally, it wasn't clear LLD would do serious Linux support.
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The attitude towards out-of-tree code is very comparable between Linux and LLVM. To some extent, both projects see code churn breaking out-of-tree code as a positive. A major difference is LLVM doesn't expect you to open things up beyond the code you submit to get it upstream.
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All I'm saying is Google doesn't have control over the project. They have about the same amount of influence as Apple. For the Linux platform support in particular, they have more influence simply based on doing more of the work than others there, similar to sanitizers/security.
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