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The other would-be-funny-if-it-weren't-so-sad thing here is the idea that in 2021 the GNU Coreutils have the market leverage to convince consumers to choose free software over proprietary alternatives
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Hey, want to take a guess what the @FSF's latest board member, Ian Kelling's, most recent contribution to Free Software is? That's right: harassing a project trying to rewrite common POSIX tools in Rust for being Anti-Freedom™. Because they chose the MIT license.
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There's a whole drama over it: lwn.net/Articles/47830 GPL proponents see Toybox as essentially an anti-GPL-enforcement project. The Toybox maintainer is the person who *started* the BusyBox GPL enforcement actions and then grew disillusioned with it. I find it quite amusing.
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GPL regularly gets in my way. GPLv2 (Linux kernel) is incompatible with the GPLv3 or later license used by GNU and most other copyleft supporting projects. GPL is why Linux doesn't have a proper mainline ZFS support. GPLv3 forbidding an immutable root of trust is problematic.
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You also presumably can't redistribute the plugins and instead can only build them locally. The Linux kernel can use them because it doesn't need the runtime library exception. GCC is such a pain (cross-compiling, etc.) and I'm glad AOSP got rid of it. GNU binutils soon too.
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