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Replying to
On the other hand, the AGPL is *perfect* if you are a commercial enterprise who wants to get all the Free Software brownie points by releasing source, while also providing SaaS or commercial options and guaranteeing nobody else can. The toxicity of the AGPL is *perfect* for this.
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I guarantee no other company will dare touch your software in any "dangerous" way if you do that. Of course, if you use the AGPL like this, you also need a CLA requiring external contributors to assign copyright to you (or equivalent). Which makes you a leech on the ecosystem.
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Any company requiring external contributors to assign their copyright to them, or full relicensing rights, is effectively using the free software ecosystem as unpaid labor. It's just as bad as the music industry exploiting artists to get them to sell off their rights.
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As you may know, the FSF is one such "company", requiring copyright assignment for many of their own projects. Funny, isn't it? But it goes further than that.
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Don't forget they *also* have successfully convinced the majority of the GPL ecosystem to use "or any later version" wording, which gives them perpetual relicensing rights over the *vast majority of GPLed code in existence*.
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You think Google's CLA is bad? The FSF have convinced everyone to effectively CLA their code to the FSF and convinced them that this is a *good thing* and it's fine because they can be trusted. They are not trustworthy.
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Replying to
Google's CLA doesn't require copyright assignment. It gives them a permissive license for your code and an explicit patent grant. They give you the same thing by releasing their projects under the Apache 2 license. The terms would be unfair if they released their code as GPL.
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Replying to
Why do they need the CLA if the license already gives them the same thing? You don't need a CLA in order to get rights for a contribution licensed under a given license.
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Replying to and
Only substantial difference I see is they don't need to distribute a copy of the license you gave them through the CLA. In practice, they release nearly everything as Apache 2 with generic attribution like "The Go Authors".
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