this post was submitted on 19 Oct 2024
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its just the apache 2 license with a restriction to not sell this project on one marketplace. Can still sell the code elsewhere. Its still totally open source, and honestly Confluence is not something I would loose sleep on. Jira has been a cash cow for a long time, and I have a beef with them anyway
No, it's not. Those restrictions are against the open source definition.
Edit: Lol, people with no clue donvoting what they don't want to hear. The open source definition is a fixed set of clauses. Read up on it.
I have a totally different view, if I can use it in my own projects, that are released with an MIT or Apache 2 or similar license, then its open source.
Not that I want to, but I could contribute to draw.io, or fork it and privately make changes, then make money off either the original repo or my fork, and its legal.
I could sell one line of code change for a million dollars and then start writing daily taunting letters, daring them to sue me, and I would be fine.
How is that not open source?
It's nice that you view it differently, but open source has a clear definition. And with this change it will not use a Open Source license anymore.