MongoDB Major Change to Licensing
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Didn't read the whole thread but they apparently didn't learn from Redis. They will have to move back or fail. There's nothing stopping anyone from forking under the previous license and essentially copying fixes.
This helps no one at all.
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@stacksofplates said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
Didn't read the whole thread but they apparently didn't learn from Redis. They will have to move back or fail. There's nothing stopping anyone from forking under the previous license and essentially copying fixes.
This helps no one at all.
Just FYI, this is what he's talking about, a very similar license scheme they walked back on after realising it was a stupid idea, but MongoDB thinks it's great
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Hahaha
This storm will pass, though my former MongoDB colleague Jared Rosoff is probably correct in suggesting on Twitter that: "Even if the result of the change isn't controversial, it's hard to trust a platform that can change on a whim."
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@tonyshowoff said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
@stacksofplates said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
Didn't read the whole thread but they apparently didn't learn from Redis. They will have to move back or fail. There's nothing stopping anyone from forking under the previous license and essentially copying fixes.
This helps no one at all.
Just FYI, this is what he's talking about, a very similar license scheme they walked back on after realising it was a stupid idea, but MongoDB thinks it's great
Ha you beat me to it.
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Good thing Wiki.js is phasing out MongoDB for there 2.0 release.
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@scottalanmiller said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
if you are a SaaS vendor looking at building software that uses MongoDB somewhere, you'd better get a lawyer looking over this license and how it applies to you.
This is becoming a bigger issue as the biggest SaaS vendors hide behind this clause more and more with incredibly proprietary forks. They offer very little to no actual core development or contribution and it goes against the previous method of GPL code getting funding.
It annoys me, as the legal headaches of contributing internal only use code back will block some companies from using OSS, but I see it both ways.
The startups who are doing a lot of the core housekeeping of NOSQL platforms are learning they can't find a business model. This is getting messier and messier.
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@black3dynamite said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
Good thing Wiki.js is phasing out MongoDB for there 2.0 release.
No kidding.
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@stacksofplates said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
Didn't read the whole thread but they apparently didn't learn from Redis. They will have to move back or fail. There's nothing stopping anyone from forking under the previous license and essentially copying fixes.
This helps no one at all.
Exactly. I'm shocked that it hasn't forked already, in fact!
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@tonyshowoff said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
@stacksofplates said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
Didn't read the whole thread but they apparently didn't learn from Redis. They will have to move back or fail. There's nothing stopping anyone from forking under the previous license and essentially copying fixes.
This helps no one at all.
Just FYI, this is what he's talking about, a very similar license scheme they walked back on after realising it was a stupid idea, but MongoDB thinks it's great
that one got forked FAST.
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@StorageNinja said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
@scottalanmiller said in MongoDB Major Change to Licensing:
if you are a SaaS vendor looking at building software that uses MongoDB somewhere, you'd better get a lawyer looking over this license and how it applies to you.
This is becoming a bigger issue as the biggest SaaS vendors hide behind this clause more and more with incredibly proprietary forks. They offer very little to no actual core development or contribution and it goes against the previous method of GPL code getting funding.
It annoys me, as the legal headaches of contributing internal only use code back will block some companies from using OSS, but I see it both ways.
The startups who are doing a lot of the core housekeeping of NOSQL platforms are learning they can't find a business model. This is getting messier and messier.
Partially because there are just too any vendors involved.
What's amazing, though, is that a move like this took a customer who was very into MongoDB and using it in projects and was literally working with MongoDB's own hosted product and now looking to avoid it like the plague.
So at least in this one case, they are likely losing hosted product from this. And gaining nothing. I imagine a lot of customers going through this same process.