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> It is for the companies who are adopting the AGPLv3 in an attempt to be seen as "real open source" again.

If it's a problem for them, then they're not really committed to free and open source software. That's how we test them.

> They don't actually care about users, except to the extent they can get cash from them, to pay back their vulture capitalist funders.

Exactly. This is why we cannot fooled by their attempts to open wash their reputation. They're still looking to control and monetize and exploit users at every turn.

> developers have to matter to some extent

Developers are users too.

Users can also hire developers to work on what they need. I've been hired to customize open source software. I even upstreamed the work. Pretty great as far as jobs go. I think this is how professional programming should be like.

> That would remove the one possibility of GPL enforcement that we have

It would also get rid of "anti-circumvention" nonsense and allow us to copy and distribute software much more freely regardless of attempts to lock things down.

It'd fix many more problems than it'd cause. No need to enforce anything if everything is already free by default. Only one copy is needed for infinite replication.

> Perhaps there would be other non-violent tactics like boycott campaigns or trademarks to mark ethical software that could be effective.

The Open Source Hardware Association has a trademark that projects can use to advertise. It can be revoked if they're not compliant.

Case in point:

https://github.com/clockworkpi/uConsole/issues/27






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