• @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    372 months ago

    We and our 692 partners (vendors) collect and process personal data (such as IP addresses or device identifiers) for the purpose of displaying personalized ads and measuring our advertising success.

    No thanks.

    I wonder which license they are going to use. Is it gonna be just an open source one or full-on FOSS?

    • @sugar_in_your_tea
      link
      English
      -52 months ago

      Is it gonna be just an open source one or full-on FOSS?

      Um, open source is FOSS, I’m not sure what you’re getting at. Maybe you’re talking about source-available?

      • fmstrat
        link
        fedilink
        English
        62 months ago

        No it isn’t. Open Source is not inherently Free and Open Source. This is the whole point of licensing agreements.

        • @sugar_in_your_tea
          link
          English
          4
          edit-2
          2 months ago

          Open source software is practically the same as free software, with only a handful of deviations:

          In “Why Open Source Misses the Point of Free Software,” Stallman explains: “The two terms describe almost the same category of software, but they stand for views based on fundamentally different values. Open source is a development methodology; free software is a social movement.”

          FOSS is just the term for both groups together (Free and Open Source Software).

          • fmstrat
            link
            fedilink
            English
            52 months ago

            You have it backwards. Free and Open Source software is Open Source (subset). But Open Source is not Free and Open Source (superset).

            Langfuse is a great example of where this is the case: https://github.com/langfuse/langfuse/blob/main/LICENSE

            It is open source, but all features under the ee folder are not free, thus it is not FOSS.

            • @sugar_in_your_tea
              link
              English
              12 months ago

              From reviewing the license, the portions under the ee directory are not open source, they’re source-available with some additional grants of rights given certain conditions.

              Here’s the definition I use for “open source”, and here’s the one I use for “free software”. Most (all?) free software licenses meet the definition of free software, but not all open source licenses meet the definition of free software, so that’s why I tend to set that free software is a subset of open source software.

                • @sugar_in_your_tea
                  link
                  English
                  1
                  edit-2
                  2 months ago

                  No, the portions outside the EE directory are both open source and free software because it satisfies the definitions of both. The software in the EE directory satisfies neither. The combined work is neither, it’s a mix of FOSS and source-available.