(no title)
shrikrishna | 7 months ago
If you’re running Sidequest entirely on your own infrastructure to orchestrate jobs across your backend, you’re not distributing the software at all, you’re providing a service. The tight coupling does not itself trigger extra obligations. What matters legally is distribution, not architecture.
Edgecase is if you give your software to a customer to run on their own servers (self‑hosted deployment/docker image shipped to customer). In those cases, you would need to allow them to replace Sidequest.js (ie, not obfuscating it away).
Someone more knowledgeable can correct me, if I'm wrong
yonixw|6 months ago
https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-faq.html#AGPLv3ServerAsUser
brianjking|6 months ago