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cobertos | 2 months ago
Also how does this work with contributor contributions? Does the owning SaaS get the benefit of contributor work instantly while everyone else has to wait 2 years? What about the contributers themselves?
cobertos | 2 months ago
Also how does this work with contributor contributions? Does the owning SaaS get the benefit of contributor work instantly while everyone else has to wait 2 years? What about the contributers themselves?
the_mitsuhiko|2 months ago
That requires trust that the company will do this. The FSL is irrevocable and comes with a future promise.
> Also how does this work with contributor contributions?
The same way as any other thing with a CLA works. If you don't have a CLA, then you have a bit of a mess.
rcxdude|2 months ago
And yeah, by my reading essentially people can contribute code or publish patches (with just a plain MIT license in principle), just the original and derivatives still can't be used for non-permitted purposes until the timer is up.
Nextgrid|2 months ago
You may want to allow certain uses (self-hosting, etc) even before it transitions to a fully open-source license. Having access to the source code can also help SaaS users debug certain situations.