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phoronixrly | 16 days ago
No, what was minio is now aistor, a closed-source proprietary software. Tell me how to fork it and I will.
> they wanted to be the only commercial source of the software
The choice of AGPL tells me nothing more than what is stated in the license. And I definitely don't intend to close the source of any of my AGPL-licensed projects.
regularfry|16 days ago
https://github.com/minio/minio/fork
The fact that new versions aren't available does nothing to stop you from forking versions that are. Or were - they'll be available somewhere, especially if it got packaged for OS distribution.
phoronixrly|16 days ago
> You may not modify, reverse engineer, decompile, disassemble, or create derivative works of the Software.
tracker1|16 days ago
phoronixrly|16 days ago
[1] https://www.min.io/legal/aistor-free-agreement
0x457|12 days ago
If a commercial company has "core" version under AGPL, it usually means their free version is an extended demo of the commercial product.
unknown|16 days ago
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