I’m curious about what you think on how it will affect the Linux community and distros (especially RHEL based distros like Fedora or Rocky).

    • Ulu-Mulu-no-die@lemmy.world
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      Thanks, by reading “RHEL going closed source” first thing I thought is that would violate the GPL license, but the article you linked seems to indicate that’s not the case.

      CentOS is basically RHEL without Red Hat commercial stuff, so sources will still be freely available, just not directly from Red Had, am I understanding it correctly?

      • _HR_@lemmy.world
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        CentOS is basically RHEL without Red Hat commercial stuff, so sources will still be freely available, just not directly from Red Had, am I understanding it correctly?

        No, CentOS is no longer a RHEL clone, but a beta version of stuff that goes into RHEL.

    • taladar@sh.itjust.works
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      1 year ago

      I can’t be the only one who has no real interest in dealing with their developer program just to support their outdated distro.

    • ar0177417@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      undefined> u will still have full access to source through their developer program or as a pa

      Their developer plan is free

  • nkey@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    RHEL hasn’t gone closed source, it still complies with the GPL. If they provide you a binary, they must and will continue to provide you with the source code. I feel like this is like when they announced Centos Stream as a “rolling distro”, their messaging is awful, and the optics are bad. I feel this is more to stick it to Oracle and unfortunately, Alma and Rocky are just getting caught in the crossfire.

    • beefcat@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It has me conflicted. On one hand, fuck Oracle. On the other hand, we need projects like Alma and Rocky.

  • cstine@lemmy.uncomfortable.business
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    1 year ago

    This is a fight between IBM and Oracle. There’s been a lot of bad blood between them since Oracle did a s/Red Hat/Oracle/r for their own branded distribution.

    IMO that’s the main driver behind this change: don’t feed your largest competitor free stuff and not something specific against Rocky/Alma/whoever else is using the code.

      • nkey@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        This was my initial thought as well, but I imagine that would violate the terms of their subscription and Red Hat could just revoke their access going forward.

        • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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          I doubt it would legal to make that against the terms. It GPL code, Oracle is allowed to access it as they please.

          • nkey@lemmy.ml
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            1 year ago

            Very true for the GPL code, but Red Hat adds code that isn’t GPL to the distro. So your downstream distros would have to cherry pick that code out.

          • exu@feditown.com
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            1 year ago

            They could still revoke access. The subscription probably says something like “we can revoke access for any reason”. Most subscriptions do

            • priapus@sh.itjust.works
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              1 year ago

              True, but what’s stopping someone from uploading it anonymously? They have to share the code with customers, but that doesn’t mean GPL doesn’t apply to non-customers. Anyone working at these companies can download the source code and upload it online.

    • squidzorz@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      They didn’t even go that far lol. There’s still Red Hat branding all over the place in Oracle Linux.

  • ebike_enjoyer@slrpnk.net
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    1 year ago

    My immediate thoughts as a fedora user: Fedora is looked at as a bleeding edge testing distro for what eventually goes into red hat. By using fedora, I am sort of a beta tester for ibm, and am in some ways contributing to the improvement of a distribution (red hat) that goes against what I believe a Linux distribution should do. Given that, should I distro hop?

    Or is my brain just trying to make me distro hop again?

    • nkey@lemmy.ml
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      Edit: spelling

      I would never consider Fedora bleeding edge, but that being said, after the Red Hat lawyers forced the removal of H.264 I did end up hopping after 5 very great years with Fedora. If you’re up for learning something new NixOS is a lot of fun.

      • ebike_enjoyer@slrpnk.net
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        1 year ago

        NixOS is actually what I was considering! I like the immutable aspects of it but the setup will require me to find some downtime in order to get started.

        • nkey@lemmy.ml
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          That’s great to hear! It took me a few evenings wrap my head around it, but now I’m really enjoying it. There’s a great community as well!

    • blackstrat@lemmy.fwgx.uk
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      You have to make up your own mind. Personally the association with IBM or Oracle would put me right off a distro. But you can find evil in all these big companies, so pick your poison.

    • projectazar@kbin.social
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      You aren’t the only one. Ive been on Fedora for a few years because I liked what Gnome was doing, I liked the updated Kernel, and I was annoyed by canonical. Now I’m not really sure where to go, as both Pop and Mint do not, in their current forms, work well with my hardware.

      • cinaed666@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        Not to revive any lame memes, but have a look at Arch Linux! I’ve been daily driving it for 10 years. It’s way more “updated” than fedora is.

        • spiritusmaximus@kbin.social
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          1 year ago

          does it have same interface? Fedoras gnome is unmatched (…to me, as far I tested around distros).

          Or is there any other equivalent, similar to fedora and its gnome?

          • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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            Arch doesn’t come with an interface, the idea is you build it up from the bare minimum yourself

            Wouldn’t recommend if you just want a usable desktop os

            As for gnome, gnome is gnome you can get it on any distro

    • knowncarbage@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      You could just use Fedora and not submit any bug reports as that would help them. Just quietly leech.

      It’s nice if you can find something that both does what you need and agrees with your philosophy…but usually some compromise is required.

    • A7thStone@lemmy.world
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      Opensuse. If you’re used to fedora the learning curve is minimal to make that switch. I used SuSE for years until their Gnome 3 implementation had some issues. I switched to fedora for a couple of years, then switched back to tumbleweed a couple years ago and have been on that happily since.

    • flashgnash@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      Go NixOS man it’s the one that finally convinced me to ditch windows entirely and stop hopping

  • PrivateNoob@sopuli.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Absolute L move from them. Atleast it makes the choice easier if future distrohopping urges will haunt my zoom zoom brain.

  • Danacus@lemmy.vanoverloop.xyz
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    1 year ago

    Some additional information from Rocky Linux and Alma Linux, since many people (including me) are confused about the implications of this:

    https://rockylinux.org/news/2023-06-22-press-release/ https://almalinux.org/blog/impact-of-rhel-changes/

    Interestingly, Rocky Linux claims to be largely unaffected by this, while Alma Linux is desperately looking for alternative solutions.

    It seems like no one really knows what the implications are, and we will just have to wait and see.

    • knowncarbage@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      1 year ago

      Rocky’s reaction seems the same as Alma, current long-term solution is they don’t know. A more businessly optimism in the post doesn’t really make up for a clear technical plan going forward.

  • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Someone enlighten me. What are we talking about? The whole distro? Isn’t almost all of it GNU stuff under GPL or similar licenses?

    Or is it just about some in-house made RH applications and patches done without any collaboration from outside people?

    I don’t get it how a Linux-based project can go closed-source after ~30 years.

    • homesnatch@lemmy.one
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      To comply with GPL, RedHat simply has to provide source code to anyone they provide binaries to.

      • WhoRoger@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yea, so why is everyone misrepresenting these news so damn hard? I’d think people who report on Linux would understand the core basics of GPL.

    • knowncarbage@lemmy.fmhy.ml
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      The source can be open, just not easy to access…send an email and in 30 days they provide it, they are not obligated to have everything available instantly as they do now or provide an infrastructure to make life easy for community projects.

      They could also mix in proprietary code to make things more awkward afaik.

      I’d bear in mind in-house made applications RH provide include systemd, wayland, pipewire & gnome…as long as your distro and use case don’t depend on any of these, there’s no need to worry.

  • M-Reimer@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    They still give all the code to their customers and as it is still GPLed code, noone can stop redistribution. So I’m wondering who will be the first RHEL customer which runs some “open mirror” of the RHEL codebase.

        • Liquid_Fire@lemmy.world
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          It doesn’t. The GPL is satisfied as long as they provide you with the source code for the version of RHEL that they distributed to you. But they’re not obligated to continue distributing later versions to you.

          • lhx@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            I’m referring to their further restrictions on redistribution. I.e., why can’t the subscriber then redistribute GPL code they received?

            • Liquid_Fire@lemmy.world
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              They absolutely can, but RHEL Red Hat will likely stop doing business with them if they find out (and thus stop giving them new versions), hence why they would only be able to do this once.

              • weavejester@lemmy.world
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                It doesn’t seem likely that would be allowed, as it would arguably constitute a restriction on distribution, which the GPL explicitly forbids.

                • Liquid_Fire@lemmy.world
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                  There’s no restriction on distribution. You’re free to distribute the GPL software you got from Red Hat.

                  They’re under no obligation to ship you other, different software in the future. You’re only entitled to get the source for the binaries they distributed to you. If they never give you the next version, you have no right to its source.

  • curtismchale@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    I’m newish to Fedora and admit I don’t understand the whole developer/governance structure of it vs RHEL, but the news did make me wonder about continuing to use Fedora.

    Reading some comments here, maybe it’s a non-issue. Guess I’ll have to dig more.

    • Oswald_Buzzbald@kbin.social
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      Fellow Fedora user here. I find this is a little concerning, but overall, I’m not too worried. Fedora is their test bed for stuff, although it is a very stable, well maintained test bed.

    • squidzorz@lemmy.ml
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      It’s a complete non-issue. Sensationalist headlines are so easy to make about this.

      Anybody who has a FREE developer account can access the source code.

  • Re4mstr@lemmy.re4mstr.com
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    1 year ago

    Well, I just hope they ARE thinking. Gotta be a good reason -I have no read anything about this- for doing this.

    I guess a few people might be looking at other distros now.

    • CountVon@sh.itjust.works
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      They won’t say it, but the reason for this is 100% to kill downstream distros based on RHEL. They already effectively killed CentOS, the downstream distro they controlled, by moving it from downstream to upstream. With this change they’re now coming for other downstream distros that they don’t control, like Rocky Linux or AlmaLinux. Upstream repos like Fedora (and CentOS once it changed to CentOS Stream) will not be affected… for now at least.

      I think downstream repos are important to the ecosystem because they give the FOSS community contributors an easy way to test against RHEL-compatible binaries without being encumbered by an RHEL license. IBM seems pretty hellbent on ensuring that people won’t be able to do this without agreeing with their license, and as soon as they achieve that I think they’ll tighten the screws on their own licensing in ways that aren’t to the benefit of anyone but IBM. It seems pretty obvious to me that IBM is making this change because they see some advantage in having absolute control of the licensing terms, and my guess is that their benefit will come at the community’s expense. Yes, you can get a free (as in beer) developer account and test using that but now you have to register VMs, keep track of your number of registered systems, and you have to worry about possibly violating the not free (as in freedom) license that you have to agree to in order to access the Red Hat developer program. I think this change will be bad for RHEL in the long term, but time will tell.

      • jmp242@sopuli.xyz
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        I guess we’re in a bit of a waiting game then. Too much stuff is tied to RHEL to easily switch for us, but TBH we’re starting to see more people wanting Ubuntu (ugg) / debian because ML seems to be there. Also most commercial software I’ve seen tends to offer .deb and .rpm or just .deb actually so more and more it’s RHEL that isn’t packaged for - and that’s been for years now.

      • promitheas@iusearchlinux.fyi
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        I need to understand… Given its GPL because of the kernel, how could they change the terms of the license suddenly? Doesnt GPL forbid you from replacing it with a different license? How are they managing to get this through?

        • CountVon@sh.itjust.works
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          They’re not changing the license that governs the open source code, they’re changing who receives the source code directly from them. The GPL requires that if you distribute binaries based on GPL open source code, you also have to distribute the source code as well. If you modify GPL’d source code and produce and distribute binaries using that modified code then you also have to distribute the modified source code as well. However, the important point is to who the GPL requires them to distribute the source code. The actual requirement in the GPL is that you have to distribute source code to the same people that you distribute binaries. You’re not required to distribute source code to anyone and everyone.

          For Red Hat’s enterprise customers, they’ll still have access to the source code that makes up the distro. Source code packages will still be a thing and licensed RHEL customers (including the free-as-in-beer developer license) will still be able to install source packages. Red Hat cannot do otherwise as it would put them in contravention of the GPL license. What is changing is that Red Hat is no longer publishing the same source code publicly. They used to do that on git.centos.org but have now stopped. The general flow of code changes used to work something like this:

          Fedora (and now CentOS Stream) -> RHEL -> git.centos.org -> downstream distros (Rocky Linux, AlmaLinux, formerly CentOS before it become CentOS Stream)

          By breaking the link at git.centos.org, Red Hat makes it harder for downstream distros to create versions that are one-for-one binary-compatible with corresponding RHEL versions. Doesn’t mean it’s impossible, and certainly both AlmaLinux and Rocky Linux have put out statements saying that they will work around the problem and continue as per usual.

          Hopefully this simply becomes the new status quo. Downstream RHEL-compatible distros have a harder time of it because they have to reverse-engineer each RHEL build to some extent rather than receiving the exact updates directly from Red Hat themselves. However I do wonder whether this is IBM / Red Hat’s first step toward an attempt to kill downstream distros, and if there are changes coming to the Red Hat license that make it less free-as-in-freedom. I hope that’s not the case because at that point things become very contentious and there will likely be litigation as to whether Red Hat can legally lock down what mostly amounts to a curation of open source software.

          • promitheas@iusearchlinux.fyi
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            1 year ago

            Thanks. So theyre not closing it completely just “hiding it” kind of, and making it harder to access it. I wonder what Linus has to say about this… Or Stallman