this post was submitted on 23 May 2025
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    [–] felsiq@lemmy.zip 91 points 2 months ago (4 children)

    I personally don’t mind at all if open source projects want to sell a “pro” version for businesses, as long as it’s still open source. Selling priority troubleshooting and dev attention to issues to businesses seems like one of the less offensive ways to fund open source projects in a capitalist society, imo

    [–] Ziglin@lemmy.world 9 points 2 months ago

    Or for server software it can be funded with support contracts.

    [–] epicstove@lemmy.ca 4 points 2 months ago

    Isn't this basically how Fedora and RHEL are? RHEL is paid for giving you support, updates, etc. While Fedora is FOSS. You just install it and they don't care what you do with it.

    [–] sxan@midwest.social 4 points 2 months ago

    Yes! I completely agree. The distinction is, to me, utterly important: they aren't selling the software, they're selling the service. Hell, if they want to sell the option to get your bugs fixed on demand, great! That's enormously different than taking millions of developer hours spent creating OSS, sticking a label and name on it, and then reselling it as if you made any real contribution to the OSS community.

    [–] axEl7fB5@lemmy.cafe 1 points 2 months ago* (last edited 2 months ago) (1 children)

    how the hell do you make something both open source and paid??

    [–] felsiq@lemmy.zip 1 points 2 months ago

    The way I was specifically talking about was for the project to be fully open source, but with an optional paid service aimed at businesses that ensures priority attention to bugs and feature requests. I’ve also seen open source projects with paid binaries, most commonly for iOS where it costs the devs money to keep an app on the app store so users can compile it themselves for free or pay for the (still open source) precompiled app. Open source and paid don’t have to be mutually exclusive, although the culture of free like freedom and free like free beer is great and I hope we never lose that.