• PieMePlenty@lemmy.world
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    9 hours ago

    but there are foss programs you have to buy and after you bought it you are free to do with it what you want.

    Any examples? I’m just curious how they stay afloat after sharing the source code once someone buys it, forks it and releases the source.
    Maybe ‘F’ in FOSS does not mean it is gratis (de jure), but it is in fact gratis (de facto) for the majority of FOSS?

    • fenrasulfr@lemmy.world
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      8 hours ago

      RHEL (Red Hat Enterprise Linux) would be an example. I am sure there are more but I am not well versed enough. There is also Ardour but I think that is more if you want a binary and build the software from source.

        • fenrasulfr@lemmy.world
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          3 hours ago

          Maybe, than again Red Hat was bought for an astronomical some by IBM so they were doing something right. Ubuntu still looks like it is doing well. I do not know how Suse is doing but they still exist.

          So I think commercial foss is not a failure but probably difficult to maintain.