You have to make a fork aka copy and modify to contribute via pull requests. The license is fundamentally broken.
Have strong opinions, but I welcome any civil fact-based discussion.
Mastodon: @BrikoX@freeradical.zone
You have to make a fork aka copy and modify to contribute via pull requests. The license is fundamentally broken.
Only in EU, the rest of the world is still stuck with WebKit. Apple geo locked App Store, so it only works for EU users.
It literally doesn’t matter what you use on iOS, as everything uses WebKit.
No audit, no 2FA, no transparency report, limited servers, proprietary clients. There are better options.
ICC can’t impose death penalty as it’s against international human rights law.
Several of mine:
Gaming communities are hard to grow since they require people who play the game to participate. You can only grow it on your own so much by posting the latest news.
Other active ones on lemmy.zip
:
Mattermost is only source-available due to their dual licensing.
There were warrants issued on March 25 to him and his brother, which were ignored.
Try FreeTube.
You are correct, I somehow got confused… It was v1.2.0 release, I updated my original post. The release didn’t even mention the license change. https://github.com/eythaann/Seelen-UI/releases/tag/v1.2.0
It’s not mentioned, but I think the compatibility layer for 1.19 releases breaks support for older versions. Ask your instance admins to update the backend.
It’s another fake open source license. While source code is public under the license, you can’t modify or republish so if the project decides to sell you are fucked.
v1.2.0 release changed the license from MIT to PolyForm Strict License 1.0.0 which removes ability to re-publish and make changes to the project. In the day when fake open source projects sell out daily, it’s a good sign to avoid this project.
lemmy.world
is defederated from hexbear.net
instance…
Not entirely about free music, but you might find Bandwagon interesting https://lemmy.zip/post/20835272
What you want is something like https://github.com/hluk/CopyQ.
Lemmy development was funded by NLNet by the way.
EU has a similar program called Horizon Europe, which spent around €95.5 billion so far. Though it’s broader in scope, not limited to just software, but includes various open source research too.
I’m not sure if it’s spelled out in the ToS, but there is no way to prevent pull requests on public repos, it’s a functional requirement.