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Red Hat Software Open Source Linux

How Red Hat Divided the Open Source Community (msn.com) 191

In Raleigh, North Carolina — the home of Red Hat — local newspaper the News & Observer takes an in-depth look at the "announcement that split the open source software community." (Alternate URL here.) [M]any saw Red Hat's decision to essentially paywall Red Hat Enterprise Linux, or RHEL, as sacrilegious... Red Hat employees were also conflicted about the new policy, [Red Hat Vice President Mike] McGrath acknowledged. "I think a lot of even internal associates didn't fully understand what we had announced and why," he said...

At issue, he wrote, were emerging competitors who copied Red Hat Enterprise Linux, down to even the code's mistakes, and then offered these Red Hat-replicas to customers for free. These weren't community members adding value, he contended, but undercutting rivals. And in a year when Red Hat laid off 4% of its total workforce, McGrath said, the company could not justify allowing this to continue. "I feel that while this was a difficult decision between community and business, we're still on the right side of it," he told the News & Observer. Not everyone agrees...

McGrath offered little consolation to customers who were relying on one-for-one versions of RHEL. They could stay with the downstream distributions, find another provider, or pay for Red Hat. "I think (people) were just so used to the way things work," he said. "There's a vocal group of people that probably need Red Hat's level of support, but simply don't want to pay for it. And I don't really have... there's not much we can tell them."

Since its RHEL decision, Red Hat has secured several prominent partnerships. In September, the cloud-based software company Salesforce moved 200,000 of its systems from the free CentOS Linux to Red Hat Enterprise Linux. The same month, Red Hat announced RHEL would begin to support Oracle's cloud infrastructure. Oracle was one of the few major companies this summer to publicly criticize Red Hat for essentially paywalling its most popular code. On Oct. 24, Red Hat notched another win when the data security firm Cohesity said it would also ditch CentOS Linux for RHEL.

The article delves into the history of Red Hat — and of Linux — before culminating with this quote from McGrath. "I think long gone are the times of that sort of romantic view of hobbyists working in their spare time to build open source. I think there's still room for that — we still have that — but quite a lot of open source is now built from people that are paid full time."

Red Hat likes to point out that 90% of Fortune 500 companies use its services, according to the article. But it also quotes Jonathan Wright, infrastructure team lead at the nonprofit AlmaLinux, as saying that Red Hat played "fast and loose" with the GPL. The newspaper then adds that "For many open source believers, such a threat to its hallowed text isn't forgivable."
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How Red Hat Divided the Open Source Community

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  • EL RHEL for long (Score:5, Informative)

    by markdavis ( 642305 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @01:15AM (#63983418)

    >"At issue, he wrote, were emerging competitors who copied Red Hat Enterprise Linux, down to even the code's mistakes, and then offered these Red Hat-replicas to customers for free."

    Exactly like it has always been with CentOS, and Scientific Linux, and others. What changed was a sudden expectation by IBM that all that could be monetized.

    >"These weren't community members adding value, he contended, but undercutting rivals."

    They aren't undercutting anything as rivals, because they were free. And RedHat wasn't adding any value for most of the FOSS software they were distributing, either.

    >"And in a year when Red Hat laid off 4% of its total workforce, McGrath said, the company could not justify allowing this to continue"

    Like I said, the CHANGE was the sudden expectation they could extort more money out of the market by force. First they kill CentOS. Most could probably swallow that. I was fine with it, myself. But the next move to try and kill all the community EL was going too far.

    >"They could stay with the downstream distributions, find another provider, or pay for Red Hat. "I think (people) were just so used to the way things work," he said."

    And if RedHat focused on things beyond the code/updates, like they have in the past: support, training, certification, classes, customization, addons, documentation, conferences, licensed toolkits, validation services, etc. then there would be no issue. Instead, they are alienating everyone and flushing their mindshare down the toilet.

    >"Since its RHEL decision, Red Hat has secured several prominent partnerships. In September, the cloud-based software company Salesforce moved 200,000 of its systems from the free CentOS Linux to Red Hat Enterprise Linux."

    Due to extortion, not due to adding any value to Salesforce. It is a likely a short-term gain that will be lost. And for every Salesforce, you probably will lose many others- especially those who will grow up using something else instead because they feel RHEL is to restrictive/walled/proprietary.

    There was a fine line in maintaining what was the view of "enterprise Linux", and I think IBM/RedHat crossed the line. Now the definition will start to get fuzzy and likely land in other hands. Yes, RedHat has contributed a lot to the FOSS community, but the FOSS community is what their entire product line is built on top of.

    • Exactly like it has always been with CentOS, and Scientific Linux, and others.

      Where "others" includes Oracle Linux.

      • Yes, I read through to see if anyone caught this.

        For the edification of others, as far as I know, Oracle's Linux is based on RHEL. And Oracle charges MONEY for support of their Oracle Linux. So, direct competitor, and not a value added reseller or value added support company.

        If someone knows better, please, let us know. Last time I worked at Oracle, was 2011, but that was for Solaris support. Not their Oracle Linux.
        • Yes, Oracle Linux is absolutely a rhel clone, except they provide their optional "unbreakable" kernel too. They are the worst of the opportunist scans here.
        • Before being acquired by IBM, Red Hat tried to counter Oracle but without alienating community too much (then CentOS was good and freely available). Post-IBM, they lumped community competitors (Rocky, Alma) and Oracle together as the "enemy". But without this extended community (from free downstream alternatives to 3-rd party repos that serve both RHEL and its derivatives to documentation sites), the value proposal of RHEL decreases dramatically.

        • For the edification of others, as far as I know, Oracle's Linux is based on RHEL.

          What's RHEL based on? Hopes and prayers? Puppy farts?

          Last time I worked at Oracle, was 2011, but that was for Solaris support. Not their Oracle Linux.

          So you only profited indirectly (MONEY) from the behavior you're complaining about?

    • If Fedora is ok, why wasn't centos?

      Red Hat made a bad move, year after year F500 companies and others will look to stop spending on RH, probably moving to LTS Ubuntu or Debian.

      • Fedora is an upstream, community driven distro funded by Red hat, from which rhel is derived. Centos was a downstream clone of RHEL. If you don't understand this you probably shouldn't be commenting on the topic.
        • I totally understand but you're missing the point, they shouldn't downstream Fedora if CentOS can't downstream Red Hat.

      • If Ubuntu created the equivalent of RHEL's developer toolsets, this would be an easy decision for many. I can run GCC 12 on the ancient RHEL 7 using official packages [redhat.com]. Similar for LLVM/clang 15 [redhat.com]. The binaries produced are compatible with stock RHEL 7 and derivatives without any glibc or libstdc++ issues. RH makes this easy.

        • >"If Ubuntu created the equivalent of RHEL's developer toolsets, this would be an easy decision for many."

          Considering some of the bad things Ubuntu has done, and its commercial nature, it is likely the FOSS community would not choose it as the next definition of EL.

          I bet most would want Debian, especially if the Debian group can put together something longer than LTS. Perhaps a new company will come along and offer all the support stuff that RedHat does, but for Debian, instead. There might already be

    • by martin-boundary ( 547041 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @03:49AM (#63983554)
      Also let's not forget it was Red Hat that foisted systemd onto the community....
    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      What changed was a sudden expectation by IBM that all that could be monetized.

      While IBM might have been more receptive, RedHat has *long* been of mixed feelings about the clones. They exercised the trademark hammer to try to crush CentOS early on (20 years ago). Then they seemed to embrace by acquiring the project, but at the same time anyone with 'business strategy' meetings with them would be treated to their regular rant about those freeloading clones and how they are thinking of ways to dismantle the clones. IBM might have tipped the scales in favor of those voices, but those

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      >"These weren't community members adding value, he contended, but undercutting rivals."

      They aren't undercutting anything as rivals, because they were free. And RedHat wasn't adding any value for most of the FOSS software they were distributing, either.

      Also, the GPL doesn't require community members to add value, good thing for RedHat.

    • Due to extortion, not due to adding any value to Salesforce. It is a likely a short-term gain that will be lost. And for every Salesforce, you probably will lose many others- especially those who will grow up using something else instead because they feel RHEL is to restrictive/walled/proprietary.

      I wonder if that's why Salesfarce laid off 9,000 people... to pay for their 20,000 redhate licenses, and for the support contract.

  • Yawn... (Score:2, Informative)

    by ls671 ( 1122017 )

    Yawn, is there anything we didn't already know in TFA? I'll write a blog post saying exactly the same thing and get it published on Slashdot; profit!

    • Re:Yawn... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ToddDTaft ( 170931 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @02:33AM (#63983476)

      Probably the biggest thing of note is not what TFA says, but where it was published. The News & Observer is the "main-stream media" traditional newspaper in Raleigh, NC (USA), the location of Red Hat HQ. The article made the Sunday, Nov. 5 print edition of the paper, which means that the issue of what Red Hat has done is getting coverage outside of the tech industry. It was the "top of the fold" lead article in the local section of the paper.

  • by Shaitan ( 22585 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @02:01AM (#63983450)

    Yes, they are technically making the source available to those they must and any separate contract or agreement which requires those customers not to share it on would trigger the GPL violation.

    But that aside they've made a mistake here. The only reason everyone uses RHEL is that everyone uses RHEL... at small companies, at home in their lab, in the cloud, etc. It is the standard and without any certification at all you can be sure anyone competent with linux knows their way around RHEL. Red hat is the most accessible and obvious choice for someone looking to pick up *nix skills. Today they'll increase sales because there are a lot of those people already but if they've just killed their source of fresh bodies for tomorrow, moreover, by angering the community they've made themselves the antithesis of the core philosophy evangelized by every project, advocate, and technology which enables learning tech skills outside academia and enterprise possible at all.

    • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

      everyone uses RHEL... at small companies, at home in their lab

      Now you're really pushing it IMHO... RHEL at home, eh?

      But nevermind. Where I live, everyone uses Ubuntu, rather than RHEL.

      • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @05:00AM (#63983658)

        He said "at home in their lab"... clearly he is referring to evil villains, who fuel their dreams of world conquest with RHEL.

      • Re:Short sighted (Score:4, Insightful)

        by coofercat ( 719737 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @10:13AM (#63984210) Homepage Journal

        I used to use Centos for just about everything - werk had it, so at home I used it too (to save me having to remember /etc/apache2 or /etc/httpd, yum or apt, etc).

        These days, I'm using Ubuntu for just about everything. Where I get a say in the matter, I'll never spec a RHEL branch distro again, although I do support a client who (now) has a load of Rocky Linux.

        Don't get me wrong, Redhat/IBM won't be crying into their tea about this - to date I've made them about $0, and so they've lost nothing. But, I'd argue that the mindshare is worse - not that I'm some awesome influencer, but if people like me aren't recommending RHEL-line distros, then they're going to have a dwindling user base, and a dwindling funnel of clients. They'll likely do fine though, holding the likes of Oracle plus maybe a few government agencies to ransom, or maybe some of the big manufacturers or whomever. It'll be just like AIX - "like Unix, but no one has ever used it".

    • Yes, they are technically making the source available to those they must and any separate contract or agreement which requires those customers not to share it on would trigger the GPL violation

      That's right. The GPL is a distribution license. It transfers the rights to modify and redistribute the code to any recipient provided said code was received through a legitimate distribution. As a paying customer of the product you have this right to receive the source code if you receive the compiled software.

      Perhaps you signed away your right to redistribute as part of a separate customer agreement. Stop being a customer. Now you can redistribute the GPL source code you already legitimately received ea

      • > Perhaps Red Hat's customer licencing does violate the GPL. If so they won't be able to distribute the binaries to their customers, who paid for it. Now they have defrauded their customers, shouldn't take long to fix in court.

        I'd actually be very interested in a ruling on this: do "consequences" (customer relationship termination) to exercising rights granted by the GPL constitute "further restrictions on the rights granted by the GPL" .

        I'd argue yes, but that's just me.

        • From memory, the usual way the argument goes is something like this: Red Hat got the initial GPL software from someone else, and further developed it. As a result all their own work on it is derivative and is covered by the original GPL license. If they fail to abide by it in any way, then the license is automatically revoked, which means nothing until they try to distribute the software (including their own modifications), then they break the law.

          I believe Lawrence Lessig once said that all such cases he

          • Re:Short sighted (Score:4, Interesting)

            by serafean ( 4896143 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @07:44AM (#63983820)

            Correct (from memory too), but legalweasly technically, as far as I understand:
            they are complying by making sources available to their customers, they're not even prohibiting redistribution, just saying "if you redistribute, we will no longer accept you as a customer".
            And that is where the discussion whether this falls under "further restrictions" starts.

            • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

              "if you redistribute, we will no longer accept you as a customer"

              Another way of saying that is "if you don't agree to these further restrictions beyond the GPL we won't distribute this source to you" and in setting those terms RH loses their own right to distribute under the GPL. The GPL defines the only permissible conditions you may set on distribution, it doesn't say anything about exceptions for if the restrictions are added with additional agreements so splitting it into a seperate piece of paper doesn

              • Just to be clear: I agree with your interpretations.

                > "if you don't agree to these further restrictions beyond the GPL we won't distribute this source to you"

                No, the end-user (customer) got the source to the binary he obtained. What he won't get is any future binaries (and associated sources) from redhat.

                I'm just saying I'm not aware of such a discussion having taken place previously.

        • by Shaitan ( 22585 )

          Universally consequences may not but in this case the consequence is you will be denied distribution of software which RedHat only has permission to distribute under the GPL. The GPL explicitly defines the only conditions you may set on distribution and while money is permitted restricting redistribution is not. It doesn't really matter what the terms they use, if the net result is condition which isn't in the GPL RedHat is committing a copyright violation.

          RH could claim this condition is for non-gpl softwa

        • I would too, and I have some trouble how even IBM's formidable lawyers could argue otherwise with a straight face.
    • You get 16 free licenses with any account, most small businesses and home users wonâ(TM)t need to pay for RHEL still.

      All the RHEL code is available upstream. The only thing youâ(TM)re not allowed to do is make a clone of the exact composition that a RHEL branded distro has.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @02:41AM (#63983486)

    Correct title: How Software Consultancy Firm IBM divided the Open Source Community.

  • I mean they are an "Open Source" company, not a "Free Software" company. Those 2 words are not synonyms.

    "Open Source" essentially means that the source code of a software package is available, but not that you, as an end-user, should ever change it.

    "Free Software" instead focuses on the point that at least the "power user" should change the software package to your own needs. Patchsets and forks are welcome here, even if they diverge from the original version.

    Note that this is not necessarily dependent on p

    • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

      I mean they are an "Open Source" company, not a "Free Software" company.

      I don't know how they can achieve that, provided that their main product is "Free Software", protected by GPL no less.

      Also, RH has no problems whatsoever with the end user changing the source they're given, recompiling it, running it, etc. They just don't want him/her distributing the source code, that's all.

      • There are multiple ways to deal with people who want to use their FOSS rights, without actually following the spirit. By themselves those ways aren't inherently bad, but by combining it you can effectively circumvent the idea behind "Free Software" without technically being in violation of the GPL.

        The most obvious is to simply reject all patches or other input you do not like. That's why, for example, Firefox doesn't have a list of obviously untrustable domains where it doesn't execute Javascript from. By i

  • As I recall... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by jd ( 1658 ) <imipak@yahoGINSBERGo.com minus poet> on Monday November 06, 2023 @03:41AM (#63983544) Homepage Journal

    The original intent of commercial distros was, as I understood it, to make their money by providing paid-for support, paid-for certifications, and paid-for additional features. The software could be free at point of delivery because the costs were all handled by the value added by the company.

    Are they saying that this model doesn't work, at least to the extent needed to pay for the staff required? That they need to add closed-source add-ons to make an organisation as large as Red Hat viable?

    If that is indeed what they're saying, then I can sympathise to an extent. However, there must be plenty of office software and games they could write and make a decent profit from. In other words, charge for add-ons that add value, rather than mission-critical components. As soon as the ecosystem becomes uncompetitive by price, you lose everything.

    I have to say that it does feel like IBM really doesn't quite grasp the new paradigm. It does feel very much like IBM's suits are still thinking along 1970s or 1980s lines when it comes to business. And I'd point out to them that this approach has failed spectacularly over the years. Once upon a time, "nobody got fired for buying IBM". But those days are gone and they're not coming back.

    • by vbdasc ( 146051 )

      The original intent of commercial distros was, as I understood it, to make their money by providing paid-for support, paid-for certifications, and paid-for additional features. The software could be free at point of delivery because the costs were all handled by the value added by the company.

      Sadly, it now seems that this traditional open source business model is dying, if not already dead. The proliferation of cloud computing dealt the mortal blow, and the emergence of GPT and its likes may drive the last nail into the coffin.

    • No, that model works. What Rocky/Alma and Oracle were doing was taking that value-add (down to the misspellings in documentation), repackaging and selling it as their own.

  • by abhi_beckert ( 785219 ) on Monday November 06, 2023 @06:25AM (#63983732)

    There's a vocal group of people that probably need Red Hat's level of support, but simply don't want to pay for it. And I don't really have... there's not much we can tell them

    Here's what you can say to us: "goodbye".

    We were happy to pay for Red Hat support on our production servers, but not on our Dev/QA servers which go down constantly anyway and nobody cares. However, we needed those servers to be identical to the production server.

    ... so, we no-longer use RHEL anywhere. Including the servers we were happy to pay for.

    • Precisely this.

      Redhat built RHEL as a *standard*.

      IBM sells RHEL as a *product* and is actively preventing its use as a standard.

      The former customers are being slow reactors.

      The smart thing to do is to be migrating to a Debian-based system. Or Arch or Nix or Gentoo if you can handle those.

      "Wait and see" misses the point that RHEL has been withdrawn as a standard and your business is 100% reliant on the whims of IBM.

      • Agreed, except I think most software that can run inside containers should, thereby avoiding having to depend on the details of any Linux distribution, nor the behavior of any of their custodians.

        Trying to make that case to some internal customers right now. They do want to go to a Debian derivative, knowing that the paid-RHEL-everywhere model is no longer tenable. But I'm trying to make sure they also understand that the vendor of this derivative could try to pull shenanigans as well, and even Debian cou

    • My position as well.

      And I think many others will come to similar conclusions, thus choking off the great majority of RHEL's user base, AND the willingness of the upstream community to jump through hoops to maintain RHEL compatibility.

  • I haven't used an rpm based distro in 2 decades but I can be pretty sure Red Hat didn't divide anything or anybody.

    What likely went down es the usual thing: Some suit with little knowledge about legal issues around software and even less about software itself decided to put some branded FOSS distro behind a paywall or subscription without the usual community alternatives. Some other people forked the entire thing in 30 minutes or so, got the message out on the usual mailing lists and online channels and eve

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Well, I'll agree that people are generally only "divided" insofar as you have "everyone but RedHat" and "RedHat".

      Note that there's no sign that this hypothetical suit got a lecture and they are stopping with the nonsense. They seem 100% committed to this course with no signs of backing down.

      Further, they may have *all* the knowledge about legal issues, and in fact is pushing their strategy as far as they can per the legal understanding. I think they may be legally in the clear with their approach, but I s

      • Exactly.

        We do not currently live under rule of law, so it's not likely that any legal challenged to IBM's formidable army of lawyers will stand. We won't get relief that way. (Even if Oracle's arguably even more formidable legal team seems to prevail in the short term. That won't lead to anything permanently better.)

        But most people still aren't going to risk being fooled a second time by someone who's fooled them once. Especially given that there are multiple better alternatives now, and more likely to

        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          IBM lawyers vs. Oracle lawyers... not sure who is more 'formidable', but it is telling that Oracle, who is not at all shy about using lawyers, has made no apparent thought towards challenging RHEL practices, and is instead focusing on a "post-RedHat" sort of strategy for a distribution that at least for *now* is heavily the same as RedHat, but I could easily imagine deviations growing over time if OpenELA has 9x the share of RedHat, at what point do you stop bothering to pay attention to the RedHat relation

    • I haven't used an rpm based distro in 2 decades but I can be pretty sure Red Hat didn't divide anything or anybody

      Right, they united us against them.

      What likely went down es the usual thing: Some suit with little knowledge about legal issues around software and even less about software itself decided to put some branded FOSS distro behind a paywall or subscription without the usual community alternatives.

      And who did that suit work for?

      The confused suit got some basic lectures on FOSS and was also asked to please speak with legal before doing anything stupid and the case was closed.

      Redhat has backpedaled on exactly nothing. They are staying the course. They did the stupid thing and they are still doing it.

  • ... spirit schmirit; how do you do that, under the GPL?

    I guess you can provide source only to your customers ... but how do you add restrictions and prevent them from copying and giving it away? Doesn't the GPL prohibit adding restrictions?

    • Sign, no edit button. Yes, I needed to close the italic tag.
    • > Doesn't the GPL prohibit adding restrictions?

      Of course. IBM intends to invalidate the GPL.

      Don't fund your enemies.

      10. Each time you redistribute the Library (or any work based on the Library), the recipient automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy, distribute, link with or modify the Library subject to these terms and conditions. You may not impose any further restrictions on the recipients' exercise of the rights granted herein. You are not responsible for enforcing complian

    • by Junta ( 36770 )

      Their legal theory is that you are free to exercise your GPL rights, and that the threat of reprisal by shutting down your access to support and updates does not count as restrictions *on the code you already have*. So enjoy redistributing your RHEL9.1 copy that RH got pissed over (as long as you remove their trademarks of course), but no RHEL9.2 for you. You are still unrestricted with respect to that RHEL9.1 software you had when they shut down your access.

      Some people who generally don't like it have wr

      • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

        "legal" and "right" are not necessarily the same.

        While it may be legal to break an agreement because a customer exercises a right in the spirit it was provided, it is clearly unethical. Sure, the GPL should be neutered but NOT in this way. The GPL itself should be rejected because it is unethical. RedHat should abandon the GPL if it is not suited to their profitability. They can't? Perhaps they should have considered that when building their business. Why should they put up with it? Because they agre

        • by Junta ( 36770 )

          Perhaps they should have considered that when building their business.

          Part of the problem being that the people running the business are not those that built the business. Those folks have largely moved on and RHAT's success has attracted people that probably would have loved to start from something like FreeBSD instead, if they had the choice. Now they are 'stuck' with a business success that, in their minds, is 'unfortunately' saddled with Copyleft licensing.

          I wouldn't be surprised to see RedHat move on to evaluating, project by project:
          -Do they control the copyright enou

  • The OSS community has never been so united on anything. There's a few business-at-any-cost holdouts, sure, but the vast majority of us are in "fuck redhat and fuck IBM" mode now.

    • by dfghjk ( 711126 )

      You like to define the "OSS community" as those who believe like you do. It's a big community that includes RedHat and IBM as well as those that have always opposed the GPL.

      Not a defense of RedHat/IBM, I'd like them to suffer too, but you do not represent the opinions of all those in open source.

      • Not a defense of RedHat/IBM, I'd like them to suffer too, but you do not represent the opinions of all those in open source.

        If you think it's just me, I cordially invite you to pull out your head and look around. The masses of both users and corporations are rejecting IBM's interpretation of what is appropriate.

    • I think there is still a large movement, though perhaps not total consensus and unity, around each of:

      * the security and other problems inherent in an ecosystem that now depends very heavily on systemd;

      * the need for consolidation among the numerous partial implementations of Wayland, so that one single API, implemented in consistent ways across multiple compositors, can meet the needs of multiple desktop environments, window managers, and UI toolkits.

      I will never want to switc

  • Which for some is a very good thing, for some others not so much.
  • How much more obvious could it be that we'd be far better off with a BSD-style license instead of the GPL? All of this is predictable and has been predicted.

    Linux is a valuable market, capitalists are gonna grab the biggest pieces they can. The feud between capitalist grift and a communist license, win-win!

    • How much more obvious could it be that we'd be far better off with a BSD-style license instead of the GPL?

      With the GPL: Redhate is broadly scorned for their violation of the GPL that places additional restrictions on a Linux distribution based on GPL-licensed parts and pieces.
      With the BSD license: Redhate does whatever they want and nobody cares because there are no restrictions

      IBM would be far better off, the rest of the world would be worse off. Where did you get this IBM-centric world view, and why do you think we're not all going to laugh at you?

  • BAH! I thought this was about systemd, turns out, it's just about Red-hatters getting mad about choosing the wrong distro.

Make sure your code does nothing gracefully.

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