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this post was submitted on 17 Sep 2023
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Redhat was the golden child of the open source community, the paragon of open source success stories, until fairly recently.
Canonical was also very highly respected until they started putting Amazon ads into people's menus.
It is not something that happens instantly for no reason, it's because of the need for these companies to squeeze every last drop of revenue out of a product to appease shareholders. Open source companies can, and do, thrive without screwing their communities over. The problem is the mindset that creating value for shareholders is the only thing that matters.
A universal basic income would allow more developers to choose to work on software they actually like, rather than the demands of business and their proprietary models.
There are free OS nowadays that are Better than the paid ones (especially the most used one for desktops).
What do you need your PC to do? If it's word-processing and spreadsheets you are already ready to go free. Other software or "solutions" will come later.
It just takes time because the money is pushing hard the payment models.
What can happen, and actually happen in a lot of software fields, is multiple companies investing in the tool. That's the case for the Linux kernel, for databases, for programming languages...
Many game companies even have their own in-house engine. Instead of investing in that (usually sub-par) engine, they could be investing in an open Source engine.
I don't understand why this doesn't happen in games. And don't tell me that they want to keep their own engine as a competitive advantage, because most in-house engines are shit.