Imagine you created your very first app. You developed the concept, workedtirelessly on the key features, design, tested it and fixed the bugs. Themoment has...
Paid and FOSS are not mutually exclusive. You can always build packages yourself if you don’t want to pay. A well executed implementation might allow some projects to drop or reduce their play store efforts.
Paid and FOSS are mutually exclusive. Open source and FOSS aren’t.
But how, you ask? Free means having the right to do whatever you want with your copy including make copies and redistribute. Thus, how can it be free while demanding a payment before allowing usage?
That’s why I said, FOSS Droid? Nah! Open Source Droid? Knock yourself out. I’m actually looking forward to supporting some of the developers of apps I love.
Free does not mean “no payment, ever”. If the source code and build toolchain are openly and completely available, but prebuilt binaries are paid-only, it still satisfies the “free as in gratis” criterion.
@wholookshere@aard free as in free beer vs free as in freedom, look it up pal. FOSS binaries can be sold as long as the code is free as in freedom, it’s just that we usually provide them as free as in beer. The main difference between FOSS and OSS is that the former is copyleft and propagates the license to derived projects, although FOSS purists would say that FOSS respects the user’s freedom where OSS purposefully doesn’t. https://itsfoss.com/what-is-foss/
Apparently they don’t understand that the F in F-Droid is for FOSS.
I’m 100% all for adding a repository with paid apps, but it’s not and shouldn’t be marketed as F-Droid.
Paid and FOSS are not mutually exclusive. You can always build packages yourself if you don’t want to pay. A well executed implementation might allow some projects to drop or reduce their play store efforts.
I will download APKs off a website before I use anything with ads.
You did not really read the post then.
@PopOfAfrica @aard
I don’t see ads in apps. You don’t have to either.
Paid and FOSS are mutually exclusive. Open source and FOSS aren’t.
But how, you ask? Free means having the right to do whatever you want with your copy including make copies and redistribute. Thus, how can it be free while demanding a payment before allowing usage?
That’s why I said, FOSS Droid? Nah! Open Source Droid? Knock yourself out. I’m actually looking forward to supporting some of the developers of apps I love.
One of the things you’re free to do is pay for a copy of the binary. Therefore you haven’t shown that FOSS and paid are mutually exclusive. 😁
You’re right.
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And the “free” means “freedom”, it doesn’t mean “no price”
Free does not mean “no payment, ever”. If the source code and build toolchain are openly and completely available, but prebuilt binaries are paid-only, it still satisfies the “free as in gratis” criterion.
Unless the payment method involves proprietary software. Also online payments are service as a software substitute (SaaS)
https://youtu.be/n9YDz-Iwgyw?t=322
@wholookshere @aard free as in free beer vs free as in freedom, look it up pal. FOSS binaries can be sold as long as the code is free as in freedom, it’s just that we usually provide them as free as in beer. The main difference between FOSS and OSS is that the former is copyleft and propagates the license to derived projects, although FOSS purists would say that FOSS respects the user’s freedom where OSS purposefully doesn’t.
https://itsfoss.com/what-is-foss/
The F stands for “free” as in “freedom”, not “free beer”.
Stripe is not free software nor is any online payment system these days.
Not to mention online payments come at the cost of privacy
Neither of your statements are antithetical to mine.
It stands for freedom as in protecting the 4 free software freedoms.
https://lazysoci.al/comment/11161130
Which part of the acronym “FOSS” stands for “no advertisement” again? Remind me.
The freedom part, unless they use an ad network that doesn’t track users or impressions.