Final thoughts on the Red Hat thing: every supporter of the Red Hat move told me that "it's normal to want to prevent people from stealing the hard work and making a clone of it".

If you think grabbing the code and reusing it is "stealing", you don't understand FOSS.

No matter what RH clones contribute, or if they're worth it. That's not the point. The point is, RH builds their stuff using the GPL, and they have to redistribute using the GPL.

Making access to a specific part of that code harder on purpose goes against the principles of Free Software.

Period. Money doesn't factor into this, value, contribution, they don't matter. FOSS is free to use, whether you contribute or not. FOSS is for everyone, "freeloaders", developers, anyone. That's the very point.

Yes, the code is still technically available with a bit more work in Stream's repos. That's not the issue. The "people are stealing from us" talk is the issue.

When a company that works in FOSS, and depends on it to operate, calls people using their GPL rights "freeloaders", you know they've lost the plot.

That's the problem. The value, the contribution, the development, the clone or not, the business: it DOESN'T MATTER.

@thelinuxEXP That's a good point, the actions are defensible, but that attitude isn't.

It would be so easy to communicate in a nicer way.

@ainmosni Exactly. No matter the righteousness or the idea behind it. The way it was done, and the vision RH lays on FOSS is now laid bare for everyone to see, and it’s ugly.
@thelinuxEXP @ainmosni they did something similar with OpenShift about 4 years ago, and I was in the middle of trying to learn how to use it on their free offer. It felt like a brutal corporate fuck off. I left, and avoided them ever since.