• JoeyJoeJoeJr@lemmy.ml
    link
    fedilink
    English
    arrow-up
    3
    arrow-down
    1
    ·
    11 months ago

    As a user, or a developer? As a user, I don’t think it matters. As a developer, I think other licenses have similar carve outs, e.g. the GPLv3 section 8 is a whole section on “termination” - the copyright holder can revoke your rights for any ticky-tack violation of the license, and at their discretion, the revocation can be permanent.

    Additionally, even with other FOSS licenses, the copyright holder can re-license the project. If I had to guess, this ability to re-license is probably why it is written as it is - the license is called the “FUTO Temporary License.” I would assume it’s written as is so they can re-license later, and they just want to cover their bases now. It’s entirely possible that’s incorrect, and they’ll clamp down. I’m personally willing to give them the benefit of the doubt (though having said that, I have no intention of buying, using, or contributing to this project).

    • lemmyvore@feddit.nl
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      2
      ·
      11 months ago

      even with other FOSS licenses, the copyright holder can re-license the project

      Re-licensing the project means future releases go out under a new license. Past releases remain as they are, because they are non-revokable (unless breached; but let’s be real, if you breach an agreement you should stop benefiting from it).

      As a user, or a developer?

      Both. A user that doesn’t care about licensing is typically called a pirate.

      • JoeyJoeJoeJr@lemmy.ml
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        1
        ·
        11 months ago

        A user that doesn’t care about licensing is typically called a pirate.

        The license literally does not govern the usage of the app. Here’s the first line:

        This license grants you the rights, and only the rights, set out below in respect of the source code provided.

        Read the entire license (it’s only 32 lines), and you won’t find anything related to using the product, only the code.

        This license should only be scary to developers, who might build on the project, and then have it taken away. As a user, your concerns are different, and this license vs the GPL, or any other FOSS, or even source available license, are more-or-less the same. As a user, your primary concerns are probably going to be related to the security and privacy related aspects, and as long as you have access to the source, you can audit it and ensure it meets your standards. If they choose to revoke access to the code, as a user, you’re in the same boat you described - don’t take new versions because you can’t audit them, but you can stay on the old version. They can’t revoke that access with this license, because again, this license literally does not govern usage of the product.