Winamp is going open source, and it feels like the early 2000s againStrawberryPigtails@lemmy.sdf.org to Open Source@lemmy.ml – 432 points – 4 months agoxda-developers.com61Post a CommentPreviewYou are viewing a single commentView all commentsShow the parent commentI am so sick of these rubbish licensing efforts calling themselves Open Souce. Fair code is a new atrocity. There is no repository link. There is no open source code.The Winamp announcement linked to in the article never says "Open source", that's the article writer not understanding the difference.Tbf, opening up its source code to enable collaborative development sounds already close to open-source, though it isn't necessarily, as the licence that is used matters.
I am so sick of these rubbish licensing efforts calling themselves Open Souce. Fair code is a new atrocity. There is no repository link. There is no open source code.The Winamp announcement linked to in the article never says "Open source", that's the article writer not understanding the difference.Tbf, opening up its source code to enable collaborative development sounds already close to open-source, though it isn't necessarily, as the licence that is used matters.
The Winamp announcement linked to in the article never says "Open source", that's the article writer not understanding the difference.Tbf, opening up its source code to enable collaborative development sounds already close to open-source, though it isn't necessarily, as the licence that is used matters.
Tbf, opening up its source code to enable collaborative development sounds already close to open-source, though it isn't necessarily, as the licence that is used matters.
I am so sick of these rubbish licensing efforts calling themselves Open Souce. Fair code is a new atrocity.
There is no repository link. There is no open source code.
The Winamp announcement linked to in the article never says "Open source", that's the article writer not understanding the difference.
Tbf,
sounds already close to open-source, though it isn't necessarily, as the licence that is used matters.