Of the points, not allowing others to make money from a fork could be difficult. You can ensure that a fork stays free, but iirc it’s hard to stop anyone making money. Although I’m hesitant to suggest this, you might want to look at the license for Gnuplot (it’s not gnu as in GNU), which is imho the least free license commonly called “free software”, it effectively prevents forked projects. In which case another question might be, do you want it to be free software? Is the gratis aspect more important?
If people will be people, the interesting difference will be how the platform works. I guess this is the true test of the federated approach. What does it hinder or facilitate in practice and what are the actual effects?
Become unreachable (startrek.website)
The future of Linux
I’m not proposing anything here, I’m curious what you all think of the future....
Question regarding license choice for my program
Hey fellow Linux enthusiasts....
i hate that it's very often like this (sh.itjust.works)
Open for discussion (lemmy.world)
That is not my dog