• TrustingZebra
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    1 year ago

    It’s not retroactive. Terraform 1.5.5 version and all below versions will forever remain with their original license. Forks can also be based on that version.

    • TheLinuxGuy@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Yep, and if open source licensing could be revoked on a whim, you can imagine the chaos that ensued. That would be my understanding as well, old version that have MPL license is perfectly fine to fork off, newer version might not be as it is under a different license. One of the reason why I liked Apache License is that it have make it explicitly clear that it’s irrevocable whereas MPL it is operating on an assumption that it’s not revocable. The most fundamental problem with the legal system in USA is that no law is “set in stone” and leaving things to assumption is open to reinterpretation by the judge who may have sided against you. (Hell, Google vs Oracle on Copyrighted API is still on case-to-case basis, so take it as you will.)

      Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer. I just share what I learned from Legal Eagle youtube and few other sources.

      • TrustingZebra
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        1 year ago

        Haha I am not a lawyer either and I don’t even watch Legal Eagle. I still barely understand the Java lawsuit. Nevertheless I do take an active interest in open source licenses, considering I make open source code contributions myself (I even have some Terraform projects that I open-sourced).

        I remember reading an article by a lawyer saying they love Apache License because it’s permissive and unambiguous.

    • jadero@programming.dev
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      1 year ago

      Okay, thanks.

      So twisted knickers are understandable, but it might be more effective to mobilize forks instead of pitchforks. (Sorry, couldn’t resist.)