• @marcos@lemmy.world
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    15910 months ago

    AWS and Azure are services, not libraries; Elasticsearch is mostly open source; and DynamoDB, well, how many people use it again?

    • Hot Saucerman
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      7310 months ago

      AWS and Azure are services

      A lot of people seem really confused by this, based on the number of downvotes.

      • Miku Luna \ she/it
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        3310 months ago

        Amazon Web Services

        I don’t think people know what AWS means, it’s literally in the name.

        • Hot Saucerman
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          10 months ago

          They also keep thinking I’m talking about the services they provide, and not, you know the actual fucking servers those services run on. Surprise, the servers themselves also need an operating system and the “server” you create is a Virtual Machine that lives on their actual, physical server and its OS.

          Every day I learn more about how people don’t actually understand how the internet works.

    • @thesmokingman@programming.dev
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      310 months ago

      AWS is closed source in some areas because they have not released the software they use to manage their platform. In other areas they have released the source code. It’s actually a pain in the ass that tools like LocalStack have evolved to fix.

  • @SleveMcDichael@programming.dev
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    12710 months ago

    Am I missing something or do two cloud computing services, two database systems, and a search engine have nothing to do with a game engine? Cuz this looks like a false equivalency whataboutism two-for-one combo to me.

    • @Vince@feddit.de
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      2410 months ago

      It’s a random list for sure, but vendor lock-in can also be a problem for companies hosting their stuff in the cloud in a similar manner to what’s happening with unity.

      • @SleveMcDichael@programming.dev
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        1610 months ago

        I suppose that’s true, but then the question becomes: how many people proselytizing Godot/OSS use these services personally vs in a corporate environment where they may not have a choice? Because I’m not sure the supposed hypocrisy the meme is “joking” about actually exists.

    • Armok: God of Blood
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      1310 months ago

      Fallacious arguments? In the comments of my content aggregation website? I don’t believe it for a second.

    • @xor
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      15 months ago

      well sure, but dog houses aren’t made out of waffles, anyways.

  • Jaysyn
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    7710 months ago

    This meme is stupid. FOSS versions of all that crap also exist.

    • bane_killgrind
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      410 months ago

      Out of that list, I like MongoDB. I just did bits in SQL before I started using it for the little python tools I’ve made for stuff.

      • 257m
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        1210 months ago

        No, I have never used any of those closed source options. I wanted cloud services I have perfectly good esp32 lying around. And if I get worried about the vendor provided system libraries I can just buy a Raspberry Pi or something.

    • @Pencilnoob@lemmy.worldOP
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      -1810 months ago

      But you can’t see the code that runs those services, stores your settings, deploys your code, etc. Services are still a liability if they go away and your project depends on it

  • @PowerCrazy@lemmy.ml
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    2910 months ago

    Oh no the internet runs on computers that use “Closed Source Software” to manage the packets that flow through them! This means that if I have a website that is open source, I’m actually a hypocrite? Actually I’m not sure what the point of this comic is.

    • @thesmokingman@programming.dev
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      10 months ago

      Their license, the SSPL, is actually pretty fucking far from open. That being said for anyone not a platform provider it’s basically open source so you can consider it as such. You just have to deal with SSPL callouts when you do compliance reviews.

      Edit: the meme says “closed source” which is patently false for Mongo

      • @snowfalldreamland@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        Edit: the meme says “closed source” which is patently false for Mongo

        No, MongoDB is closed source, proprietary software. You might be confusing open source with source available.

        Edit: Actually I am wrong sorry. Closed source is not the opposite of open source. I didn’t read your comment exactly enough. MongoDB is not open source, it’s not free software, it is source available and thus not closed source. The things below are still true but don’t contradict what you said.

        The SSPL is not a free software license and it is not an open source license. The OSI said so:

        https://blog.opensource.org/the-sspl-is-not-an-open-source-license/

        • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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          110 months ago

          It’s to the AGPL what the GPL is to LGPL: More viral. Calling it “not open source” when using it would require the likes of Amazon to open up their complete stack is kinda hare-brained.

          It could reasonably be argued that it’s too viral and gods know people have been doing that with the GPL but OSI’s argument “enforces additional usage restrictions” is… well, then any copyleft is a usage restriction if you want to be consistent.

        • @thesmokingman@programming.dev
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          010 months ago

          That’s why I started by saying it’s pretty far from open. I refuse to touch SSPL projects at work because they’re not open. You have rights until you want to sell something the licensor might misconstrue as theirs. Terraform’s BSL is a new iteration of this bullshit.

  • @calzone_gigante@lemmy.eco.br
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    1810 months ago

    That’s why you don’t make your systems dependent on any of those tools. If Mongo goes crazy, you add an implementation to another document database, test to see if performance is good enough, and start to migrate to another database.

    There’s no problem in using proprietary shit. The problem is marrying stuff you can’t rely on, building your house on land you don’t own.

    That’s also one of the reasons why it isn’t good to use very unique features from any service, because once you start relying on it, you get locked, AWS may have a billion services, i would normally only use those that other providers also have.

    • @bitsplease@lemmy.ml
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      810 months ago

      Yup, wrappers for everything you didn’t build yourself. That way when you inevitably have to switch vendors, you can simply write a new wrapper using the same interface, minimal changes necessary

      • Cyclohexane
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        10 months ago

        Idc about open source purism personally. I’m okay with open source projects making it difficult for corporate users to make profit and contribute nothing back.

        It’s open source enough for me. The code is open, contributions are accepted, forking is doable. That’s what matters.

        • As the OSI says in the post linked above:

          This is not to say that Elastic, or any company, shouldn’t adopt whatever license is appropriate for its own business needs. That may be a proprietary license, whether closed source or with source available. […] What a company may not do is claim or imply that software under a license that has not been approved by the Open Source Initiative, much less a license that does not meet the Open Source Definition, is open source software. It’s deception, plain and simple, to claim that the software has all the benefits and promises of open source when it does not.

          A lot of companies are trying to redefine what “open source” means. And regrettably, this is probably something that was inevitable with a name as open to interpretation as “open source”, but it’s unfortunate that the OSI was denied the trademark for the term. If they owned the trademark, nobody would believe projects like ElasticSearch and MongoDB are open source when they do not meet the Open Source Definition (OSD), because those companies wouldn’t be able to claim they are.

          Open source was never about preventing people from making a profit. That sounds more like the original Linux license, where Linus Torvalds didn’t want money to change any hands in the process of conveying the software. I can’t imagine how much worse things would be if Linus never transitioned to a license that met the OSD. My belief is that there is nothing wrong with making money so long as the software meets the OSD. I know at least the GNU Project actively encourages people to sell free software.

  • Cyclohexane
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    510 months ago

    If AWS was open source, you wouldn’t be protected from a similar incident. You’re primarily using them for servers and infrastructure.

    • Semperverus
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      10 months ago

      I think that’s because the software comes from a similar place. You have to fight for your freedom and it takes effort, and the people that put that effort in like to feel good about it by sharing (or showing off). It’s like gym-goers who like to show their hard-earned progress.

      And then there’s the fundamental differences in core philosophy, where a lot of friction between open and closed source projects comes in. It’s warranted, but I get why it’s annoying.

      • @RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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        -3010 months ago

        Look, I might have switched to Godot if all the people recommending it weren’t so annoying about it. Effort or not, the vast majority of those people did not contribute to the software, so it wasn’t even their fight. They just adopted a weird oppression fetish into their personality and decided to make FOSS into their god.

        If someone was wronged by “Big GameDev” or whatever and developed their own FOSS replacement, then good on them, I am happy to listen about it. But the large majority of these users didn’t do that, but act like they did. Just be normal, please. Being so overly annoying about it isn’t going to attract more people, existing users being annoying are going to push away potential new users.

        • 257m
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          310 months ago

          Just someone didn’t develop something dosen’t mean they can’t passionately share it. If you like a TV show and started talking about how much you like the show it wouldn’t rude for you to share just because you weren’t the director of the show.

    • @SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      10 months ago

      People are free to continue using proprietary software, but you can’t then continue to complain when they inevitably do another shitty thing in the name of profit.

      No wonder people are promoting FOSS, what else do you want to happen? I really don’t get why people are so hostile to FOSS, it’s literally for your own long-term benefit. How many more projects have to enshittify before people get it?

      • @RightHandOfIkaros@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I am not complaining about FOSS, or even saying its bad. I am saying the people that look at FOSS as if it was their god are annoying. The people that just cannot shut up and have to shove it in your face. The people that start conversations with “I use Arch” or “Godot is the best.” Thats what I am talking about.

    • @Pencilnoob@lemmy.worldOP
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      610 months ago

      If AWS decides tomorrow to pull a Unity, can you fork it and keep your business running? Or do you need to rebuild an entire deployment infrastructure?

      • Hot Saucerman
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        10 months ago

        Running your server on someone else’s hardware isn’t the same thing as using not using open source?

        AWS’s servers themselves run on an Amazon-modified flavor of Linux. I’m pretty sure this version already is a fork of CentOS or RHEL.

        If you choose to use AWS, you can choose a variety of Linux flavors to run.

        If you choose to leave AWS and you have to find a new hosting provider or need to procure hardware to host it yourself, that has nothing to do with the provider being open source or not. Them forking their versions of Linux really only affects Amazon internally, they’re not giving their internally used version out to everyone for use. They have Amazon’s Linux 2 which they do give away to everyone to use, but why would you use it when there’s more open versions of Linux available?

        Once again, this seems mostly like people confusing using open source software and using hardware that someone else owns. Open source isn’t about who owns the hardware, that’s a private property issue. That’s more akin to setting up your business on Amazon’s lawn and then getting frustrated when Amazon isn’t mowing their lawn and your business can’t be seen from the road. Honestly, that’s what you get for setting up shop on someone else’s property where they already have their own shop.

        • @jmcs@discuss.tchncs.de
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          110 months ago

          Except most people running their services on AWS are not using just the EC2 instances. I would even go as far as saying no one in their sane mind uses AWS just for EC2, at which point you are probably tied to the services you use. If Amazon goes full Unity, and you are lucky it’s things that have alternative implementations like S3, if it’s something like sagemaker you’re fucked.

          • Hot Saucerman
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            10 months ago

            Y’all are fundamentally talking about different things and are failing to see why they are different.

            Vendor lock in from proprietary software is not the same thing as vendor lock in from using vendors hardware.

            Both are bad, but they are not the same, and conflating the two is misunderstanding the point. Just like the original meme misunderstood the point.

        • @severien@lemmy.world
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          110 months ago

          You keep making the assumption that AWS == EC2, meanwhile it is just one of many services AWS provides.

          • Hot Saucerman
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            10 months ago

            I’m literally not talking about the services they provide, I’m talking about the AWS servers themselves. The physical box that lives at Amazon. To boot up it has to have an operating system. That OS is a flavor of Linux. The number of people who have not understood that in this thread is downright mind boggling.

            • @severien@lemmy.world
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              10 months ago

              Who cares what OS the AWS machines are running? I can’t touch it, it’s completely inaccessible for me and other clients. I can only touch the services which AWS provides. I wouldn’t know the difference if it was running windows, since the OS is completely transparent, basically a hidden implementation detail.