…this completes what appears to be a decade-long plan by Red Hat to maximize the level of difficulty of those in the community who wish to “trust but verify” that RHEL complies with the GPL agreements. Namely, Red Hat has badly thwarted efforts by entities such as Rocky Linux and Alma Linux. These entities are de-facto the intellectual successors to CentOS Linux project that Red Hat carefully dismantled over the last decade
First off, I have never used RHEL or a derivative for more than 5 minutes, and I found it… not very pleasant because you don’t need that level of stability (read: ancient packages) if you’re not in an enterprise environment.
However, saying they’re working around the spirit of the GPL is a stretch I’d say. All the sources for their applications are still available, either on fedora or Stream. Outside a RHEL subscription, it’s not very hard to get a big-compatible distro out of the sources. But the sources are out there. The bigger offender is grsecurity, doing the same thing without any sources whatsoever for non-customers, and morning has happened to them in over 5 years.
If Red Hat adds nothing of value with their distribution, I wonder why people are so eager to have distributions like Alma and Rocky. As I said, I don’t really care about RHEL, but if they’re essential to your operation, consider not only licensing the bare minimum… or make your stack work reliably on other systems (I guess containerization helps a lot with that nowadays)
Screw IBM but I feel like the loudest complainers right now got themselves in a kind of predictable situation. Especially after the acquisition. But my guess is RH is fully in the clear legally. Is it a wise business decision long term? I don’t know. If that loses them money in the longer run, the decision night get reversed.