Yeah, this is an interesting bit of news.
There are several ways one can be a bit concerned. In most of what follows I'm imagining the point of view of those who are concerned.
The most interesting is simply that it is inherently offensive to put a corporate spin and completely change the terms of the original license and open source nature of the program.
Not only a "corporate spin," but one which explicitly is dedicated to "cooperating" with (read: abetting) various western law enforcement agencies. It's hardly paranoid to be suspicious of the intentions of the United States' Department of Homeland Security or Russia's FSB. And whatever lurks in Belgium.
So, it's no longer an open source program, it's no longer a part of well-understood copyright licensing frameworks, and it aims to please vast law enforcement networks for no good reason.
The analogy is this: "if you have nothing to hide, then you shouldn't be worried if we search your vehicle or domicile."
That is true.
However, the powerful rejoinder is: "No thanks, Mister Man! I'll just produce an identical piece of software using the exact same source code, and this time it will adhere to community standards that are long established and have an equally long legal standing."
They'll call it "Freedacity" or something, and I guarantee that's what everyone is going to use. At least the cool kids.
It's not paranoia, exactly, on the part of those concerned. But leaving that aside, it's offensive to many people in the way that an ugly painting is.
And even I wonder: what's in it for the Muse Group? Why are they so happy to be Dudley Dooright, charging, John Wayne style, ahead in the interests of law and order? What the hell do they care, anyway.
And what's that bizarre thing about an age restriction?
That's just strange.
It's like watching a dog chasing a truck, or a bear riding a tricycle: what is it doing? One can make guesses, but the sight of such a spectacle is, on the first glance, simply deviant and aberrant.
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As well, there are questions whether the new policies are in accordance with the GPL license.
I don't see that there's any question that the new mandates violate the GPL. The age restriction alone means that the new release is no longer a part of the GPL.
And, in fact, they can be sued for this, and will certainly lose. It depends on the jurisdiction and who cares enough to pursue them in whichever court for a clear-cut copyright licensing violation.
It's no longer FOSS, even if it may be open source of a particular sort: all contributions to the code, including extensions, of which there are many, are gifted to the new owners and their own FrankenLicense.
That's a philosophical, rather than a legal issue, but it does rankle people who contributed to the base code, not to mention all of the add-on modules available. Understandably so.
It's no problem. In the blink of an eye, instead of Audacity there is an identical fork. It's not immediate, and as it's entirely volunteer work, nor can it be reasonably done by one person, it requires organization, but it will happen, and soon.
This isn't dissimilar to the way Red Hat has recently brought much anger to users in industry production who have relied upon its
official upstream equivalent CentOS.
Most people I know of just dumped CentOS in industry and moved immediately to one of its forks (there are two of them: risky, immature at the moment, but promising) or to another server distro altogether like Debian. If the companies who have used and relied on CentOS in the past weren't going to pay for the RHEL branding, they aren't about to now. And the RHEL code itself is corrupted by depriving itself of innovations in the upstream CentOS.
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And, for the record, I personally don't care. I know I have Audacity on a few boxes at home, but I wouldn't know what version, and I don't care.
It's pretty useful software, and it's pretty capable for a primitive audio editing bit of gear, but I haven't been transcribing much lately, so I hardly use it. (And it doesn't affect any serious recording engineers either, since they are (i) using proprietary software (ii) using air-gapped computers for anything mission-critical. Even a rank amateur like me still has a Win10 box some updates, but I build the updates by hand, if I think think they are useful, but this is after having removed all telemetry and networking, also by hand, from the OS, which is one of my favorite things to do after installing Win10: not just "hide" things like Cortana and such, but actual rip them out of the OS completely. Plus, in case of forgetfulness, I never give Win10 access to any network. And, FWIW, I'm one of the few people, especially among linux users, who actually
likes Microsoft: I see nothing wrong with the company, I just prefer to not use their stuff except when necessary.)
No, I don't really care that Russia or the US knows ZOMG my IP address at such-and-such a time — I assume that's a given, already, knowing how much crap there is out there anyway.
But, people do care about this stuff, and for some good reasons.
The aesthetics or in the cryptojournalism speak of the day, "the optics," are not that great, so I disapprove because it's ugly, stupid, and wrong!
It's not going to change my use of the software, but it does change my opinion about the Muse Group, not that it matters.
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