Jimmy McArthur wrote:
Hmm...
http://antirez.com/news/120
Today a page about the new Creative Common license in the Redis Labs web
site was interpreted as if Redis itself switched license. This is not
the case, Redis is, and will remain, BSD licensed. However in the fake
news era my attempts to provide the correct information failed, and I’m
still seeing everywhere “Redis is no longer open source”. The reality is
that Redis remains BSD, and actually Redis Labs did the right thing
supporting my effort to keep the Redis core open as usually.
What is happening instead is that certain Redis modules, developed
inside Redis Labs, are now released under the Common Clause (using
Apache license as a base license). This means that basically certain
enterprise add-ons, instead of being completely closed source as they
could be, will be available with a more permissive license.
Right, they switched to an open core model, with "enterprise" features
moving from open source (AGPL) to proprietary (the so-called Commons
clause). So we need to evaluate our use of Redis since:
1/ We generally prefer our default drivers to use truly open source
backends (not open core nor proprietary)
2/ I have no idea how usable Redis core is in our use case without the
now-proprietary modules (or how usable Redis core will stay in the
future now that Redis labs has an incentive to land any "serious"
features in the proprietary modules rather than in core).
--
Thierry Carrez (ttx)
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