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I suspect ten years from now, most of the companies who're attempting this sort of thing (and haven't folded) will have moved to a more traditional commercial license, or ended those products. The companies they're trying to fight off with them will be still around doing the same thing.

:#marseyagreefast:

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They're going to go the typical monetization route that open source has been doing where the devs make useful software, keep the in-demand commercial features "TODO", have r-slurs do the coding for free:marseyjanny: one it gets momentum, offer hosting as an initial revenue source, and then place said commercial features behind a paid API and implement said API into the open source project.

Rocket chat does this and so do others. The product was made to be commercialized from the start with a legal entity and funding but outwardly marketed as an open source project with no commercial interest.

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