Now that would be a horror story. Then again, it’s one of the reasons why I’m asking. Rust fame is just too coincidental with a number of things to not be suspicious. There was a whole thing in C++ (dunno if it’s still ongoing) about the “memory safety” meme, as well.
Since you seem to be in good faith: no, you’re wrong.
Using a language cannot force you into adopting a licence, because automatically everything you produce will be all rights reserved unless otherwise specified. It’s then up to the developer to choose a license.
Rust doesn’t even populate the license metadata in your manifest, it’s up to you.
I think MIT dominance came about thanks to GitHub’s choose a license.
I feel ya. To me, it’s really sad that some new projects now use licenses that are really good for businesses but do not even protect the projects themselves. I’d rather live in a world where GPL share would increase. (Instead, GPL grows, but its share is diminishing.) All my projects so far are GPL/AGPL.
At the same time, Rust being picked for Linux has really nothing to do with the license. It’s just what you said - a coincidence. The actual choice is made because of the language itself. It’s a great language BTW.
Now that would be a horror story. Then again, it’s one of the reasons why I’m asking. Rust fame is just too coincidental with a number of things to not be suspicious. There was a whole thing in C++ (dunno if it’s still ongoing) about the “memory safety” meme, as well.
Since you seem to be in good faith: no, you’re wrong. Using a language cannot force you into adopting a licence, because automatically everything you produce will be all rights reserved unless otherwise specified. It’s then up to the developer to choose a license.
Rust doesn’t even populate the license metadata in your manifest, it’s up to you.
I think MIT dominance came about thanks to GitHub’s choose a license.
I feel ya. To me, it’s really sad that some new projects now use licenses that are really good for businesses but do not even protect the projects themselves. I’d rather live in a world where GPL share would increase. (Instead, GPL grows, but its share is diminishing.) All my projects so far are GPL/AGPL.
At the same time, Rust being picked for Linux has really nothing to do with the license. It’s just what you said - a coincidence. The actual choice is made because of the language itself. It’s a great language BTW.
Eh, I’ve heard “foo is a great language” far too many times before, and we always end up seeing the disaster. Sometimes I miss C with POSIX.