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  3. Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?

Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?

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  • jdaviescoatesJ jdaviescoates

    @marcusquinn said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

    Looks like someone else has a neat FOSS Cloudron alternative to compare and run a few apps missing here: https://github.com/meienberger/runtipi

    Quite a few similar things have been shared in various posts on this forum previously. I feel collectively we could put together a pretty comprehensive list of Cloudron alternatives/ competitors, and that we should. I think I may have even previously started a thread to that end...

    jdaviescoatesJ Offline
    jdaviescoatesJ Offline
    jdaviescoates
    wrote on last edited by
    #103

    @jdaviescoates said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

    a pretty comprehensive list of Cloudron alternatives/ competitors

    I still think such a list would be very helpful/ useful market research (and source of inspiration for App Wishlist posts)

    I just came across https://elest.io/ via a post @Sam_uk made in a thread about Keycloak.

    I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

    jdaviescoatesJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • jdaviescoatesJ jdaviescoates

      @jdaviescoates said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

      a pretty comprehensive list of Cloudron alternatives/ competitors

      I still think such a list would be very helpful/ useful market research (and source of inspiration for App Wishlist posts)

      I just came across https://elest.io/ via a post @Sam_uk made in a thread about Keycloak.

      jdaviescoatesJ Offline
      jdaviescoatesJ Offline
      jdaviescoates
      wrote on last edited by
      #104

      @jdaviescoates said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

      I still think such a list would be very helpful/ useful market research (and source of inspiration for App Wishlist posts)

      I've just started such a list of Cloudron alternatives/ competitors here.

      I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

      1 Reply Last reply
      3
      • adisonA Offline
        adisonA Offline
        adison
        wrote on last edited by
        #105

        i2think cloudron needs to be open source again. even if companies do recell it, it would be great for it to be open source to the public.
        my admins are critisizing cloudron for not bein open source, and want us to stop using it untill it becomes open source or something like that.

        my website is not available right now

        jdaviescoatesJ marcusquinnM 2 Replies Last reply
        1
        • timconsidineT Offline
          timconsidineT Offline
          timconsidine
          App Dev
          wrote on last edited by
          #106

          Yawn
          What makes users think they have any say or influence on what the owner does.
          Woke socialism
          Have all your admins open sourced their activities?

          M jdaviescoatesJ 2 Replies Last reply
          1
          • adisonA adison

            i2think cloudron needs to be open source again. even if companies do recell it, it would be great for it to be open source to the public.
            my admins are critisizing cloudron for not bein open source, and want us to stop using it untill it becomes open source or something like that.

            jdaviescoatesJ Offline
            jdaviescoatesJ Offline
            jdaviescoates
            wrote on last edited by
            #107

            @adison said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

            or something like that.

            it is at least source available, which is a bit something like that

            I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

            1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • adisonA adison

              i2think cloudron needs to be open source again. even if companies do recell it, it would be great for it to be open source to the public.
              my admins are critisizing cloudron for not bein open source, and want us to stop using it untill it becomes open source or something like that.

              marcusquinnM Offline
              marcusquinnM Offline
              marcusquinn
              wrote on last edited by
              #108

              @adison They can view the source code. Are they offering any code contributions to what they see?

              Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
              Development https://brandlight.org
              Life https://marcusquinn.com

              1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezrN Offline
                necrevistonnezr
                wrote on last edited by
                #109

                Again, I prefer a sustainable paid software with available sources over an unsustainable open source project any day of the week. Look at Hashicorp, who suddenly switched licenses to become sustainable or the gazillion of abandoned open source projects...

                jdaviescoatesJ 1 Reply Last reply
                5
                • necrevistonnezrN necrevistonnezr

                  Again, I prefer a sustainable paid software with available sources over an unsustainable open source project any day of the week. Look at Hashicorp, who suddenly switched licenses to become sustainable or the gazillion of abandoned open source projects...

                  jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                  jdaviescoatesJ Offline
                  jdaviescoates
                  wrote on last edited by jdaviescoates
                  #110

                  @necrevistonnezr said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

                  Again, I prefer a sustainable paid software with available sources over an unsustainable open source project any day of the week. Look at Hashicorp, who suddenly switched licenses to become sustainable or the gazillion of abandoned open source projects...

                  I don't seem them as mutually exclusive. Indeed, if Cloudron went fully open source again I don't think anyone would stop paying, but quite a few who don't subscribe now because it isn't open source may do so.

                  I'd keep paying for supports and timely updates, which is what we're all paying for, wouldn't you?

                  I should think Cloudron could relatively easily restrict timely updates to paying customers only, perhaps making them publicly freely available 6 months later or something (quite a few sustainable open source projects do stuff like this).

                  I use Cloudron with Gandi & Hetzner

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • ryangorleyR Offline
                    ryangorleyR Offline
                    ryangorley
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #111

                    Open source software is abandoned all the time, but so is a lot of commercial software. Abandoned open source software can be picked up and maintained by the community, especially if the community has been involved in writing code along the way. This happens frequently. It never happens with proprietary software.

                    Regarding commercial viability, this isn't a guaranteed win for proprietary licensing either. Yes, restrictive licenses give creators leverage. They don't automatically give creators a user base. Good open source software spreads (that's the point!). While that doesn't necessarily give creators revenue automatically, if their user base is 1000x larger, it does give them a lot of options. Reaching people is the most expensive part of marketing; open source makes that much easier and cheaper.

                    There are costs to open source, obviously. Maintaining a community of contributors is a different kind of work than writing code, and it can be challenging. Some people won't pay when they don't have to. These are factors @girish and @nebulon have to take into account. But software-focused incubators like Y-Combinator continue to churn truly open source companies. I'm pretty sure it's not because they want to be nice but because the benefits outweigh the costs. They believe it will make them money.

                    It does seem a bit ironic for anyone using Cloudron to cast doubt on the viability of open source software, considering we only use Cloudron to run open source software. Nothing is guaranteed to work, but open source works all the time.

                    marcusquinnM 1 Reply Last reply
                    3
                    • timconsidineT timconsidine

                      Yawn
                      What makes users think they have any say or influence on what the owner does.
                      Woke socialism
                      Have all your admins open sourced their activities?

                      M Offline
                      M Offline
                      malvim
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #112

                      @timconsidine Sorry, but that's not it. Putting the "woke socialism" label everywhere is really not what we should do.
                      I've seen more entitled pro "freedom" people whine about a company not doing what they want, saying they'll call for a boycott or what have you, "vote with your wallet"-style, than anyone else.

                      I, too, don't like the attitude of "cloudron NEEDS to go open source bc my admins are whining about it". I'd love for cloudron to be open-source, but I understand why it's currently not, and I'm okay with it. So much so that I have been a paying customer since early 2017 on version zero dot something, and have no plans to cancel my membership anytime soon.

                      I'd much rather have serious, respectful, adult discussion about open source software and business models (which most people in this thread are doing) than slapping labels on others willy-nilly.

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      3
                      • adisonA Offline
                        adisonA Offline
                        adison
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #113

                        @marcusquinn mainly, the admins are looking for sourcecode, witch they cant find. i've even searched for it this morning, but couldn't find it.
                        if i may ask, where is the source code?
                        most of the time, they hate it when they use proprietary products that don't contain any source code.
                        though, if they do make us stop using it, i will at least use it for my personal infrostructure.

                        my website is not available right now

                        BrutalBirdieB nebulonN marcusquinnM 3 Replies Last reply
                        0
                        • adisonA adison

                          @marcusquinn mainly, the admins are looking for sourcecode, witch they cant find. i've even searched for it this morning, but couldn't find it.
                          if i may ask, where is the source code?
                          most of the time, they hate it when they use proprietary products that don't contain any source code.
                          though, if they do make us stop using it, i will at least use it for my personal infrostructure.

                          BrutalBirdieB Offline
                          BrutalBirdieB Offline
                          BrutalBirdie
                          Partner
                          wrote on last edited by BrutalBirdie
                          #114

                          @adison said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

                          mainly, the admins are looking for sourcecode, witch they cant find. i've even searched for it this morning, but couldn't find it.

                          If you visit the homepage of Cloudron https://www.cloudron.io and scroll to the bottom, you find About => Open Source.
                          And at the bottom => ...and all Cloudron app packages are open source at our GitLab instance.
                          In there you got all apps and also the Cloudron internals like the box code.

                          So if you or your admins could elaborate on what you/they are looking for, we are happy to assist.

                          Like my work? Consider donating a drink. Cheers!

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          3
                          • adisonA adison

                            @marcusquinn mainly, the admins are looking for sourcecode, witch they cant find. i've even searched for it this morning, but couldn't find it.
                            if i may ask, where is the source code?
                            most of the time, they hate it when they use proprietary products that don't contain any source code.
                            though, if they do make us stop using it, i will at least use it for my personal infrostructure.

                            nebulonN Away
                            nebulonN Away
                            nebulon
                            Staff
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #115

                            @adison that is totally understandable from a sysadmin perspective. We also think one should be able to introspect the code running on ones server. This may not be made overly clear from our side, as we sometimes lack focus on the non-technical stuff. But to be clear, Cloudron is source-available and as @BrutalBirdie already mentioned, the platform code is at https://git.cloudron.io/cloudron/box there is nothing to hide from our side, anyways one can just ssh into the server and open the source files, it's all plain-text javascript.

                            1 Reply Last reply
                            6
                            • robiR Offline
                              robiR Offline
                              robi
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #116

                              The code also flows from the installer package which is not encrypted or gated by a license code or further obfuscation. It's all there if you're willing to look.

                              Conscious tech

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              1
                              • adisonA Offline
                                adisonA Offline
                                adison
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #117

                                i have.
                                thank you

                                my website is not available right now

                                1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • ryangorleyR ryangorley

                                  Open source software is abandoned all the time, but so is a lot of commercial software. Abandoned open source software can be picked up and maintained by the community, especially if the community has been involved in writing code along the way. This happens frequently. It never happens with proprietary software.

                                  Regarding commercial viability, this isn't a guaranteed win for proprietary licensing either. Yes, restrictive licenses give creators leverage. They don't automatically give creators a user base. Good open source software spreads (that's the point!). While that doesn't necessarily give creators revenue automatically, if their user base is 1000x larger, it does give them a lot of options. Reaching people is the most expensive part of marketing; open source makes that much easier and cheaper.

                                  There are costs to open source, obviously. Maintaining a community of contributors is a different kind of work than writing code, and it can be challenging. Some people won't pay when they don't have to. These are factors @girish and @nebulon have to take into account. But software-focused incubators like Y-Combinator continue to churn truly open source companies. I'm pretty sure it's not because they want to be nice but because the benefits outweigh the costs. They believe it will make them money.

                                  It does seem a bit ironic for anyone using Cloudron to cast doubt on the viability of open source software, considering we only use Cloudron to run open source software. Nothing is guaranteed to work, but open source works all the time.

                                  marcusquinnM Offline
                                  marcusquinnM Offline
                                  marcusquinn
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #118

                                  @ryangorley said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

                                  software-focused incubators like Y-Combinator continue to churn truly open source companies. I'm pretty sure it's not because they want to be nice but because the benefits outweigh the costs. They believe it will make them money.

                                  The operative word being them. I don't see Y-Combinator as a attractive path, quite the opposite — when independent creator-owned products retain freedom to put the user first, without investor overheads, or increasing support costs for the many, at the expense of the few.

                                  The only investment Cloudron needs is community, and that has steadily grown in all the year's since I've joined.

                                  The apps packaging by the community are almost all offered as open-source.

                                  There doesn't seem to be a problem to solve here, more a preference for some to bend others to their will.

                                  Hours contributed to code contributions will have many times the influence over opinions.

                                  Until there's community code contributions showing that the burdens of development and maintenance are in the main offered beyond the things asked of the founders, I don't see substance being committed beyond opinion — and everyone is still free to have those opinions.

                                  Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                                  Development https://brandlight.org
                                  Life https://marcusquinn.com

                                  ryangorleyR 1 Reply Last reply
                                  2
                                  • adisonA adison

                                    @marcusquinn mainly, the admins are looking for sourcecode, witch they cant find. i've even searched for it this morning, but couldn't find it.
                                    if i may ask, where is the source code?
                                    most of the time, they hate it when they use proprietary products that don't contain any source code.
                                    though, if they do make us stop using it, i will at least use it for my personal infrostructure.

                                    marcusquinnM Offline
                                    marcusquinnM Offline
                                    marcusquinn
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #119

                                    @adison We agree on having source code available, and I'm not a fan of compiled code, either. This one of the many reasons that drew me to Cloudron. Sure, there's alternatives, but I value my time enough to prefer the many time-saving conveniences of Cloudron, and the confidence that things can carry on running, whatever happens in future.

                                    Web Design https://www.evergreen.je
                                    Development https://brandlight.org
                                    Life https://marcusquinn.com

                                    adisonA 1 Reply Last reply
                                    3
                                    • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

                                      @adison We agree on having source code available, and I'm not a fan of compiled code, either. This one of the many reasons that drew me to Cloudron. Sure, there's alternatives, but I value my time enough to prefer the many time-saving conveniences of Cloudron, and the confidence that things can carry on running, whatever happens in future.

                                      adisonA Offline
                                      adisonA Offline
                                      adison
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #120

                                      @marcusquinn eitherway, at least its source-available. better than completely proprietary with no look.

                                      my website is not available right now

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • marcusquinnM marcusquinn

                                        @ryangorley said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

                                        software-focused incubators like Y-Combinator continue to churn truly open source companies. I'm pretty sure it's not because they want to be nice but because the benefits outweigh the costs. They believe it will make them money.

                                        The operative word being them. I don't see Y-Combinator as a attractive path, quite the opposite — when independent creator-owned products retain freedom to put the user first, without investor overheads, or increasing support costs for the many, at the expense of the few.

                                        The only investment Cloudron needs is community, and that has steadily grown in all the year's since I've joined.

                                        The apps packaging by the community are almost all offered as open-source.

                                        There doesn't seem to be a problem to solve here, more a preference for some to bend others to their will.

                                        Hours contributed to code contributions will have many times the influence over opinions.

                                        Until there's community code contributions showing that the burdens of development and maintenance are in the main offered beyond the things asked of the founders, I don't see substance being committed beyond opinion — and everyone is still free to have those opinions.

                                        ryangorleyR Offline
                                        ryangorleyR Offline
                                        ryangorley
                                        wrote on last edited by ryangorley
                                        #121

                                        @marcusquinn said in Why not make Cloudron fully open source again?:

                                        The operative word being them. I don't see Y-Combinator as a attractive path, quite the opposite — when independent creator-owned products retain freedom to put the user first, without investor overheads, or increasing support costs for the many, at the expense of the few.

                                        I may not have communicated clearly. I'm not suggesting Cloudron should join an accelerator or seek venture backing (their product is good enough I think they could though). I'm calling attention to the erroneous assumption I've seen frequently repeated in this thread that switching to an open source license is commercially non-viable. Venture capitalists want to earn lots of make money, period. If it was not possible to monetize open source software, they would not invest in such companies. But they do, perhaps for the reasons I have mentioned or better reasons.

                                        The only investment Cloudron needs is community, and that has steadily grown in all the year's since I've joined.

                                        The apps packaging by the community are almost all offered as open-source.

                                        There doesn't seem to be a problem to solve here, more a preference for some to bend others to their will.

                                        The problems related to proprietary licensing have been expressed repeatedly here. The primary issue is not how we paying, committed customers feel. The issue is about how the 99.9999% of potential users who are not using Cloudron feel and more importantly whether they'll even have the chance to form an opinion at all. When was the last time you told someone about Cloudron and they were already using it? When was the last time they had even heard about Cloudron? If your experience is anything like mine, you'll come away feeling that Cloudron is being utilized far less than it could be for how incredibly powerful, affordable, and easy-to-use it is. That problem is of concern to both the Cloudron team and those of use who depend upon their software. One solution may be open source licensing.

                                        Hours contributed to code contributions will have many times the influence over opinions.

                                        Until there's community code contributions showing that the burdens of development and maintenance are in the main offered beyond the things asked of the founders, I don't see substance being committed beyond opinion — and everyone is still free to have those opinions.

                                        Find me a single person who would not contribute to Cloudron should it once again be freely licensed. I can point to many I know personally who will not contribute with it licensed as is. How can you blame them? At any moment we could get an announcement that Cloudron has been purchased and will no longer be source available? There's no protection against that. I like the Cloudron developers, I think their hearts are in the right place, but who says their feelings won't change and they won't lock things up or sell the code to someone else who will? A developer who doesn't take this into account hasn't been around very long.

                                        Still, logic should be the only basis for any action by the Cloudron developers, not opinions weighted by volume of code commits. I have no reason to believe you have anything but sincere motives, but brushing aside arguments you don't value as mere opinions and belittling the people who express them as just wanting to bend wills does no service to our shared interests here. I think we can agree Cloudron is an incredible tool and we'd love the people who made it to be successful and we want all our friends to use it. Can we keep that in focus?

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • ryangorleyR Offline
                                          ryangorleyR Offline
                                          ryangorley
                                          wrote on last edited by ryangorley
                                          #122

                                          I'll add a counter-argument to my own argument regarding VC-backing as a sign of commercial viability. Venture capital, in software especially, isn't always motivated by earnings in the way that a normal business would have to be. As I understanding it (I'm no venture capitalist), these folks don't generally recoup their investments through dividends on earnings but by selling their ownership shares to a bank or larger private equity fund or through an IPO. So they'll often run these companies at a loss for years to try to grow the user base as much as they can to get that big cash out at the end. That's not really compatible with a business operating by its own earnings.

                                          Still, not all open-source software companies are VC-backed. Not all of them that are VC-backed are cash negative. The underlying point remains, that open-source grows adoption. Scaling at practically no cost is what makes software such a unique product to sell, and what makes it so enticing for investment in the first place. Open source as a means to scale and ultimately monetize should be taken seriously.

                                          marcusquinnM necrevistonnezrN 2 Replies Last reply
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