Red Hat’s Mike McGrath (VP of Core Platforms Engineering) responds to the backlash from closing RHEL public source code access

  • fr0g
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    101 year ago

    Hobestly, I can respect that. They seem to be fairly open about the motivations of that decision and who it’s targeted it without devolving into vague fluffy corporate speech too much. You can sense the author was a bit pissed by the reactions.
    And I do agree that many of the reactions to the news seemed overblown and I think the actions make sense from their point of view without being super shady, even if it still has some negative repercussions for the open source world as well.

    • macallik
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      1 year ago

      I agree as well. People are well within their rights to refrain from using current/future products completely and voice their frustration, but there’s also this undercurrent of people who want to be as vitriolic as possible and try to twist the knife on the way out of the door. It reeks of insecurity and an inability to regulate their emotions.

      There’s a kind of similar undercurrent/echo chamber in certain areas of the fediverse around Reddit as well, and I say this is a person who was actively using teddit pre-APIgate and has drastically reduced my reddit-browsing time as of late. Changing all of your comments to expletives about the current CEO is not as revolutionary or well-received as most people think it is

      • meat_popsicle
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        61 year ago

        try to twist the knife on the way out of the door

        That’s because they stab us in the chests while smiling about it. People are fed up and trying to lash out - it’s hard to injure faceless orgs otherwise.

        Corporations like IBM have been twisting the knife for years and according to you, it’s only a problem when people do it…