• cacheson
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    22 years ago

    In this thread: Programmers disassembling the joke to try and figure out why it’s funny.

      • @KairuByte@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        02 years ago

        Open source inherently means you can compile the code locally, for free. You can’t necessarily redistribute it, depending on the license, but I’m not aware of a “you can compile this source for testing and code changes only but if you use it as your actual copy you are infringing” license.

        I am very much open to correction here.

        • ono
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          2 years ago

          Open source inherently means you can compile the code locally,

          Open Source means more than that. It is defined here:

          https://opensource.org/osd/

          If you use the phrase “open source” for things that don’t meet those criteria, then without some clarifying context, you are misleading people.

          for free.

          Free Software is not the same as “software for free”. It, too, has a specific meaning, defined here:

          https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html

          When the person to whom you replied wrote “free software”, they were not using it in some casual sense to mean free-of-charge.