this post was submitted on 25 Oct 2024
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The way the founder replied coldly and closed the GitHub issue is pretty telling. Now they're doing damage control.
It's usually better to stay away from VC funded software. They exist for the sole purpose of turning a rich guy's million dollars into 100.
They literally said the issue was an unintentional bug and then fixed it. How is that damage control?
They were doing the same on other repos for months.
Both their npm module and android client.
On android they tried to get people to add their own fdroid repo because the official fdroid has not had updates for 3 months due to the license changes.
Edit: Looking at it now compared to 4 days ago, they apparently got frdoid to remove bitwarden entirely from the repo. To me this looks like they are sweeping it under the rug, hiding the change pretending it has always been on their own repo they control.
Next time they try this the mobile app won't run into issues, the exact issues that this time raised awareness and caused the outcry on the desktop app, which similarly is present in repos with license requirements.
If they were giving up on their plan, wouldn't they "fix" the android license issue and resume updating fdroid, instead of burning all bridges and dropping it from the repo entirely, still pushing their own ustom repo? Where is the npm license revert?
Thanks for the input and research.
One does not "accidentally" build a proprietary SDK for months and make the clients depend on it, intentionally violating the GPL.
They even publicly admitted to doing precisely that, defending their GPL violation with dubious claims how the GPL supposedly works.