- cross-posted to:
- privacy
- opensource
- cross-posted to:
- privacy
- opensource
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.world/post/12284817
There’s a new version of Nephele WebDAV server (also on Docker Hub) that supports using an S3 compatible server as storage and encrypting filenames and file contents.
This essentially means you can build your own cloud storage server leveraging something like Backblaze B2 for $6/TB/month, and that data is kept private through encryption. That’s cheaper than Google Drive, and no one can snoop on your files.
Looks cool :) but AL2? no thank you !
I’m not familiar with the term AL2. What is that?
Apache license 2.0
Ah. I don’t know why anyone would be put off by that.
Me neither, but I’d love to hear those arguments.
I understand that some projects needs these kind of license to protect their code, I get it. But this will most of the time shift the project to a closed proprietary/paid service over time… leaving the open source community with a strange feeling of being abused.
It’s not always the case, but it happened in the past, leaving people to fork the project and strating over.
Licensees may redistribute Derivative Work under different terms.
Licensees do not have to distribute the source code alongside with their Derivative Work.
https://itsfoss.com/open-source-licenses-explained/