I think it’s more free in some way? I’m not sure, but I think it means free as in doesn’t cost anything. Whereas FOSS means free as in open and modifiable, but the maintainer(s) might still charge for it.
I love OSS but I won’t sacrifice my experience just to go fully libre. Sometimes it just doesn’t make sense. I’m glad it’s an option for people who do want that though
And here I am, marking unfree software as installable as the first thing I do on any distro.
I’ll absolutely take FLOSS if I can get it, but failing that, FOSS is still a nice improvement over closed-source software.
What does the L stand for
Libre, which is synonymous with free.
I think it’s more free in some way? I’m not sure, but I think it means free as in doesn’t cost anything. Whereas FOSS means free as in open and modifiable, but the maintainer(s) might still charge for it.
I think those are backwards
I thought they might be… you’re probably right.
Its French for “free”, as in freedom. Free is ambiguous and can also mean free of charge.
Libre means “with little or no restriction,” whereas Gratis means “at no monetary cost."
It’s good that it’s opt in
The NixOS default config has allowUnfree set to false, so it’s not always opt-in
That sounds changeable and off by default. So how come you wouldn’t say that is opt-in?
Unfree apps are not allowed by default. You have to opt in to allow them.
Oh, agreed. There are definitely people who can live without unfree software. Me, I can’t do without Steam and Lutris.
I love OSS but I won’t sacrifice my experience just to go fully libre. Sometimes it just doesn’t make sense. I’m glad it’s an option for people who do want that though