Close Menu
TechTost
  • AI
  • Apps
  • Crypto
  • Fintech
  • Hardware
  • Media & Entertainment
  • Security
  • Startups
  • Transportation
  • Venture
  • Recommended Essentials
What's Hot

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software is creeping into Europe

Everyone is navigating real-time AI security — even Google

Spotify will reserve tickets for an artist’s top fans in an effort to fill the engagement

Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
TechTost
Subscribe Now
  • AI

    Everyone is navigating real-time AI security — even Google

    25 May 2026

    I’ve tried Amazon’s Bee wearable and I’m a bit intrigued

    24 May 2026

    Elon Musk has given up on solar power (on Earth)

    24 May 2026

    Ferrari uses IBM AI to create F1 superfans

    23 May 2026

    How VCs and Founders Use Inflated ‘ARR’ to Crown AI Startups

    23 May 2026
  • Apps

    Spotify will reserve tickets for an artist’s top fans in an effort to fill the engagement

    25 May 2026

    Audio production app Huxe, founded by former NotebookLM developers, is shutting down

    24 May 2026

    Spotify’s AI bet: more of everything, less of what you want

    24 May 2026

    Apple says Epic lawsuit shouldn’t reshape App Store rules for all developers

    23 May 2026

    Google prefers glitter with disco ball icons: “Are you sure you still want this?”

    23 May 2026
  • Crypto

    As crypto cools, a16z crypto raises $2.2 billion in capital

    6 May 2026

    Coinbase to lay off 14% of staff as part of broader restructuring

    5 May 2026

    British cryptographer Adam Back denies NYT report that he is Bitcoin creator Satoshi Nakamoto

    9 April 2026

    Hackers stole over $2.7 billion in crypto in 2025, data shows

    23 December 2025

    New report examines how David Sachs may benefit from Trump administration role

    1 December 2025
  • Fintech

    General Catalyst just led a $63 million bet in India’s travel payments market

    21 May 2026

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close on May 27

    21 May 2026

    Venmo’s biggest makeover in years comes at a very interesting time

    11 May 2026

    Fintech startup Parker files for bankruptcy

    10 May 2026

    Robinhood’s venture fund IPO attracted 150,000+ private investors, CEO says

    7 May 2026
  • Hardware

    Xreal, Google’s smart glasses partner, believes it has finally conquered this extremely difficult industry

    25 May 2026

    We tested Google’s AI glasses and they’re almost there

    23 May 2026

    Finnish phone maker HMD ropes Indian AI chatbot into new smartphone to reach local market

    22 May 2026

    Flipper unveils a Linux-powered networking gadget designed for hackers and tinkerers

    22 May 2026

    Minimalist Light Phone teams up with Andrew Yang’s Noble Mobile, which pays you to stop doomscrolling

    20 May 2026
  • Media & Entertainment

    Spotify launches an audiobook creation tool powered by ElevenLabs

    22 May 2026

    New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani Takes To Twitch To Chat With New Yorkers

    21 May 2026

    Clouted wants to take the guesswork out of making short videos go viral

    21 May 2026

    ‘Ask YouTube’ Brings AI Chat Search to Video, Adds Gemini Omni to Shorts

    20 May 2026

    Google’s Gemini Omni turns images, audio and text into video — and that’s just the beginning

    19 May 2026
  • Security

    Scammers abuse an internal Microsoft account to send spam links

    22 May 2026

    Law enforcement shuts down VPN service used by two dozen ransomware gangs

    21 May 2026

    GitHub says hackers stole data from thousands of internal repositories

    21 May 2026

    Customers say Trump Mobile is leaking their personal information

    20 May 2026

    US cyber agency CISA has exposed bundles of passwords and cloud keys to the open web

    19 May 2026
  • Startups

    SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws big VC interest

    24 May 2026

    This startup raised $43 million to create a hive mind for ships

    22 May 2026

    Maka Kids redefines kids’ screen time with a streaming app optimized for wellness, not engagement

    22 May 2026

    This new startup is taking on a fragrance industry that hasn’t changed in nearly half a century

    21 May 2026

    Imperagen raises £5m to use quantum physics, AI to engineer enzymes

    21 May 2026
  • Transportation

    Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software is creeping into Europe

    25 May 2026

    TechCrunch Mobility: Robotaxi Reality Check

    24 May 2026

    Wayve’s self-driving technology is heading to US cars made by Stellantis

    24 May 2026

    How Elon Musk will increase his power through the SpaceX IPO

    23 May 2026

    Waymo halts freeway routes after robotaxi race in construction zones

    23 May 2026
  • Venture

    Peec, one of Berlin’s up-and-coming startups, more than doubled annual revenue in months to $10 million, sources say

    23 May 2026

    Convective Capital Raises $85M Fund to Build Disaster Resilience

    22 May 2026

    Sam Altman does a ‘mic drop’ pitch to every Y Combinator startup

    21 May 2026

    Startup Battlefield 200 applications close on May 27

    20 May 2026

    Stilta raises $10.5M from a16z and YC to help companies rediscover patents they forgot they had

    20 May 2026
  • Recommended Essentials
TechTost
You are at:Home»Apps»The eternal struggle between open source and proprietary software
Apps

The eternal struggle between open source and proprietary software

techtost.comBy techtost.com26 December 202305 Mins Read
Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
The Eternal Struggle Between Open Source And Proprietary Software
Share
Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

Whenever chaos takes over A proprietary technology relied upon by millions, the default reaction from many seems to be: “Hey, let’s see what the open source world has to offer.”

Case in point: The steady demise of X (Twitter) since Elon Musk took over last year has led many to look for more “open” alternatives, be it Mastodon or Bluesky.

This scenario became all too familiar throughout 2023, as established technologies relied on by millions hit a curve of chaos, making people realize how loyal they are to a proprietary platform over which they have little control.

The OpenAI fiasco in November, where the ChatGPT hit maker temporarily lost its co-founders, including CEO Sam Altman, created a whirlwind five days of chaos that culminated in Altman’s return to the OpenAI hotseat. But only after businesses had built products on top of OpenAI’s GPT-X Large Language Models (LLM). he began to wonder the wisdom of going all-in on OpenAI, with “open” alternatives such as Meta’s Llama-branded LLM family well-placed to capitalize.

Even Google has seemingly recognized that “open” can trump “proprietary” AI, with leaked out internal memo written by a researcher expressing fears that open source AI was on the front end. “We don’t have a moat, and neither does OpenAI,” the note noted.

Elsewhere, Adobe’s $20 billion bid to buy rival Figma — a deal that ultimately died amid regulatory wrangles — was a boon for open-source Figma challenger Penpot, which saw signups rise amid a mad panic that Adobe might be about to unleash a corporate downpour. in the proverbial Figma parade.

And when cross-platform game engine Unity revealed one controversial new fee structure;, developers went berserk, calling the changes disastrous and unfair. The result caused Unity to make a quick turnaround, but only after a team from the developer community started to check out open source competitor Godotwhich also now has a commercial company driving core development.

But while all of this helped highlight the eternal struggle between the open source and proprietary software realms, within the open source community once again revealed itself to all – with proprietary companies usually the root cause of the confusion.

The (not so) open source factor

Back in August, HashiCorp changed Terraform’s popular “infrastructure-as-code” software from a “copyleft” open source license to the available source Business Source License (BSL or sometimes BUSL), which places greater restrictions on how third parties can commercialize the software — particularly where it can compete with HashiCorp itself. The reason for the change? Some third-party vendors benefited from Terraform’s community-based development without giving anything back, HashiCorp said.

This led to a vendor-led faction ousting the original Terraform project and going it alone with OpenTF, eventually renamed to OpenTofu by Linux Foundation service as the governing body. While HashiCorp was perfectly within its rights to change the license and protect its business interests, it also created uncertainty for many of its users. According to OpenTofu proclamation:

Overnight, tens of thousands of businesses, from one-person shops to the Fortune 500, woke up to a new reality where the foundation of their infrastructure suddenly became a potential legal hazard. The BUSL and additional use grant drafted by the HashiCorp team are unclear. Now, every company, vendor, and developer using Terraform must ask themselves whether what they’re doing could be construed as competing with HashiCorp’s offerings.

Of course, HashiCorp is far from the first company to make such changes. Application Performance Management (APM) platform. Guard transition from open source BSD 3-Clause License to BSL in 2019 for reasons similar to those cited by HashiCorp. However, this year Sentry created an entirely new license called the Functional Source License (FSL) designed to “provide freedom without harmful free-riding,” the company said at the time. It’s a bit like BSL, but with a few tweaks — for example, FSL-licensed products automatically revert to an open-source Apache license after two years, compared to four years with BSL.

Again, this highlighted the eternal struggle of companies wanting to embrace the ethos of open source, without compromising their commercial interests.

“There’s a long history of companies with deeper pockets and more resources taking advantage of traditional open source companies,” Sentry’s head of open source Chad Whitacre he said in November. “Open source companies, regardless of license or pedagogic definition, are increasingly dependent on being venture-backed, for-profit, or most importantly supported by the companies that build on their code.”

And similar to Grafana before thatElement moved the Matrix decentralized communication protocol from a fully permissive Apache 2.0 license to a less permissive open source AGPL license, which forces all derivative projects to maintain the exact same license – a major deterrent for commercial companies looking to build proprietary products.

Element said the cost of maintaining Matrix, to which it makes the vast majority of contributions, forced it at a time when other companies’ business models were designed around building proprietary software based on Matrix — without any of the costs borne by Element Element to maintain the Matrix. “We’ve made Matrix wildly successful, but Element is losing its ability to compete in the very ecosystem it’s created,” the company wrote at the time.

This license change essentially meant that companies using Matrix would have to contribute their code back to the project… or pay Element for a commercial license to continue using it in a proprietary product.

So on the one hand, companies, consumers and developers have seen how going all-in on proprietary platforms can lead to vendor lock-in and disastrous consequences when things go belly up. But on the other hand, businesses built on strong open source foundations can easily move up the ladder by changing the terms of engagement — all in the name of trade protectionism.

All this, of course, is nothing new. But the last 12 months have really highlighted both the power and the dangers of open source software.

Adobe eternal Figma open open source OpenAI proprietary software source struggle TechCrunch 2023 Recap unity
Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
Previous ArticleHackers stole $2 billion in crypto in 2023, according to data
Next Article What VCs are looking for in the next wave of cybersecurity startups
bhanuprakash.cg
techtost.com
  • Website

Related Posts

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software is creeping into Europe

25 May 2026

Spotify will reserve tickets for an artist’s top fans in an effort to fill the engagement

25 May 2026

Audio production app Huxe, founded by former NotebookLM developers, is shutting down

24 May 2026
Add A Comment

Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Don't Miss

Tesla’s Full Self-Driving software is creeping into Europe

25 May 2026

Everyone is navigating real-time AI security — even Google

25 May 2026

Spotify will reserve tickets for an artist’s top fans in an effort to fill the engagement

25 May 2026
Stay In Touch
  • Facebook
  • YouTube
  • TikTok
  • WhatsApp
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
Fintech

General Catalyst just led a $63 million bet in India’s travel payments market

21 May 2026

Startup Battlefield 200 applications close on May 27

21 May 2026

Venmo’s biggest makeover in years comes at a very interesting time

11 May 2026
Startups

SolarSquare in talks to raise up to $60M as India’s rooftop solar market draws big VC interest

This startup raised $43 million to create a hive mind for ships

Maka Kids redefines kids’ screen time with a streaming app optimized for wellness, not engagement

© 2026 TechTost. All Rights Reserved
  • About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Disclaimer

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.