Oracle's Edward Screven's demanding Red Hat to publish source code (which we do) while VirtualBox, a project under his belt, has a propietary extension pack for a bunch of important features is kinda rich.
@christitustech Just want to to note here the Developer subscription is completely free and still allows access to RHEL and its source code if you want exact package sources. CentOS stream basically serves as a RHEL upstream so I understand this change. It may seem confusing for some people.
If you would please explain a bit more.
CentOS Stream doesn't contain all the bug fixes RHEL does. And you won't be able to redistribute RHEL packages downloaded via the client portal/subscription.
How would you be able to maintain a 1:1 binary, then?
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@expMeiji Meiji, we would like to fix it if possible. Can you please clarify what you are referring to? Was there an email or a phone call that you found deceptive?
@phoenixnap Your sales tactics are borderline deception. I hope you sober up. Until then, I would advise everyone not to touch you, even with a 100 feet pole.
#PhoenixNAP
Thanks. I didn't think you do, though.
But the consensus is monetizing. It gives a wrong impression.
Shorteners are often used to drive traffic to malicious URLs and are blocked in many client-facing firewalls for the same.
@expMeiji We're not monetizing our links. We use a third party service to schedule some of our social media posts. That service uses the URL shortener, probably for analytics purposes.