What is Grayjay?

Grayjay is a cutting-edge app that serves as a video player and source aggregator. It allows you to stream and organize videos from various sources, providing a unified platform for your entertainment needs.

It’s mostly used as a YouTube frontend^. However, it is now launching as a desktop app for Linux, Mac and Windows.

    • iopq@lemmy.world
      link
      fedilink
      English
      arrow-up
      1
      ·
      4 days ago

      Because that’s how unsuspecting people get spyware and viruses. Sure, the clones must publish their source code, but that doesn’t stop them from profiting from open source software while contributing nothing

      • TootSweet@lemmy.world
        link
        fedilink
        English
        arrow-up
        2
        ·
        4 days ago

        Can you name any real-world examples of this happening?

        Actually, I can. I know before Minetest (a FOSS Minecraft clone (they’d bristle at being called that, but anyway) that has since renamed itself to “Luanti” - I reccommend it, actually) officially supported Android, somebody ported it to Android (I don’t remember what they called the clone) and put it on the play store for money. Now, Minetest wasn’t under a copyleft license, so the clone wasn’t even FOSS (nor was it legally required to be.) I don’t remember any malware being involved. The Minetest community did all heave a collective groan when a wave of clueless people who didn’t realize it was FOSS started joining Minetest servers. People in the Minetest community definitely resented the clone. But beyond that, no real harm came to the game or its players. Some folks paid for an Android Minetest client that didn’t afford them the freedoms guaranteed by the Free Software Definition or Open Source Definition, but at the time the official Minetest client didn’t support Android. Aside from that, I don’t know of any harm that came from any of that. And had Minetest been under a copyleft license, even less harm would have come of that.

        Also, in practice, anyone who’s only out to get a quick buck is going to either avoid copylefted code like the plague or just blatantly violate the terms of the license. They’re unlikely to actually put forth the effort to compose a proper GPL compliance plan. (In fact, the ongoing U.S. court case “SFC v. Visio” is very apropos. Visio is named as a defendnt in that suit specifically for blatantly violating the terms of the GPL. Specifically the copyleft portions.)

        And if someone who does just want to make a quick buck clones some GPLd code and sells it in compliance with the license, I’m still not convinced that does anyone any harm. The GPL was also designed with non-programmer empowerment in mind, specifically allowing the use case where if a non-coder wants a feature added to a piece of GPL’d code, they can commission a coder to add it. But I’m not sure the Grayjay license would allow that even if it would allow one to make changes themselves noncommercially.

        I dunno. You seem to be really hung up on “contrubuting nothing”. And mind you, I don’t think that’s uncommon. That’s a big part of the whole “post-open-source” thing Parens is involved with these days. If FOSS as a whole was floundering right now in a way that money could solve, I maybe could get on board with the idea that there might be improvements that could be made to the existing FOSS paradigm. (Though something like legally-preserved nag screens in source-available software seems at best a clueless and ham-handed approach to that problem.)

        Much more concerning to me is that software respect users’ rights. I mostly won’t use software I don’t feel I can trust (either legally or security-wise.) And FOSS is software I can virtually always trust. When I’m publishing software, I do so under the AGPL v3 because I kinda don’t care if anyone sells it. (Though they can always get a free version from my GitLab (yeah, I switched to GitLab before Codeberg was a thing).) I do care if someone distributes (for money or gratis) my code in a way that doesn’t afford the end user the four freedoms. Which is why I use AGPL v3 over other options like non-copyleft FOSS licenses or noncommercial licenses.

        And, just to repeat this, again, I’m not angry at FUTO for releasing their code under non-FOSS licenses. That’s enough to make me not want to use their software. But not enough to make me resent them the way I do. The anger is at the way they’ve been sabotaging Open Source to the best of their ability while misrepresenting themselves as consumer rights advocates.

          • TootSweet@lemmy.world
            link
            fedilink
            English
            arrow-up
            1
            ·
            2 days ago

            Too little too late. The damage is already done.

            And even on that page, they’re still being assholes about Open Source (“Our use of the term ‘open source’ thus far has been not out of carelessness, but out of disdain for OSI approved licenses which nevertheless allow developers to be exploited by large corporate interests.”) while pretending what they’ve done with the FUTO license is some boon to consumer rights (“Fundamentally, our goals are to build great products that don’t abuse people, beat the tech oligopoly, and elevate the rights of programmers developing software that has source code open to public scrutiny and tinkering.”). And they’re still not dropping the effort to dilute the term “Open Source” (“The OSI, an organization with confidential charter members and large corporate sponsors, does not have any legal right to say what is and is not ‘open source’. It is arrogant of them to lay claim to the definition.”).

            Also, just as an aside, as page that the words “legal right” in that last quote link to says, the OSI attempted to trademark “Open Source.” I’m not sure why FUTO seems to think the same reasons why the “Open Source” trademark was rejected won’t apply just as much to the term “Source First” (but they do seem to think that: “we will be making our own term and trademarking it.”)