@pwramsey The currency that matters for them is leverage, and a project like GDAL actually has quite a bit of it. It gives favored capability like /vsis3 and /vsigcs that few in its community actually need. The project could pull it out and risk a fork that wouldn't immediately cause everyone to jump onto their "true open source" fork because the alternative isn't some BSL silliness, it's the community that's actually supporting the software.
@hobu Perhaps a realization that bad actors should be forced to "talk to the hand" will spread more widely in OSS. https://github.com/qgis/QGIS-Enhancement-Proposals/issues/272
@hobu Unfortunately any given organization contains multitudes, and the net effect might be punishing allies in an organization for the crimes of completely separate divisions.
@pwramsey That's just it. Open source happens at the individual level, not the organization one, and organizations like AWS take advantage of that fact.
AWS is wants to say and act like it's just like "any other individual actor", but it's not. It's the toll bridge where the value from a lot of these tools is extracted. Same for GCS/Azure.
And it's all bloviation for what in the end, even as total support to open source by all could vendors in total, is budget dust.
@pwramsey @hobu wasn't the real political idea behind Free Software, that, together we don't need to put up with that kind of stuff. Or at least that is my interpretation.
Change requires collective action.
A lot of us work for companies who use AWS services, do we rebel enough? Do we stand up for what we believe enough?