Home GADGETS Winamp owner deletes ‘Open Source’ repository after a bumpy month on GitHub

Winamp owner deletes ‘Open Source’ repository after a bumpy month on GitHub

Winamp owner deletes ‘Open Source’ repository after a bumpy month on GitHub

The contents of Winamp’s “open source” GitHub repository has been deleted after less than a month. This move happened after its owners, Llama Group, received criticism from the free and open-source software (FOSS) community for its highly restrictive license. The original GitHub release was under the Winamp Collaborative License (WCL) 1.0, which states No Forking: You may not create, maintain, or distribute a forked version of the software. The deletion seemingly occured after The Register contacted the developers regarding the inclusion of Shoutcast DNAS code and some codecs from Intel and Microsoft.

(Image credit: Tom’s Hardware)

The Register shared that some GitHub users noted in the comments of the project that this license actually violates the platform’s terms of service, and that the repository upload isn’t actually open source. This license was eventually revised to WCL 1.0.1, which changed the line to No Distribution of Modified Versions: You may not distribute modified versions of the software, whether in source or binary form. This means you can now build upon the code that Winamp uploaded to GitHub, but you won’t be able to share it with anyone. So, while the Winamp source code was online for all the world to see, it’s wasn’t fully open source, as you cannot freely redistribute the modifications you make.

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