… certain parties violating the old license, by not attributing and stripping my copyright. Packagers being collateral damage was a beneficial side-effect, considering they don’t clearly mark their versions as modified (also a GPL requirement), break functionality, and expect upstream to provide support.
Emphasis mine, snipped from the authors comment
As a maintainer of few AUR packages this is always so hurtful.
Where does this position come from? Packaging is the avenue that people using any linux distro use to get your software.
This also my first time hearing that packages (re)building GPL code have to mark the packages as modified in some way. I can understand that being a valid concern (if it is one) but that’s a problem that can be rather easily fixed without throwing all of the maintainers overboard (?).
I can see there being bad maintainers that will come shouting to upstream with every little thing that does not work on their platform, but man that’s just insincere towards maintainers that will dive, analyze and help where they can to make it work.
For every one maintainer coming to your github issues with their problems there is probably shitton of patches and overal time spent on making your program work with the given distro.
NuXCOM_90Percent@lemmy.zip 1 month ago
zaemz@lemmy.world 1 month ago
I never did like using RetroArch. I always thought it was overly convoluted. Also whenever I looked something up I was trying to figure out, a lot of the explanations I’d find would be oddly rude and off-putting.
If the things you’ve mentioned are true, then it kinda makes sense.
wizardbeard@lemmy.dbzer0.com 1 month ago
Yeah, RetroArch is something best used/enjoyed in spite of the lead devs. There’s a lot of really cool and unique stuff it does, but the main devs have pulled some real bullshit over time.