リーディングビュー

The Document Foundation Removes Dozens of Collabora Developers

🤖 AI Summary

記事によると、Document Foundation(LibreOfficeの非営利組織)は Collabora の開発者たちから30人以上を解任した。Collabora Productivity のMichael Meeks氏が LibreOffice Online プロジェクトの再活性化について文句を言ったことから一連の動きが始まった。Document Foundationは、「法的懸念や連坐主義」に基づいて Collabora のメンバー全員を退会させたと主張している。

また、 LibreOfficeに長期的に貢献した10人のうち7人がCollabora Productivityで働く現在の開発者たちも含まれている。この動きは過去数年間でDocument Foundationが失った多くの設立者の解任につながっている。残りの活動的な共同創業者は、4人中の3人はDocument Foundationに雇われたスタッフであり、彼らのうち誰も核心コードにプログラムしていない。

CollaboraのMeeks氏はブログで、「完全に新しい、軽量化された、差異化されたCollabora Officeを作成し、よりスムーズでユーザーフレンドリーな製品にする計画がある」と述べた。彼はさらに、 LibreOfficeへの貢献を続けたいが、その選択肢は制限される可能性があると語った。

Document Foundationは、「メンバーの解任は寄与禁止ではない。いつでもプロジェクトに参加できる」と強調している。Collaboraは、「適切なときに」引き続き貢献する方針であるという。
Long-time GNOME/OpenOffice.org/LibreOffice contributor Michael Meeks is now general manager of Collabora Productivity. And earlier this month he complained when LibreOffice decided to bring back its LibreOffice Online project, as reported by Neowin, which had been inactive since 2022. After the original project went dormant — to which Collabora was a major contributor — they forked the code and created their own product, Collabora Online. But this week Meeks blogged about even more changes, writing that the Document Foundation (the nonprofit behind LibreOffice) "has decided to eject from membership all Collabora staff and partners. That includes over thirty people who have contributed faithfully to LibreOffice for many years." Meeks argues the ejections were "based on unproven legal concerns and guilt by association." This includes seven of the top ten core committers of all time (excluding release engineers) currently working for Collabora Productivity. The move is the culmination of TDF losing a large number of founders from membership over the last few years with: Thorsten Behrens, Jan 'Kendy' Holesovsky, Rene Engelhard, Caolan McNamara, Michael Meeks, Cor Nouws and Italo Vignoli no longer members. Of the remaining active founders, three of the last four are paid TDF staff (of whom none are programming on the core code). The blog It's FOSS calls it "LibreOffice Drama." They've confirmed the removals happened, also noting recently adopted Community Bylaws requiring members to step down if they're affiliated with a company in an active legal dispute with the Foundation. But The Documentation Foundation "also makes clear that a membership revocation is not a ban from contributing, with the project remaining open to anyone, and expects Collabora to keep contributing 'when the time comes.'" Collabora's Meeks adds in his blog post that there's "bold and ongoing plans to create an entirely new, cut-down, differentiated Collabora Office for users that is smoother, more user friendly, and less feature dense than our Classic product (which will continue to be supported for years for our partners). This gives a chance to innovate faster in a separate place on a smaller, more focused code-base with fewer build configurations, much less legacy, no Java, no database, web-based toolkit and more. We are excited to get executing on that. To make this process easier, and to put to bed complaints about having our distro branches in TDF gerrit [for code review], and to move to self-hosted FOSS tooling we are launching our own gerrit to host our existing branch of core... We will continue to make contributions to LibreOffice where that makes sense (if we are welcome to), but it clearly no longer makes much sense to continue investing heavily in building what remains of TDF's community and product for them — while being excluded from its governance. In this regard, we seem to be back where we were fifteen years ago.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

  •  

SaaS Apocalypse Could Be OpenSource's Greatest Opportunity

✇Slashdot
著者: BeauHD

🤖 AI Summary

ソフトウェア株価の900兆ドルが2026年に消失し、サブスクリプション型ソフト(SaaS)の企業に対するヘッジファンドの大規模な空売りが実現しました。FOSDEM 2026でcURLの開発者Daniel StenbergはAI生成のバグ報告書によって負担過多となり、bug bountyプログラムを停止しました。

HackerNoonの記事では、多くの商業的なSaaSが必ずやオープンソース化される可能性があると主張しています。これは経済的理由ではなく、アイデオロギーによるものではありません。プロキモックスがVMwareを企業規模で置き換えた例や、HolosignがDocuSignを1か月19ドルのプライスで複製した例が示されています。

記事は、AIツールを拒否する開発者がリスクを負うと警告し、 Forkingまたは完全な再構築により競争相手から置き換られる可能性があることを指摘しています。
Longtime Slashdot reader internet-redstar writes: Nearly a trillion dollars has been wiped from software stocks in 2026, with hedge funds making billions shorting Salesforce, HubSpot, and Atlassian. At FOSDEM 2026, cURL maintainer Daniel Stenberg shut down his bug bounty program after AI-generated slop overwhelmed his team. A new article on HackerNoon argues that most commercial SaaS could inevitably become OpenSource, not out of ideology but economics. The author points to Proxmox replacing VMware at enterprise scale and startups like Holosign replicating DocuSign at $19/month flat as evidence. The catch, the article claims, is that maintainers who refuse to embrace AI tools risk being forked, or simply replicated from scratch, by those who do.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.

  •  
❌