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Cake day: July 11th, 2023

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  • Other people have covered the main reasons, which are time and expense. I will just add:

    • Lawsuits are public, and a lot of dirty laundry can get aired. They have the potential to be embarrassing for both sides.

    • They are also stressful, particularly if you are cross-examined which must be an awful experience.

    • Finally, they are risky: even if you think you have a very solid case, there is always a significant chance that the judge will rule against you on the day.

    Basically litigation is a bad experience, whether you are plaintiff or defendant, corporate or individual, right or wrong. So both parties have a strong incentive to settle.


  • sol@lemm.eetoNo Stupid Questions@lemmy.worldWhy GitHub?
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    1 year ago

    UI and pricing aside (I don’t have much direct experience of either on GitLab), GitHub is, AFAIK, by far the most popular and therefore it’s easier to get your project discovered and get other developers to contribute.

    I do kind of think that by centralising so much stuff on a website owned by Microsoft we are running the risk of another Reddit-like situation where GitHub turns sharply anti-user in an attempt to monetise in the future. But for the moment, the network effects are real and significant.