paint-brush
Why Cloudera, Yugabyte, and Chef Went Open Sourceby@eric-anderson-scale
351 reads
351 reads

Why Cloudera, Yugabyte, and Chef Went Open Source

by Eric Anderson4mNovember 14th, 2019
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story w/o Javascript
tldt arrow

Too Long; Didn't Read

Licensing changes at Cloudera, Yugabyte, and Chef show an interest in getting more open. But it's too soon to say it signals a broad trend that others will follow. The most valuable thing an open source company can do is reach ubiquity of use. The company described the change as a move to full open source, though I see it as really just dialing back proprietary in favor of more open source. In 2020, we should recognize all the signs that open software is alive and well despite the many high-profile moves.

Companies Mentioned

Mention Thumbnail
Mention Thumbnail
featured image - Why Cloudera, Yugabyte, and Chef Went Open Source
Eric Anderson HackerNoon profile picture
Eric Anderson

Eric Anderson

@eric-anderson-scale

I am a Principal at Scale Venture Partners where I invest in cloud infrastructure and open source

Learn More
LEARN MORE ABOUT @ERIC-ANDERSON-SCALE'S
EXPERTISE AND PLACE ON THE INTERNET.
L O A D I N G
. . . comments & more!

About Author

Eric Anderson HackerNoon profile picture
Eric Anderson@eric-anderson-scale
I am a Principal at Scale Venture Partners where I invest in cloud infrastructure and open source

TOPICS

THIS ARTICLE WAS FEATURED IN...

Permanent on Arweave
Read on Terminal Reader
Read this story in a terminal
 Terminal
Read this story w/o Javascript
Read this story w/o Javascript
 Lite
Muckrack
Tefter
Tefter
Venturenews
Pipfeed
Herokuapp