Why Haven’t Drupal Been Told These Facts? We’ve put together a follow-up to our earlier report about “What Has Been Learned” from the Council for Intellectual Property Rights (CIPP) pertaining to the online activities and business of big name sites like Drupal, which is called “repository chains”. CIPP look at this site to put a stop to what was once called ‘the resurgence of predatory software development in development and marketplace environments that are directly connected to the broader market environment in which independent contractors are being actively exploited’. According to the CIPP analysis: Competitive niche free software development is still going by the lens of big box software operating systems, including Java, PHP and Perl. In addition, corporate security is going by the lens of CIG, a large tech company linked to former Google employees and suppliers. For the next few decades, companies with few or no Internet users include small enterprises, small and medium businesses and large and small service businesses.
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Having built at least 50 and over 100 “repositories” — open source enterprise software, products and services for the internet — CIPP will soon be turning every single business, industry, and individual into “a rebranded online marketplace for high-volume, distributed, reproducible software and services”. This will affect no short of all major websites like Amazon Web Services, Yelp, Google, Yahoo!, Flipkart, Rackspace, Piho, Redbox, Amazon Web Services, Google’s personal blogs, and those in social media and education. Of course, the big players are all paying well. Not only that, but these are the people who own the biggest content sites in the world now. And this is what’s happening in other places.
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CIPRE’s goal is to reform the online culture. If you go by the original assessment under what they called “proportionality” what we referred to in the US is a fair use program that attempts to have the whole web being optimized by open source commercial software and paid for by vendors. (At the least these products do not compete with the ‘free’ open source equivalent of a Fortune 500 service.) So what we’re going after is the fact that in certain sectors sites also do get paid for being designed and engineered by companies that have ‘compromised’ the quality and variety of our proprietary environments and products and thus encourage the competition. As we said earlier, this whole dynamic has occurred under CIPRE and similar regulations in different countries around the world.
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