Linux-based phones : Why are GNU/Linux users treated as second class? | Linux Today

Linux-based phones : Why are GNU/Linux users treated as second class?

Written By
Web Webster
Web Webster
Oct 5, 2009

“It’s all about the apps
Thanks to the ubiquitous iPhone (you have to admire Apple’s
marketing skills if nothing else), mobile phones are all about the
applications these days. I own an HTC Hero, an Android-based (but
not Google-dependant) phone and mightily pleased I am with it too.
I like the fact that there are plenty of applications, some useful,
some silly and some a nice way to waste a few minutes waiting for a
train. Installing new Android apps is a breeze — as you would
expect it to be — but there’s something missing from the
listings: the licence. Sure some apps include their licence within
the notes but those will be from the authors that feel the licence
is important; and usually that’s the free licences.

“This makes it a right royal pain to find out what licence your
preferred app is deployed under. I appreciate that for most people
this isn’t an issue: they simply don’t care about the licence their
software is released under. But for many people the reason they
chose Android would have been for the licence the OS uses and we’d
appreciate having a similar choice about the apps. Without knowing
apps’ licences, we aren’t really given that choice. Like many I’d
like to to see the amount of free software on Android increase but
this is not going to happen if developers don’t even know there is
a choice — let alone users. In response to this the community
has created an Android Free Software wiki which lists free Android
software and the licences they use.”


Complete Story

Web Webster

Web Webster

Web Webster has more than 20 years of writing and editorial experience in the tech sector. He’s written and edited news, demand generation, user-focused, and thought leadership content for business software solutions, consumer tech, and Linux Today, he edits and writes for a portfolio of tech industry news and analysis websites including webopedia.com, and DatabaseJournal.com.

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