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> Unfortunately they don't and it's only fair that eventually those developers take it in their own hands.

"Fair" is somewhat loaded. The developers certainly have a right to change their product and charge for it, but it's not nearly as cut and dry in my opinion. How many contributions were made because of the completely open nature of the product? Is it "fair" to those people that the controllers of the project want to change how it's offered at a later date? Some people are happy to feel like something they have contributed is in use by a lot of people regardless of whether someone else is making money from it.

There are often lots of entangled assumptions in open projects like these. Ultimately, people have a right to offer their work as they want, so I see no problem with projects trying to request additional restrictions on how their work is used, but I also don't see a problem with companies using open projects as offerings. It was offered for free, and it's not like the cost of the offering isn't usually just the cost of the underlying resources plus some additional amount for ease of management.




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