Freedom Means Having A Choice

Why we all need Almalinux ... whether we use it or not!

The AlmaLinux OS Foundation1 continues to make fully license-compliant releases of a fully RHEL-Compatible Linux distribution within one or two days of RehdHat’s releases. This is actually good for everyone, including Red Hat. The most recent full release, AlmaLinux 9.0, appeared within 2 days of the release of RHEL 9.

AlmaLinux 9 Release Image

It validates Red Hat’s good faith

The AlmaLinux community validates that Red Hat’s product is indeed a true, forkable Open Source project and not a bad-faith hack like other self-described open source products (for example, Forgerock, who appear to actively engineer their code to be unforkable by failing to document which parts are proprietary and which are just the CDDL-licensed Sun/Oracle code they took, and failing to provide tools for debranding).

It provides those who need a self maintained Linux with something that has an off-ramp

Not everyone wants Red Hat’s subscription. Some Linux users - notabl;y in the cloud hosting market - are happy to self-supportand have the skills and respources to do so. They could base their work on Debian or another distribution, but as a RHEL downstream their customers retain a freedom of choice of support provider and including being free to switch to Red Hat at any time.

It creates an on-ramp for RHEL

Red Hat benefits from the growth of its adoption base, as users of downstream distributions can and do become customers.

It creates a no negotiation zone for innovative hacking

Some users need access to RHEL for skunkworks hacking that does not need to be included in their licensing accounting under their Red Hat agreement.

This flexibility used to be included within Red Hat’s licensing universe but a hacker at a hedge fund on Wall Street ruined things for everyone by gaming Red Hat’s original trust in their customers and using a single licence to support an entire company. Red Hat was forced to reword its customer agreement to embrace all systems running RHEL.

1

Disclosure: I am a director of the AlmaLinux OS Foundation and its founder CloudLinux is a client. This article represents my own opinion and is no way endorsed by either entity.

2

(Originally posted on a different test-blog on 26-May-2022)