Talk about feeling watched.
As far as I can work out there are 2 main types of people/organisations that get involved in Open Source software:
1. People who passionately care about some sort of cause and wish to use the Open Source pathway to get as much out to as many people as they possibly can.
1.1. Examples that spring to mind are:
1.1.1 GIMP: Spencer Kimball and his chums felt that Adobe was charging vast amounts for their product (Photoshop) because they had a virtual monopoly (it worked; Photoshop now sells for about 1/20th of what it did 20 years ago).
1.1.2 Open Office felt the same about Microsoft Office: When the Open Office people had a "lover's tiff" and some of them went away to start LibreOffice those people were able to take all the Open Office code with them, it being Open Source . . .
2. People who are only really interested in their commercial product, so release an Open Source version (knowing they can stop it in its tracks whenever it serves their interests) in the hope that users of the Open Source version will contribute an awful lot of work that can be folded back into the commercial version. I am, at the moment, only aware of one example . . .
People in case #1 take a lot of care to make sure that "all and everything" is available to "all and everyone" because they regard an Open Source licence NOT as a handy lever to get more of what they want, but as the driving force behind their work.
People in case #2 probably don't bother to go through an Open Source licence carefully, and at a later date, should they drop their Open Source version, a lot of what SHOULD have been included in a request for source code is quietly not talked about, or hedged around with so many difficulties that no one can take the time and effort to pursue it.
Talk about feeling watched.
I would like to believe that:
1. This Forum IS being watched,
2. By users of the product OXT is derived from who are wondering whether the slightly awkward calculation about developing Open Source software versus code-protected software at quite a price might justify moving one's code-bases to OXT.
3. People who feel a bit guilty because they know that they have violated the Open Source licence they signed up to.
4. People who might feel that they can learn from 'here' just as we can, occasionally, learn from 'there'.
5. People who, as soon as the Open Source version of the product from which OXT is derived was dropped by the parent company, stopped using it (for some reason I totally fail to understand), and are wondering about jumping on board with OXT.
Talk about feeling watched.
The fact that, suddenly, "soon as I type something like this, the number of 'guest' users spikes up to 48+" should, surely, be taken as a compliment as we are getting under someone's skin: skin that could do with a bit of a scratch.