tux3 a day ago

I will be surprised if the EU CRA results in more F500 companies entering suppport contracts with their major OSS dependencies, but that would definitely be the ideal outcome.

There's some good pro-consumer intent in this law, but as is often the case the regulators barely understand the ecosystem they're regulating. It was not designed with the massive importance of open-source in mind from the start.

  • kazinator a day ago

    Why would it be the ideal outcome? Not everyone writing open source wants to be at the beck and call of some F500 companies.

    That's likely the outcome that the corporate interests behind EU CRA want: to put a lasso around the neck of open source and have it be something that either serves them, or does not exist.

    • pabs3 7 hours ago

      Under the EU CRA, open source maintainers have no obligations to anyone, unless they have paid contractual relationships with users. If anything, this means open source maintainers now have a revenue source; doing paperwork for things they are probably already doing.

      https://lwn.net/Articles/944300/ https://lwn.net/Articles/1023306/

      • kazinator 5 hours ago

        Paperwork ... just the thing you get into open source for.

        What if you're not probably already doing those things?

        • pabs3 2 hours ago

          Then you either continue to not those things (with no consequences, except maybe companies asking you to do them, maybe they will offer incentives), or you decide to do those things since they are a good idea anyway.

  • Avamander a day ago

    > I will be surprised if the EU CRA results in more F500 companies entering suppport contracts with their major OSS dependencies, but that would definitely be the ideal outcome.

    If it's made simple enough (with an EU legal entity), I see it quite likely.

fwlr 18 hours ago

Seems very likely this will lead to “professional repackagers” whose business model is “for a fee you may install our fork of curl and we will promptly reply to emails like this”, unfortunately.

  • akadruid1 10 hours ago

    Red Hat would be smart to get in on this

cyb0rg0 8 hours ago

Really? Asking a third-party dev to vouch for testing counts as risk assessment?

Feels like classic Big-4 CYA checkbox theater.