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aaronbrethorst 2 days ago

Many S3-compatible services are recommending that their users use the S3 SDK directly, and changing the default settings in this way can have a direct impact on their users.

This is wholly predictable; AWS isn't in the business of letting other companies OpenSearch them.

null_deref 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

I don’t think that the article at least state it was malicious. Also some (major?) businesses benefits exist when your company sets the standards for a large market

benatkin 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

That’s an odd way to describe it. Elasticsearch was a wrapper around Lucene. Had they started with a restrictive license rather than wait until it got popular under the nonrestrictive license, Solr might have taken off more. OpenSearch is what the community needed. That Amazon did it is fine.

aaronbrethorst 2 days ago | parent [-]

Here's a good discussion from here in 2021 about the fork that colors my perception: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=26780848

benatkin a day ago | parent [-]

Yeah Amazon’s motivations aren’t great, but it’s occupying a space that opened up when Elastic changed the license on Elasticsearch. Nobody’s going to create another permissively licensed alternative to it just because they’re annoyed it’s an Amazon project.

arandomhuman a day ago | parent [-]

Amazon, after making its pretty barebones fork, lobbed it off to the Linux Foundation. It ultimately feels lazy and self-serving in a way only a select few companies can pull off.