[fluffy]so all this stuff around Automattic and Wordpress reminds me of the reason Wordpress is even as popular as it is today: because back in the early 00s, Six Apart did some similarly boneheaded threats of license enforcement on Movable Type which led everyone to drop it and switch to Wordpress pretty much overnight.
[tantek]Except Six Apart did that to every one of its users. WPEngine is being managed/extracted by private equity so I don't really have a lot of sympathy for their shenanigans. Still the whole fracas does seem reputationally damaging all around
[fluffy]As I recall, Six Apart never threatened individual users of Movable Type, they were just threatening to go after people who were doing “professional services” on Movable Type, which included making themes and custom installations for others.
[fluffy]They were quite clear on how individual users were free and clear to use it without paying money, but they were becoming more explicit about what they considered to be a commercial use. They were also weirdly proud of having never actually enforced that against Huffington Post, which was at the time the largest/most popular MT-based site.
[tantek]Yes that sounds right, only going after that whole (somewhat ambiguous) class of users. There was an attempt at a professional / non-professional distinction (did ad revenue count?), also MT used a custom open source license, not any kind of "standard" one, which they explicitly changed from MT2 to 3 IIRC to include those clauses and that upset people (and broke trust)
[Joe_Crawford]I made some layout changes this morning and was looking at longer posts and stumbled on this one from 10 years ago. I surely wish I'd encountered more of IndieWeb stuff then. https://artlung.com/blog/2013/06/08/lots-of-news-few-bloggers/