I have to disagree… distribution via the App Store (or any other distribution method) does not preclude a program from being open source. And according to the Colloquy development page, they're still open source (http://colloquy.info/project/wiki/Development%20Guide). The same situation is true for Growl and Limechat. If you are interested in the development of any of these, the source code is still free, and you a free to download it and build your own software from source. VLC is another example, and was re-added to the iOS App Store today, and remains open source software. The only thing that the label "open source" requires of a developer is that the SOURCE be available for the (not necessarily non-paying) user to download. 

Please, prior to demanding that open source software be free, and then claiming that software is not open source if it isn't free, read the gnu.org link provided by Mr. Odgaard which defines the term 'open source'. 

Dustin Wheeler
mskblackbelt@me.com

Sent from my iPad

On Jul 18, 2013, at 20:28, kafi <kkaaffii@gmail.com> wrote:

Allan Odgaard-4 wrote
I picked a license that wouldn’t disallow something that I was already
doing.

Both Limechat and Colloquy are in the iOS app store, but started as open
source projects.
Growl is in the Mac app store, but also has the source availble.
QuickCursor I think is now pulled from the Mac app store, but is also on
GitHub, I know there are more ..


Limechat and Colloquy are no longer open source as they are now in the iOS
app store. The vice versa is for QuickCursor.

Growl 1.3 is no longer open source. So, none of these examples are valid.
Try again.



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