RE: https://social.treehouse.systems/@wwahammy/116264430375745593
I want everyone who says "this is the law, distros need to comply" I want you to explain a plausible set of circumstances to lead to the following:
* That the AG of California will sue a random Linux distro which has effectively no money
* Prove who the OS distributor actually is (is it the committers? Committers of what part? Their bank account with $12 in it?)
* Prove by preponderance of the evidence how many children used the OS in order to set the fines
* get a judge and jury to think this isn't a massive waste of their time
* That it isn't just a violation of the law but is a "negligent" or "intentional" violation
* all the while, the OS maker and everyone else having effectively zero knowledge of who uses it since there's no continuing relationship with users.
How does all of this happen?
@cy the AG of California doesn't care about Linux. It's not an issue they have ever thought about or considered.
@pavel @wwahammy this is fairly well-trodden territory. They can’t force open-source devs to implement anything, really.
But they CAN regulate what can be SOLD. So the “right” way for RH/Canonical/whoever to comply would be to only ship the required capabilities in Enterprise Desktop versions of their OS. (Arguably they don’t sell an OS at all, but that would be hard to convince a jury of, I bet.)
Then fight any attempt to enforce more than that.
@pavel @wwahammy it is wrong, but it’s also how the system is designed so it’s not novel or surprising. Legislatures pass laws that conflict with higher laws (including the constitution) all the time. The judiciary acts as a check on that power.
Legislatures almost always have the ability to ask the judiciary to weigh in on proposed law, but they’re not required to do so.
Yes this whole thing is problematic, but also unlikely to change