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Those who forget history often inadvertently repeat it. Some of us recall that twenty-one years ago, the most popular code hosting site, a fully Free and Open Source (FOSS)
 site called SourceForge, proprietarized all their code — never to make it FOSS again.  Major FOSS projects slowly left
 SourceForge since it was now, itself, a proprietary system, and antithetical to FOSS.  FOSS communities learned that it was a mistake to allow a for-profit, proprietary
 software company to become the dominant FOSS collaborative development site.  SourceForge slowly collapsed after the DotCom crash,
 and today, SourceForge is more advertising link-bait than it is code hosting. We learned a valuable lesson that was a bit too easy to forget — especially when corporate involvement manipulates
  FOSS communities to its own ends.  We now must learn the SourceForge lesson again with Microsoft's GitHub.


Nice
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Yes, but it is a difference of having the product on a host, which naturally has to be kept in compliance with the legislation of a country like the product itself, this is not very different in the EU, than hosting it directly on a government server, where simple political and even party interests can change the regulations.
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