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Reminds me of TranscribersOfReddit[0] which is a great attempt at trying to make the web more accessible for all. Reddit posts get cross posted and those without visual impairments can transcribe the photo. Their bot is also starting to get pretty good!

[0] https://www.reddit.com/r/TranscribersOfReddit


Most of the pieces show up on their instagram


Is there a name for companies that release their code under an actual free license, but charge for other things like support? Companies that come to mind are flynn.io or sidekiq.org (both of which were recently on the front-page).


Flynn co-founder here.

Great question. We just consider ourselves to be a normal company that happens to build open source tools. We also try to make money in ways that don't interfere with the open nature of what we build.

There are lots of different kinds of companies whose engineers primarily work on open source projects. In most cases where their core "product" is an open source technology they also sell commercial support, usually to large companies who need an SLA. Others (like us) sell managed services as well.

We made the decision before we started the company to make anything we ever asked users to run on their own machines permissively licensed open source and just be careful with our trademark (like Mozilla is[1]). That leaves the door open for closed-source SaaS in the future but gives our users (and investors) a clear set of expectations about how and what we'll build.

I think it's important for companies to be as clear as possible about how and why they license their code, what choices they'll make in the future, and what happens when the company changes hands. It would be great to see something like an "open source pledge" where founders/the company could contractually commit to either a final open source release before closing (like Parse did[2]) or staying open after being acquired (like Sun didn't after being acquired by Oracle [3]).

[1] https://www.mozilla.org/en-US/foundation/trademarks/policy/ [2] http://blog.parse.com/announcements/introducing-parse-server... [3] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Solaris_(operating_system)#Pos...

edit: We tend to avoid calling ourselves an "open source company" which can get confused with the "open company" movement[4].

[4] http://www.opencompany.org/


Red Hat is a billion dollar company that does exactly that.


LINE made $268 Million from just stickers last year http://qz.com/704768/line-sold-268-million-worth-of-stickers...

If Discord can keep up the growth, things like stickers, emojis, and sound packs could pull in good revenue. Also, the gaming community is already used to paying for these items on sites like Twitch


I will stand corrected, with this excellent example.


God, I'm so disconnected with current millennial trends, I had to lookup what those stickers were.


I'm a millennial and haven't heard of them until now.

Everyone likes to keep coming up with new names for the word "emote".


I'm actually a millennial too, I just don't give a damn about all these new apps that are reinventing irc for the tap/swipe people.


I have to admit, Slack and Discord are much nicer to use than IRC - even something like IRCCloud (and I'm a relatively happy paying customer of IRCCloud).


It's probably due to location. LINE is absolutely dominant in Japan, Taiwan, Thailand and a few other Asian markets. None of my friends in America use it really. Facebook messenger is clearly watching LINE closely though.


>Also, the gaming community is already used to paying for these items on sites like Twitch

But I have a "global twitch emote" plugin on chrome so I presume kappa will already show up for me if used in discord?


Why would a chrome plugin affect a totally separate application?


It's not really totally separate. Discord is a web app and you can run it in chrome. The only feature that you lose is push-to-talk, last I looked.

Granted, a lot of people will run the electron-based desktop app (which packages the web site), but IIRC, there's a plugin for twitch emotes for it too.


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