Briar is hard to regulate because of it having no server, hence I was wondering: are they an alternative to whatever the EU is doing with general messaging apps?
- I don’t think that’s how the legal minded people think. - They’ll just go after the developers, force the program abandoned and illegal. 
- Technically or legally? 
- They just won’t comply. These FOSS services never have to worry about the law anyway - there are literal piracy sites, lol - FOSS is fucked either way in EU starting end 2027 because of CRA. - EU, the entity that couldn’t make a functioning TODO app given a couple million EUR budget, is regulatory killing computing, software and digital communications. - Elborate? - I replied in a sister comment. - Thank you for replying 
 
 
- Isn’t FOSS excluded from CRA. Why should it be fucked? - It isn’t, the license you publish your code under has no relation to whether or not the regulation applies. - For example I develop a small opensource (GPL) application, for which I do paid support. Because of the paid support, it’s interpreted as a commercial activity. Without the paid support, I can’t spend time on the project. I used to see it as a way to have the large users subsidise the project for all. Turns out it’s a huge liability instead. - So I’ll have to abandon the project when the law comes into effect. It’ll be easier to rewrite it closed source as an employee for those companies, for they do have a legal department. 
 
 
 



