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This squashed commit contains all Cal.diy changes applied on top of calcom/cal.com main: - Rebrand Cal.com to Cal.diy across the entire codebase - Remove Enterprise Edition (EE) features, license checks, and AGPL restrictions - Switch license from AGPL-3.0 to MIT - Remove docs/ directory (migrated to Nextra at cal.diy) - Remove dead code: org tests, EE tips, platform nav, premium username, SAML/SSO, etc. - Clean up .env.example for self-hosted Cal.diy - Update Docker image references to calcom/cal.diy - Update README, CONTRIBUTING.md, and issue templates for Cal.diy community fork - Add PR welcome bot for Cal.diy contributors - Fix API v2 breaking changes oasdiff ignore entries - Replace Blacksmith CI runners with default GitHub Actions 3893 files changed, 20789 insertions(+), 411020 deletions(-) Co-Authored-By: benny@cal.com <sldisek783@gmail.com>
…I v2 atoms controllers (#1701) Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
…notices, and package metadata (#1702) Co-authored-by: Devin AI <158243242+devin-ai-integration[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
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@pumfleet Force merging. We determined as a team that for this Cal.diy PR, these failures can be handled in follow-ups soon and/or are inevitable. |
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So basiclaly this Pull Reuest changed from AGPL to MIT License but ripped out enterprise stuff and renamed from cal.com to cal.diy. The GPL and AGPL are used by corporations as a Communist Virus Trap to keep people from actually profiting on their own source code modifications to an existing product. So while ripping out the Enterprise (valuable) features shows their bad-faith intentions, it is a win for the world that it was relicensed as MIT. I am the maintainer of www.FuckGPL.com. Go there to learn more. If you want a better alternative to the MIT vs GPL, consider my own Small Business License, which lets projects be DUAL LICENSED with optional fallback after X Years so that individuals and Small Businesses can use and host completely free (with same rights as the base license, such as MIT) while prohibiting larger businesses from rent-seeking. This would save ElasticSearch from Amazon AWS predation, for instance, and keep Cal.DIY from being exploited from bigger businesses as well, which might be the REAL reason they are making this move. |
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