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I get preferring that major open sourced projects weren't controlled by a big corporation, but this seems overly dramatic.

Docker was always a company first and foremost, I fail to see how leaving the technology in their commercial control would have been better in any way than making it an open standard. Just because Docker = small = good and Google = giant corporation = evil? Docker raised huge amounts of VC funding, they had every intention of becoming a giant corporation themselves.

And it's kind of bizarre to completely discount the outcome of this situation, which is that we have amazing container tools that are free and open and standardized, just because you don't like some of the parties involved in getting to this point.




> making it an open standard

I would hesitate to use the term "open standard" until I'd thoroughly assessed the identities of everyone contributing to that open spec, along with those of their employers, and what history the spec has of accepting genuinely "community" contributions (in the 1990s sense of that word)


The container image/runtime/distribution area is heavily standardized now via the Open Container Initiative (OCI) that was founded 5 years ago.

https://www.linuxfoundation.org/press-release/2015/12/open-c... https://kubernetes.io/blog/2016/12/container-runtime-interfa...

You can see the releases and specs that are supported by all major container runtimes here: https://opencontainers.org/release-notices/overview/

For example, OpenShift ships https://cri-o.io in its kubernetes distribution as its container runtime, so this isn't really new.

Disclosure: I helped start OCI and CNCF


I've never tried contributing to CRI so I don't really know what the process is like. I imagine like any such large and established standard it would require a herculean effort, that doesn't necessarily mean it's not open just that it can't possibly accept any random idea that comes along and still continue to serve its huge user base.

But let's say you're right and call it a closed standard. Then this change drops support for one older, clunkier closed standard in favor of the current closed standard. Still doesn't seem like anything to get upset over.




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