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This is a list of notable software packages which were published as free and open-source software, or into the public domain, but were made proprietary software, or otherwise switched to a license (including source-available licenses) that is not considered to be free and open source.
Title | Orig. free date | License change date | Initial free license | Non-free license | Forked replacement | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Akka | 2009 | 2022 | Apache-2.0 | Business Source License[1][2] | ||
ArangoDB | 2011 | 2023 | Apache-2.0 | Business Source License[3] | ||
Aseprite | 2001 | 2016 | GPL-2.0 | EULA that permits personal use but forbids redistribution[4] | LibreSprite | |
CockroachDB | 2015 | 2019 | Apache-2.0 | Business Source License[5] | ||
Consul | 2014 | 2023[6] | MPL-2.0 | Business Source License[6] | ||
Couchbase Server | 2010 | 2021 | Apache-2.0 | Business Source License[7] | ||
Couchbase Mobile | 2022[8] | Apache-2.0 | Business Source License[8] | |||
Elasticsearch | 2010 | 2021 | Apache-2.0 | "Elastic License" and Server Side Public License[9][10][11] | OpenSearch | Added AGPL v3.0 on 29 August 2024[12] |
Emby | 2014 | 2018 | GPL-2.0 | Source code closed on December 8, 2018.[13] | Jellyfin | |
FBReader | 2013 | 2015 | GPL-2.0-or-later | Apparently the number of devs was limited, and they all agreed to relicense it.[citation needed] | ||
LiveCode | 2013 | 2021[14] | GPL-3.0-only | proprietary[14] | The Livecode company developed it, ran a Kickstarter campaign to GPL it, ran it for eight years open source, and then relicensed it back to proprietary, saying there were few other contributors, most were using the free GPL version, and they couldn't sustain the project.[14] | |
LiveJournal | 1999 | 2014 | GPL-2.0-or-later | The source code was made private in 2014. | Dreamwidth | |
MetaMask | 2016 | 2020 | MIT | Custom proprietary "non-commercial use only" license.[15] | ||
MongoDB | 2009 | 2018 | AGPL-3.0-only | Server Side Public License[16][17] | ||
Nexuiz | 2005 | 2012 | GPL-2.0-or-later | Game abandoned in favour of a commercial video game of the same name, which licensed the Nexuiz title but is not based on its engine. | Xonotic[18] | |
OctoberCMS | 2014 | 2021 | MIT | Cited the sustainability of its open source model as a factor.[19] | Winter[20][21] | |
OTRS | 2001 | 2020 | GPL-3.0-or-later | Support for the Community Edition dropped on December 23, 2020,[22] | Znuny | |
Paint.NET | 2004 | 2007 | MIT | freeware license that prohibits modification or resale[23] | ||
PyMOL | 2000 | 2010 | MIT-CMU[24] | [25][26][27][28] | ||
2008 | 2017 | CPAL-1.0 | Source code was made private in 2017, as the internal codebase had already diverged significantly from the public one. | |||
Redis | 2009 | 2024 | BSD-3-Clause | dual: custom license and Server Side Public License[29] | Valkey[30] | |
Sourcegraph | 2013 | 2023 | Apache-2.0 | proprietary[31] | ||
Terraform | 2014 | 2023[6] | MPL-2.0 | Business Source License[6] | OpenTofu[32] | HashiCorp founder considered the move "tragic for open source innovation."[33] |
Tux Racer | 2000 | 2002 | GPL-2.0-or-later | Commercial expansion by original authors, also called Tux Racer. | Extreme Tux Racer (formerly PlanetPenguin Racer) | |
Vagrant | 2010 | 2023[6] | MIT | Business Source License[6] |
Open-Source Philosophy
PyMOL is a commercial product, but we make most of its source code freely available under a permissive license. The open source project is maintained by Schrödinger and ultimately funded by everyone who purchases a PyMOL license.
Open source enables open science.
This was the vision of the original PyMOL author Warren L. DeLano.