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1. px43+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-07-26 12:54:31
> Google's open source projects are open in name only.

The link at the top of the page is pointing to the GitHub repo, where you can see literally over a million contributions from thousands of people working at hundreds of companies: https://github.com/chromium/chromium/commits/main

I've worked on both Chrome and Android (Chromium and AOSP) professionally, and never worked at Google.

replies(3): >>jsjohn+83 >>lcnPyl+i3 >>troupo+M5
2. jsjohn+83[view] [source] 2023-07-26 13:08:48
>>px43+(OP)
You and GP both can be right depending on definition used for “open source”.
3. lcnPyl+i3[view] [source] 2023-07-26 13:09:30
>>px43+(OP)
There is the OSS vs FOSS distinction which may have been unwittingly invoked. Certainly there is nothing “free” about Chromium except its price. Google is not about to switch to a fork for Chrome and any changes to Chromium which are not approved by Google are unlikely to be in any release builds.
4. troupo+M5[view] [source] 2023-07-26 13:20:23
>>px43+(OP)
Well, true :)

What I should've written is that: yes, they are open source, but there's no way to influence the direction they are going. These projects are 100% Google-run, and very few (if any) decisions are public.

For most projects there's also a significant proprietary part in the actual final product

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