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> Asking me to open a new issue to discuss this behavior instead of it being a high priority for them to open up a new issue internally to fix this is odd. I'm not here to do their homework for them.

Why are people so entitled? How much is the author paying WolfSSL to make demands of them?

> Currently I've only identified one victim of this decision, but there's bound to be more out there.

Oh yes, he has become a victim of using a FOSS library.

 help



The "victim" was the Elixir or Erlang library, not himself. To be clear.

I don’t think it was clear, but thanks for the insight.

Was WolfSSL forced upon Elixir or Erlang? Did they purchase it and received a defective product? Are they held hostage by WolfSSL’s decisions? Are they not allowed to modify WolfSSL as needed themselves?

I fail to see any victims beyond perhaps the WolfSSL maintainers for having to suffer such entitlement.


The lib is (AIUI) a client library, meaning that it will fail to communicate with an HTTPS-enabled, WolfSSL) server, ostensibly because the WolfSSL isn’t SOEC-compliant.

You explicitly modeled the situation so that no victims can exist, so please do spare people from the autofellatious poetic questions and remarks about how you fail to see any victims.

> Was WolfSSL forced upon Elixir or Erlang?

Yes actually, and upon others, that's how computer networking works. Did you read the blogpost by the way? Even just the beginning? Really doesn't seem like it.

Hint: there's a reason the word "middlebox" is mentioned 16 times in there, and that the word "server" is mentioned another 6 more.

> Did they purchase it and received a defective product?

They did not purchase a copy, WolfSSL distributed them one for free. The blogpost author did identify the product as defective however, as it allows for and defaults to spec-noncompliant behavior. It stands to reason that this then affects WolfSSL's paying customers (and their downstream customers) too, who might be unknowingly operating or interacting with spec-noncompliant services as a result.

Will people need to read out the whole article for you?

> Are they held hostage by WolfSSL’s decisions?

Yes, and so are others, that's (still) how computer networking works.

> Are they not allowed to modify WolfSSL as needed themselves?

What would they do with it? Put it on a USB stick and stick it up their ass?

> for having to suffer such entitlement

Are you really one to take issue with another person's behavior after this power tantrum?


> Oh yes, he has become a victim of using a FOSS library.

many such cases


Neither person is entitled to the work of the other and neither wants to do the work which seems to be how we ended up here. The author can't make demands of the project and so wrote a blog post warning others that it's not production ready and you'll have broken software if you use it. Their conclusion isn't that they must fix it but that you should use a more mature library.

Two adults both defected in the social prisoner's dilemma and so here we are. Both individuals believing to have done free labor for the other and that they should be grateful.




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