Difference between revisions of "Free Software Directory:Antifeatures"

From Free Software Directory
Jump to: navigation, search
m
m
Line 9: Line 9:
 
The Free Software Directory (FSD) notify you when viewing the details of an app with one or more of these Antifeatures.
 
The Free Software Directory (FSD) notify you when viewing the details of an app with one or more of these Antifeatures.
  
* [[:Category:Software with antifeatures|Software with antifeatures]] '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Software with antifeatures}} [[:Category:Software with antifeatures|listed]])''':
+
* Software with [[:Category:Antifeatures|antifeatures]] '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Antifeatures}} [[:Category:Antifeatures|listed]])''':
 
** Delayed upstream forks '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Antifeature: Delayed upstream forks}} [[:Category: Antifeature: Delayed upstream forks|listed]])''' - Software that is not a straight fork; instead, they are parallel efforts that works closely with and re-bases in synchronization on the latest base software as the upstream supplier.
 
** Delayed upstream forks '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Antifeature: Delayed upstream forks}} [[:Category: Antifeature: Delayed upstream forks|listed]])''' - Software that is not a straight fork; instead, they are parallel efforts that works closely with and re-bases in synchronization on the latest base software as the upstream supplier.
 
** Free forks needed! '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Free forks needed!}} [[:Category:Free forks needed!|listed]])''' – the developer has betrayed the community by moving to a proprietary license, but people can continue to use and fork the last free version.
 
** Free forks needed! '''({{PAGESINCATEGORY:Free forks needed!}} [[:Category:Free forks needed!|listed]])''' – the developer has betrayed the community by moving to a proprietary license, but people can continue to use and fork the last free version.

Revision as of 05:39, 24 November 2016

See Dev if you want to contribute to this project.

Merge from Free System Distribution Guidelines (GNU FSDG) and software categories.

This page can be used by people to exclude software in these categories, or inform their developers to understand that they have this warning label so they can be improved.

Antifeatures are flags applied to applications to warn of behaviour that may be undesirable from the user's perspective. Frequently it is behaviour that benefits the developer or third party, but that the end user of the software would prefer not to be there.

The Free Software Directory (FSD) notify you when viewing the details of an app with one or more of these Antifeatures.

  • Software with antifeatures (0 listed):
    • Delayed upstream forks (0 listed) - Software that is not a straight fork; instead, they are parallel efforts that works closely with and re-bases in synchronization on the latest base software as the upstream supplier.
    • Free forks needed! (0 listed) – the developer has betrayed the community by moving to a proprietary license, but people can continue to use and fork the last free version.
    • Software known to have grave flaws (0 listed) – Software that fails to fully do the job that it says it does.
    • Software names with words to avoid (0 listed) – Software named with Words to Avoid (or Use with Care) Because They Are Loaded or Confusing.
    • Source code of the latest version not published (0 listed) - Software with delayed source code published for some reason.

The numbers indicate how many apps in the main FSD repository have each antifeature, and you can click through to see them all.



Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.3 or any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license is included in the page “GNU Free Documentation License”.

The copyright and license notices on this page only apply to the text on this page. Any software or copyright-licenses or other similar notices described in this text has its own copyright notice and license, which can usually be found in the distribution or license text itself.