Docker just updated their terms of use for Docker Desktop that requires a paid subscription for companies that have more than 250 employees or $10M in annual revenue. Some people have some feelings about this that I don’t quite understand. Can someone break it down for me?
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Top comments (7)
I appreciate the explanation. I feel like this doesn't justify the reaction I've been seeing from folks about it, though. That is, it feels like it's not so much Docker pissing off the engineers, but rather the engineers getting pissed off about it. The amount of money it costs is a rounding error if Docker is a core tool for your business.
We have so many real issues in tech to channel that energy on, like rampant sexism by well known engineers.
To be clear, I realize I was probably preaching to the choir. 😄
That’s fair, however the people I’ve seen complaining about this change the most don’t come across as the people that need this kind of assistance. Highly anecdotal and scoped to my own field of view, admittedly.
My interpretation here is that the reactions to this change you and I have each observed have very different intensities. I’m talking about people I respect (not even just the usual suspects on HN) virtually frothing at the mouth over the change, which is why I made the comparison to more serious issues.
But that’s also the reason I asked here instead of asking those people about it directly. Based on their clearly passionate reactions, I couldn’t expect a dispassionate explanation.
As far as I don't need Docker Desktop and not in range of employees or revenue ammounts, I'm not worried about paying for using that. And I can switch to other open source alternatives. #NotABigDeal ;)
This is where I'm at with it, too. I pay like $5/mo for my own personal account so I can host more than 1 private container repo anyway (which I completely forgot about) so maybe it's just people worrying about having to set up a subscription when they didn't before? I feel like if Docker is part of your business, even if it's just to build the containers, this is such a tiny thing to worry about.
Company, after dropping $30,000 for this month's AWS bill: What?! I have to pay $7 per month per engineer (on the order of 1/20 of 1% of that engineer's salary in the US) for Docker now?! This is outrageous!
Edit, for clarity: Not my company 😂 Just the reactions I've been seeing from folks