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wikiHow_talk:Right to Fork

On 16:04, 31 May 2008

Thanks For the Memo said:

Strange... If I were the creator of a site I would refuse to give it up...

On 01:39, 22 March 2009

AmyCat said:

Never heard of "right to Fork" before. Sounds good. I wish FaceBook and LiveJournal had this...

On 18:43, 19 April 2009

Isaac Sherman said:

Right to fork... I get it! Branching off! I thought it was just a euphemism for disparaging the current steward...

On 06:32, 24 August 2010

99.238.31.18 said:

Wait... The content is licensed under CC-BY-NC-SA... But the site itself contains ads all over the place, which is certainly "commercial"... How exactly does the right to fork work in this situation?

On 07:04, 24 August 2010

Writelf said:

Wait... The content is licensed under CC-BY-NC-SA... But the site itself contains ads all over the place, which is certainly "commercial"... How exactly does the right to fork work in this situation?

The site only shows ads to anonymous users, as a registered user you never see ads. Also, anon users get the option to turn off the ads.

On 19:40, 20 July 2011

BrianFSU said:

Right to fork is very interesting and trusting. Jack, you are a better man than I.

At 01:32, Nov 19, 2014

Antoine Sakho said:

Wow. So just. And brave - usually, start-ups try to increase switching costs, not reduce them.

But even then, you're growing and seem to have a community which loves your product.

It says a lot about the value you bring your users and community - you're putting yourself to the absolute test of the value you're bringing them.

I can only hope you'll prove that the greatest businesses are those which are ultimately aligned with their users' interests.

What a paradigm shift.

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