cge 19 hours ago

Something that is dismaying to me about this situation is that, on one hand, the anti-Collabora arguments are not unconvincing: the situation with Collabora and the foundation seems to have been dubious at best, and I would not be surprised if their legal worries are well-founded.

But on the other, in arguably trying to address the problems, the anti-Collabora side seems to exhibit a distressing lack of honor and decency. The dismissal of voting results that didn't go their way, the malicious misreadings of member votes against their proposals (eg, deciding "If the Board majority group insists on proceeding with this misguided and premature motion, I vote NO" was not a vote against the proposal because the motion was "neither misguided nor premature"), the arguments that complaints about their behavior violate community standards and are are not sufficiently respectful of the work they do, the toxic, patronizing, dismissive statements toward developers and others... even if they are right, I do not understand why they need to behave the way they are behaving.

  • Aurornis 17 hours ago

    The earlier threads from the Collabora side were also disappointing in how childish all of their arguments were structured. I read their posts and could barely understand what was being claimed in between all of the sarcasm and attacks, and I wasn't alone in the comments here.

    From the outside, this entire situation is obviously very heated. What seems to be missing is some adults in the room who can turn down the tempers, get everyone to take a beat, and then start coming to some reasonable compromises.

    Instead it feels like we're seeing the inevitable boiling over of passionate people who couldn't work well together and failed to find ways to cool off and work together.

    It's a sad situation to watch.

garciansmith 17 hours ago

I wish this was more clearly written. Maybe I missed something, and I guess this is supposing the reader already has a lot of background, but there are several points that confused me.

"At the time, nobody could imagine that the companies that had supported OpenOffice.org until then would create a project to kill LibreOffice."

Did they mean... to kill OpenOffice? Or had supported LibreOffice would want to create a project to kill it later? Because that fact that companies who had previously supported OpenOffice then switched to LibreOffice doesn't strike me as odd, given the situation with Oracle back then. Also, what is the "project" that is trying to kill LibreOffice?

I am not clear on how the Board of Directors differs from The Document Foundation (are they just the Board of Directors of The Document Foundation then?).

What is "TDC"? It is not even clear what that stands for, nor what this "parallel organization" was supposed to do and how it differed from The Document Foundation. And if "the plan to transfer many of TDF’s tasks and assets" to "TDC" didn't happen back in 2020, why is it being brought up here? But then the next paragraph talks about the transfer so it did happen the year before? But then was terminated? Again though, I don't get why it matters now except maybe that some people were upset by that move over five years ago.

"This attempt resulted in permanent damage to relations between the project’s components, and especially between certain BoD members and the team."

Who is "the team"? The Document Foundation?

"After years of discussions marked by accusations and finger-pointing, during which no real progress was made in resolving the legal issues, the authorities requested an audit..."

Who are "the authorities" requesting the audit?

A "third audit" was mentioned, but it is unclear if the one audit mentioned above in the post was that third one or one of the previous ones (describing these and when they happened would have helped).

I still have no clue as to what Collabora's relationship was and is to The Document Foundation.

They apologize for the need for this post, but I don't really understand why. I get the idea that, given their non-profit nature, there were issues, but making those more clear seems laudable (even if I don't think the post especially helped in doing so).

  • golfer 16 hours ago

    Agree wholeheartedly. Very confusing. If they want people to care, they need to explain the situation in a way to make people care.

  • ksec 11 hours ago

    Yes. I am bookmarking it for future reference. The post shows a perfect example why you need marketing and PR agency.

allenrb 20 hours ago

As a person who refuses to use “free” cloud products, and won’t even consider Office on Windows, I’m a big fan of LibreOffice. I’ve donated a few times over the years but probably not enough.

I’ll be sad if there’s not a free & local “office” solution available.

That said, my eyes crossed trying to read this. Do I need to ask an LLM to read the various messages and tell me what’s going on? ;-)

  • godot 20 hours ago

    I don't know about any of the drama happening, but if LibreOffice ceases to exist, there's still Softmaker FreeOffice as a free & local option. It's nothing fancy, but works for the times when I have to use one. I'm not against cloud products as you are, but it's nice being able to do stuff locally sometimes, it's just more convenient.

    • deafpolygon 19 hours ago

      If LO ceases to exist, then I will just use plain text typesetting tools.

      • c7b 16 hours ago

        There are many good options for text editing, some for presentations, but what about spreadsheets? Using Python/R/SQL everywhere ain't no panacea, spreadsheets are really useful in some cases and LO has the best implementation I've seen apart from Excel.

        • deafpolygon 8 hours ago

          plenty of ways with sqlite. someone just needs to come up with a good front-end without monetizing it.

          there's sqlite db browser, but not much challenger in this space because it either gets turned to a saas (notion, airtable) or is a niche dev tool.

    • dangus 17 hours ago

      OnlyOffice and its upcoming Euro Office derivative, which I already like better than LibreOffice.

      • KronisLV 17 hours ago

        Apparently Euro-Office has some drama around it too: https://www.onlyoffice.com/blog/2026/03/onlyoffice-flags-lic...

        OnlyOffice also seems to have a lack of clarity in regards to the ownership of the org (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47100599) but in general I think they're in the right here - you can't just ignore parts of a software license selectively because you feel like it. Oh and I liked their software when I did try it out, except LibreOffice seems like a slightly safer bet (though I'm also not as sensitive to the way its UI is).

        • dangus 2 hours ago

          I should also disclaim that I only need these office suites for occasional home use. If one of them disappears tomorrow it’s no big loss to me personally, not that I wouldn’t be sad about a loss of consumer choice.

          If I need something for a business that I’m going to depend on I’m just gonna give Microsoft ten bucks a month, hate to say it. Office is really better than any of these options by a long shot. I also find the Google suite to be really good and free as in beer.

  • fhdkweig 19 hours ago

    If LibreOffice ceases to exist, won't the old installers still work? Is it forkable to a new project? I seem to remember that it was Star Office then Open Office then LibreOffice.

    • kackerlacker 17 hours ago

      I think such situations are rather big risk that a community that already wasn't very active atrophies or splits and then atrophies. With code bases like that there's also a lot of maintenance so being able to run an old version is not necessarily enough.

      • jrumbut 16 hours ago

        Yeah that ability to use old code is great as an emergency escape hatch but it's not really a viable day-to-day document editing strategy.

      • eudamoniac 15 hours ago

        What maintenance are you talking about? I'm quite sure I could open any document on my computer with a libreoffice version from ten years ago. The functionality doesn't magically rot away...

        • greekrich92 12 hours ago

          Security vulnerabilities for one obvious example

    • johannes1234321 17 hours ago

      The questionnis: How does a community form, which can take a project tof that size? TDF andjvre Office cMd out of a long process of independent (from Sun Microsystems) contributions to OpenOffice, which at some point had a momentum to do a proper form and then another momentum to take over as the lead variant.

      For a successful fork you need a notable amount of people engaging in the fork.

  • shevy-java 19 hours ago

    > I’ll be sad if there’s not a free & local “office” solution available.

    I think a free open source suite will always exist. But probably slow down if existing open source solutions handicap progress for whatever the reason(s).

    They should focus on making the office suite much more useful and powerful and wide-spread. Like ffmpg+mpv!

  • tomrod 19 hours ago

    Before Libre Office was Open Office.

    I take comfort that we would not be without a local office suite for long.

    • SV_BubbleTime 18 hours ago

      I’d love for someone to be able to take it from “yeah it mostly works for me” to “oh fuck you Microsoft, I’m going to move our entire company over to this”.

      I’m not going to hold my breath.

      • redeeman 18 hours ago

        because thats not about quality, its about "i demand something thats 100% exactly the same as microsofts product, even in the places where its objectively crappier. I also wish it to track the microslop so that it consistently stays as shitty as microslop deems, so that I may never realize I use something else."

        • gus_massa 17 hours ago

          > "so that I may never realize I use something else"

          The main reasons are:

          1) ... so my muscle memory work. (In some editor Ctrl+Y is redo, in others no, I never remember in which editors, I hate when it doesn't work.)

          2) ... so I can exchange files with coworkers, and they will see exactly what I wrote (I recently received an email with a draft and I complained about a missing ≥. It actually was there was the visor in Gmail was not showing it.)

        • kube-system 16 hours ago

          This is the kind of attitude that stops OSS from becoming widely adopted. If simply shipping a quality office suite was enough, this problem would have been solved last millennium. (WordPerfect fuckin' slapped) And in fact, there are many quality office suites.

          Organizations choose Office because it:

          1. enables interoperability with other organizations

          2. has a commercial throat to choke

          3. has an existing pipeline of workers trained on it

          4. has a deep feature set for edge-case power-users

          5. integrates with other products and services that their customers want

          Every institutional office-migration project runs into these issues -- they're solvable, but damn if OSS advocates stopped pretending they didn't exist, they might actually fix them. LibreOffice/TDF is the closest anyone has gotten thus far in this regard.

          • mistrial9 15 hours ago

            curious that item zero is missing.. for specific example, long ago.. Brazil was in the middle about modernizing using desktop computers, language translations, support, and a large dose of polarization about depending on American products. So many kinds of Office software were being tested, including of course the MSFT products. This story is from the late 90s.

            One day, as much as I am aware, the entire national phone company of Brazil switched to using MSFT Office only, by decree from upper management. Why? much later, some correspondence between upper management / C-Suite at the company, and Brazilian attorneys hired by MSFT to negotiate, showed large, opaque payments, long-term discounts, and added support services, in exchange for changing to ONLY MSFT Office products. The change did in fact happen.

            Use your own brain and understand that MSFT has able legal and business teams, hired in the target country, that have large incentives based on closing sales. Those sales are closed using negotiation language and incentives that are appealing to the C-Suite and their banking and legal partners, period.

            I do not see this reality reflected in the too-neat summary of drivers there.

            • kube-system 15 hours ago

              As if it is somehow MSFT's fault that others failed to do the same?

              "Build it and they will come" is a falsehood proven over-and-over by a long history of dead startups who died before they ever figured out how find market fit. It doesn't matter how good your software is, if you don't convince people to use it, you won't have users.

              Look at Red Hat, GitLab, etc for examples of how to make OSS successful.

      • mattoxic 14 hours ago

        Boggles the mind that corporates stick to expensive, inefficient, insecure and in so many ways crap software. SQL Sever, Office, Oracle (any product), Windows servers and workstations - yet demand peak efficiency from staff.

    • bityard 17 hours ago

      There is still Open Office: https://www.openoffice.org

      • johannes1234321 16 hours ago

        Well, it exists but got one patch release (fixing 7 CVEs and little more) in 2025, no release in 2024, two patch releases in 2023. Not a really active project. Also most of the community moved on.

        Apache OOo is dumped by Oracle and since then didn't receive much love.

      • TiredOfLife 10 hours ago

        That project exists only to leech users.

everybodyknows 20 hours ago

Meeks' blog post, for comparison:

https://www.collaboraonline.com/blog/tdf-ejects-its-core-dev...

Note the references to legal issues; draw your own conclusions.

  • thayne 19 hours ago

    > at the same time accusing others of historic conflicts of interest

    Collabora clearly has a conflict of interest, as their Collabora Office products both benefit from, and compete with LibreOffice proper. They even allude to that conflict of interest in the next sentence:

    > overriding past board and engineering steering committee decisions and violating their own processes to drag code out of the attic to enable competing with their largest single contributor

    A non-profit dedicated to promoting open source software should do what is best for that project and its users regardless of if doing so steps on the toes of corporate sponsors.

    • ealexhudson 18 hours ago

      This plausibly demonstrates why a nonprofit may not be a great vehicle for some free software projects - while the nonprofit should do whats best for the project, if the main work is done by commercial sponsors then it’s crucial those sponsors feel the relationship is beneficial.

      The reality is free software office apps require significant professional development input. Apache Open Office is the obvious example.

      It’s a classic version of the tragedy of the commons. If Collabora goes off to its own thing, I struggle to believe they will maintain the development rate with new devs, and without development the TDF sponsorship will fall off.

      I hope we are not looking back in two years time regretting this.

      • coliveira 17 hours ago

        You're considering open source development as just another commercial endeavor. The fact that this is done by a nonprofit organization means it's pursuing goals that are not strictly commercial, and that is fine. Think about the GNU project as another example. If someone is not happy with that, it is always possible to start their own company.

        • dangus 17 hours ago

          I don’t think they’re considering it a commercial endeavor, they’re just acknowledging that complex open source projects often require paid work to effectively maintain and develop them.

          The GNU project works because it’s a bunch of small packages that are each maintained by approximately one person each for free on their spare time.

          LibreOffice is a complex office suite that essentially competes with a multi-billion dollar industry of complex office applications and services.

          It’s also an open source project that has pretty much always depended on corporate sponsorship and a paid variant rather than having some other form financial backing (e.g., it never went the Wikipedia route of being completely free for everyone and only surviving on donations).

          • hackze 17 hours ago

            Do you consider GNU Emacs a small package?

            • Seattle3503 16 hours ago

              I don't think they were talking about the size of the codebase. How much funding does emacs require to maintain?

      • thayne 9 hours ago

        > if the main work is done by commercial sponsors then it’s crucial those sponsors feel the relationship is beneficial

        But if the sponsor is getting a tax write-off because of their donation to non-profit to do work on the project that they would have done anyways for their commercial product, then they are basically just using the non-profit to avoid taxes, and while I'm not a lawyer, it wouldn't surprise me if that is illegal, especially if the company also controls seats on the board of directors.

        > a nonprofit may not be a great vehicle for some free software projects

        I've frequently wondered if we need some new kind of structure for funding open source projects works kind of like a non-profit but is more lenient in some ways, like allowing some kinds of business transactions in addition to accepting donations, and maybe you don't get as much of a tax deduction for donating to it. I don't know exactly what that would look like though, and it would probably be difficult to get right.

    • quikee 3 hours ago

      "Collabora clearly has a conflict of interest, as their Collabora Office products both benefit from, and compete with LibreOffice proper."

      But that was the point of TDF: being an umbrella for the community and the commercial partners. Commercial partner having its own interests is something that was expected and encouraged as long as the work would be done for the common good on the LibreOffice codebase. For the TDF itself there are COI policies in place as well from the very beginning.

      "A non-profit dedicated to promoting open source software should do what is best for that project and its users regardless of if doing so steps on the toes of corporate sponsors."

      That kind of thinking is what brought this result - especially when the corporate and the non-profit are supposed to be partners and work together for the common good. The result should be dialog to find a compromise that would work for both sides. So in this case forcefully reversing a previous decision and ignoring the de-atticisation rule (having active developers working on the code-base) was a needless aggressive move that just worsened the situation. And the reason for the move according to the TDF board was to "start the discussion".

      Note that the proper procedure for de-atticisation of the LOOL codebase would be to confirm there is notable developer activity. Users wanting LOOL is NOT enough and the TDF board has clearly ignored one of its own rules.

tzs 18 hours ago

I'm unclear on the relationship between Collabora and LibreOffice. Some of the earlier stories on this described TDF as ejecting LibreOffice core developers.

My understanding is that Collabora is an online collaborative office suit based on LibreOffice, with commercial support available and managed cloud hosting. It is also available fully open source and supports self-hosting if you don't want their commercial services. Their developers contribute back to LibreOffice.

What I think of when I think of core developers of an office suite are the people developing the word processor itself and the spreadsheet itself and the other core applications.

Did the ejected developers work on those, or did they only work on things built on top of then or other other non-core things? If they were working on the core applications how many non-Collabora people also work on them?

chadash 20 hours ago

For those of us with zero context, what's the story here?

  • eisa01 20 hours ago

    Not sure myself, it seems like some of the founders were kicked out in 2025 for "misuse of funds" according to the auditor of TDF / or the Foundation authorities?

    https://community.documentfoundation.org/t/well-known-high-c...

    Also found this in the annual report, sounds quite serious:

    > In 2023, following a request by the Foundation Authorities in Berlin, given the size our foundation has grown into over the last decade, TDF was audited, and a report was sent back to Berlin. The Board of Directors is working with the authorities to implement the improvements suggested by the audit

    https://nextcloud.documentfoundation.org/s/fsqeJZrAtXeR7JD?d...

    Would be helpful if the blog post was more clear about this

    • mschuster91 19 hours ago

      Yikes. They set up the foundation in Berlin, Germany? A country well known for its braindead tax laws and bureaucracy, particularly when it comes to NGOs?

      • janice1999 19 hours ago

        There are plenty of non-profit software projects headquartered in Berlin, e.g. KDE since 1997, and they seem to do just fine.

        • mschuster91 4 hours ago

          Yeah because they went into existence way before the bureaucracy became a nightmare and have had ample time to evolve with the legal landscape.

      • mhitza 18 hours ago

        It's stated as conflict of interest, not some bureaucracy.

        Things are still vague, due to some legal liability, probably. Sounds to me like for some grants/tenders received by the non-profit were contracted out to Collabora. Which in turn, profits from the base project.

  • WhyNotHugo 20 hours ago

    Based on the article:

    Some founders/directors kept using money from the foundation to pay their own private companies to get work done.

    This is highly irregular: you can’t manage funds that aren’t yours and use those funds to buy from a company which gives you profit.

    Legal council warned the of this irregularity, and nothing was made to change the status quo during years.

    • shevy-java 19 hours ago

      Isn't this theft, if true?

      • blm126 18 hours ago

        I wouldn't call it theft, exactly. Presumably work did get done. If I'm reading it right, its just a terrible conflict of interest. The board uses donations to pay companies to work on LibreOffice. That seems totally fine. Some of the board were running/part of companies that rely and work on LibreOffice. That also seems mostly fine? You want your board to represent your community. Then, those same board members directed work towards their companies.

        That's definitely a conflict of interest, but I wouldn't call it theft unless you prove the foundation was getting a bad deal. Could the foundation have gotten the work done better or cheaper hiring non-represented companies? That's the question you have to answer to call this theft.

        It doesn't seem that is really what the foundation is arguing though, so I'm guessing it wasn't that bad. It seems more their argument is that this violates the non-profit laws they operate under.

        • overfeed 16 hours ago

          > Some of the board were running/part of companies that rely and work on LibreOffice. That also seems mostly fine?

          Those board members were elected by foundation members who also work for Collabora, so it was a privilege escalation from contributors to (controlling?) foundation board seats

        • lmm 12 hours ago

          > It doesn't seem that is really what the foundation is arguing though, so I'm guessing it wasn't that bad. It seems more their argument is that this violates the non-profit laws they operate under.

          It may have been that bad. They don't really have to get into the messy arguments of "was this a fair price for this kind of contracting" because that kind of arrangement is inherently unethical, to the point that you can kind of assume it's embezzlement by default (which is why those non-profit laws are set that way).

      • worik 18 hours ago

        No. They did the work. It is a corrupt practice, not theft

      • bigfatkitten 18 hours ago

        At the very least it looks very much like corrupt conduct, even if it isn’t.

      • pessimizer 16 hours ago

        It's a kind of corruption referred to as "self-dealing."

        As directors of LibreOffice, they should be looking for the best deals for LibreOffice. Contractors (or any employee) are always (logically and reasonably) looking to do the least amount of work possible for the most compensation possible, so if as a director you use yourself as a contractor, your duty opposes your interests.

        And if on the one hand you're being paid a flat salary (or no salary at all) for making decisions for LibreOffice; and on the other hand the worse the contracts you make with yourself are for LibreOffice, the more income you will receive, plunder is absolutely inevitable.

        This is exacerbated even more with some nonprofit who is answering to an amorphous public who is funding it. They have no way of stopping you, other than withdrawing entirely.

  • fallinditch 19 hours ago

    It's poorly written, perhaps aimed at people already in the loop - would benefit from an AI edit.

codethief 17 hours ago

Can someone enlighten me what's been going on in the open-source office application space lately? Here we have LibreOffice and Collabora parting ways; meanwhile NextCloud used to integrate OnlyOffice until v18, then started integrating Collabora in v19 (and also in the recently announced stack for openDesk and "Office EU") but then the other day NextCloud announced they'd fork OnlyOffice to create EuroOffice, … which clearly neither Collabora nor OnlyOffice seem to like?![0]

Please just tell me what the canonical stack is that I'm supposed to use these days. I still have scar tissue from the OwnCloud vs. NextCloud situation…

[0]: https://www.theregister.com/2026/04/02/eurooffice_forks_only...

  • ndsipa_pomu 3 hours ago

    I run NextCloud (dockerised) at home so that I can easily share links with friends and that currently uses OnlyOffice (https://www.onlyoffice.com/). I self-host the OnlyOffice container with its own URL and setup NextCloud to link to that.

    To be honest, I never use it, but just set it up as it seemed to be part of a decent NextCloud install.

  • Moomoomoo309 1 hour ago

    Collabora is the blessed one currently, but you can use either, it supports either one, and you can easily swap them. The EuroOffice image will likely default to OnlyOffice, but NC has not announced any plans of switching that to the default. It could change in the future, but I don't foresee them discontinuing support for either if they have any say in it.

  • delfinom 1 hour ago

    The EU is unleashing billions of euros to drop US controlled software this year and beyond. This means TDF, Collabora and NextCloud are tripping over themselves to scoop up the funds as non-American Office Software alternatives to Microsoft.

12_throw_away 20 hours ago

I used to have the impression that OpenOffice/LibreOffice had an outsized amount of drama surrounding it. I still do, but I used to, too.

asveikau 19 hours ago

I'm not following this, but having drama in an office suite dev team sounds funny to me. I just want to open an occasional word doc and sometimes make a spreadsheet.

  • charcircuit 18 hours ago

    A lot of open source software has drama so it isn't surprising to me.

    • bluGill 18 hours ago

      Anything with more than a few humans will have drama. Most marriages have a lot and that is two people (who mostly manage anyway).

      lack of drama is a bad sign - it means someone isn't allowed to think/feel. (This is okay in a few contexts but overall bad)

    • asveikau 14 hours ago

      To be fair, closed source office suites also have drama. Did you know the VP who was responsible for the Office ribbon is in the Epstein files?

      • mghackerlady 1 hour ago

        Damn, who would've thought the inventor of an interface so braindead only a child could like it was a predator

_spduchamp 17 hours ago

This post seems yo raise speculation, not end it.

Is LibreOffice at risk?

  • buovjaga 10 hours ago

    LibreOffice development will continue and TDF will keep hiring new developers.

trebligdivad 13 hours ago

Heck I hope this doesn't result in a bug fork happening; it's already a PITA to deal with fixing bugs that have been inherited from OOo bug trackers or earlier. You hit things like wanting to test against a file that used to be in a long dead bug tracker.

everdrive 14 hours ago

I have no idea what this post is saying. Can someone post a quick summary. Is LibreOffice going away?

starkparker 15 hours ago

This entire fucking mess is a bunch of people writing open letters at each other that nobody outside of the closed system can parse at all. All of these stupid posts just make everyone involved look childish and incompetent. They seem to be comprehensible only if you're already too entrenched on one side to be swayed by anything, much less this horseshit.

nialse 19 hours ago

In terms of communication: The only clearly communicated message is that TDF is not fit for fulfilling its purpose and likely never have been. As an outsider I would suggest ceding the project and IP to a third party not involved in the historic squabbles and infighting. It would be a service to the community and enable the project flourish!

ma2kx 19 hours ago

It seems there opens a new market as Europe plans to abandon Microsoft products. First OnlyOffice / EuroOffice and now this...

jaggs 19 hours ago

Long live LibreOffice.

contingencies 20 hours ago

I use and promote Libreoffice instead of cloud SaaS and M$ religiously and have been doing so for decades. While it does feel that 'peak office suite' is solidly in the rear-view mirror and the majority of tools are becoming ~irrelevant (nobody does physical meetings anymore, writer < LyX and spreadsheets are being supplanted by custom code with better visualization control and web integration), I still need Writer to deal with lawyers and their 'change tracking' and 'comments', and Calc for presenting 'give me money' financials to investors. Is there now a preferred fork we should follow?

  • AtlasBarfed 19 hours ago

    Maybe within the strict confines of these cases made by Microsoft, which also have inherent monopoly designs behind them.

    Office documents are still fundamentally opaque to data extraction and generation. The user interfaces of the components are still heavily restricted to dedicated applications as opposed to providing some sort of means of embedding them in other contexts such as gasp a web page that might have an actually good Excel interface.

    And I would say in general llm should be a massive boon to closing the compatibility gap between free office applications and the barriers put up by proprietary ones, particularly format. Parsing and saving

    If we can have an office document foundation similar to what Labor office does to provide generalized libraries and code for parsing office document formats saving them across many platforms, something that just piecemeal across most programming languages and environments, it could be a huge boon to open days formats represented by these relatively important file formats:

    The spreadsheet

    The word document

    The presentation

    The flowchart/chart

    Well, Microsoft with things like OLE kind of pushed some of these capabilities across the Microsoft ecosystem. That sucks and it failed because it was within the Monopoly.

    But the vision was a good one.

tym0 3 hours ago

I've really been enjoying the work that collabora (the consultancy) has done, especially around gaming on Linux.

So it's really disappointing to see Collabora Online and TDF behaving like this...

ddtaylor 18 hours ago

Just to be clear, the source code exists and none of this matters to most of us. When these idiots get tired of fighting everyone will just be pillaging the corpse and moving forward as FOSS always does.

geophile 16 hours ago

Can someone write a tl:dr; about what’s going on? I am a very satisfied user of LibreOffice, and some of the comments here, suggesting we will need an alternative, are troubling.

neoCrimeLabs 14 hours ago

Not taking sides here. This communication could have been, far, far better handled had a crisis-PR person, or frankly any decent PR person, been involved.

gentleman11 19 hours ago

I feel like this was written by somebody who thinks we've been in the room the whole time while things happened. It's so dense with allusions that nobody is going to be able to understand.

What is this even about?

- A licensing controversy with some cloud companies who used libre office's software?

- Some new tos thing?

- something else?

  • ssl-3 18 hours ago

    I guess we're just supposed to speculate about that, in contradiction of the title of the article.

Invictus0 18 hours ago

> Ideally, we would have preferred to avoid this post. However, the articles and comments published in response to Collabora’s and Michael Meeks’ biased posts compel us to provide this background information on the events that led to the current situation.

> Unfortunately, we have to start from the very beginning, but we’ll try to keep it brief. The launch of the LibreOffice project and The Document Foundation was handled with great enthusiasm by the founding group. They were driven by a noble goal, but also by a bit of healthy recklessness. After all, it was impossible to imagine what would happen after September 28, 2010, the date of the announcement.

Seems to be a common theme with open source projects that the maintainers think people care about them and their drama way more than they actually do. Sort of the same way that dealing with open source always ends up being a waste of time. This intro is a disaster; completely unclear, gives 0 context, assumes the user knows all the drama, and signals that what follows is going to be a long, drawn out and pointless mess.

Get. to. the. point.

  • StrauXX 18 hours ago

    I had the same impression. The introduction reads really unprofessionally.

shevy-java 19 hours ago

I am confused.

What is the main issue now?

  • worik 18 hours ago

    tl;dr the non-profit had acted outside the regulations for non-profits, to the benefit of some members and due to over eager action not actual dishonesty. Audits caught up with them, they have to change their ways.

avazhi 18 hours ago

Classic open source drama which makes the entire open source/FOSS ecosystem look like dog shit.

kkfx 18 hours ago

Considering that office suites are software from a bygone era, born from the idea of letting untrained secretarial staff use a PC as an advanced typewriter and calculator, the business and the squabbles surrounding them, which have absolutely nothing to do with FLOSS, are frankly laughable, if they weren't so pathetic.

LibreOffice (and any office suite) is a piece of software as massive as it is absurd, and those who use it don't even realise it, which is why there's so much business built around it. It's 2026; information shouldn't be managed in scattered files designed for printing and then used on screens anyway. It's high time people were taught how to actually use a computer, rather than playing around with software that hoped to make computers usable for those who don't know how to use them, and has done more harm than good in the process.

  • BobBagwill 15 hours ago

    Too late for that. If you can't do it on a smart phone, it's not worth doing. And with AI, who needs a GUI?

      This is the end
      Beautiful friend
      This is the end
      My only friend, the end
    • kkfx 3 hours ago

      If you like drink interested PRs dreams on sale yes, but reality is quite different.

      The OEMs who have lied https://unctad.org/system/files/official-document/der2024_en... through their teeth about the lifespan of a well-made desktop to compare it to a smartphone are simply on their last financial legs; their Nazi wet dream doesn't scale. A society like that doesn't work. That's why they'll collapse just like their German-speaking counterparts did a few years back.

      The West is collapsing to save four kleptocrats and their model of exploiting us all; nature doesn't give a toss, it carries on her way and so does technology. Dead wood can stay standing for a long time, in some cases it even becomes a fossilised trunk, but it doesn't evolve; it's still a dead branch.

      If you think the current Office model will be replaced by some LLM, you're dreaming just like those who hope for it and are working to make it happen. Sure, plenty of jobs are no longer necessary and gradually mankind, if we don't commit suicide first, will end up only creating new knowledge while machines apply it, but this model only works if it's open, distributed, and diverse enough to be resilient and evolve. The current monochrome model can only flare up and die.

SilverElfin 20 hours ago

I have no idea what this drama is about, but it feels a lot like the kind of thing no one has time to even be interested in. OpenOffice and LibreOffice already feel irrelevant and dated to begin with. What’s the point of people paying attention to this battle if they’re not insiders? There are so many other options, although none truly open source I guess.

  • jhoechtl 20 hours ago

    > OpenOffice and LibreOffice already feel irrelevant and dated to begin with.

    It is the only non cloud free office solution which is truely free. How can this be irrelevant?

    • baal80spam 19 hours ago

      OnlyOffice? FreeOffice?

      • maxloh 17 hours ago

        FreeOffice is proprietary software, not "truly free" in the FOSS way.

throwatdem12311 19 hours ago

Can someone with way more money than sense generate some AI video in a documentary style like The Office about this drama as comedy?

The Libre Office.

psim1 20 hours ago

LibreOffice almost seemed irrelevant; with cheap to free (*included) tools in abundance, such as MS Office, Google Workspace, Apple Pages/Numbers/Keynote, the need for LibreOffice is not what it once was, back when StarOffice and OpenOffice were liberating people from the tyranny of Microsoft.

Now it's worse than irrelevant, it's a liability.

  • queenkjuul 20 hours ago

    MS office has never been cheap or included

    • downrightmike 19 hours ago

      Forced +$30 per seat per month to get people loaded into their proprietary AI

    • bananamogul 19 hours ago

      I guess you don’t remember a time when spreadsheets sold for $495 a seat. And that was just the spreadsheet. IIRC, Excel 1.0 retailed for $99.

    • add-sub-mul-div 19 hours ago

      It's $8.30/month. It's cheaper than Netflix and Amazon Prime.

      • snmx999 18 hours ago

        Over 50 years' time that's $4980.

        • kube-system 15 hours ago

          50 years ago you needed about 5 million bucks to get started with electronic spreadsheets on your IBM mainframe

  • opan 20 hours ago

    It's still the only free as in freedom office suite option I'm aware of. I do try my best to avoid needing such software at all (I prefer to stay inside vim), but it has its uses when dealing with files from other people, or niche stuff like importing XML and saving as a CSV.

    • mananaysiempre 20 hours ago

      For what it’s worth, AbiWord and Gnumeric are still around (but are of course much less capable).

      • megnu 19 hours ago

        Gnumeric is great. It's the only one that holds up with massive CSV files and remains snappy. So I tend to prefer it. Functions are more limited than Calc though.

      • fhdkweig 19 hours ago

        About 10 years ago the Ubuntu package manager borked my installation of LibreOffice (or maybe it was OpenOffice then). I only used it for spreadsheets and Gnumeric was able to open the ODS files just fine. There was only one function that I need to change (DaysInYear for handling leap years).

        If for any reason I have to go back to it, I think I can.

  • MrDresden 18 hours ago

    Some of us run unGoogled/M$ Linux systems and want offline functionality. None of those options you mentioned would work for us.

  • maxloh 18 hours ago

    For context, you cannot export a Google Doc in its native format and import the file later from another account.

    That’s the price you pay: Google owns your data. You’ve sold your soul to them.

  • linguae 17 hours ago

    None of the tools that you mentioned except for LibreOffice and OpenOffice are free-as-in-freedom, and if you’re using Linux on the desktop, then Microsoft Office and the Apple iWork suite are unavailable as desktop applications.