I’m looking for a way to keep an eye on open source software I’m using, especially if there are detrimental changes. Like for example when there’s an acquisition (Raivo Authenticator) or the project has not been updated in a long time (potentially posing a security risk).
But I don’t want to have to read about every project, just the ones I’m using.
Anyone got any ideas?
I think participating in communities which are centered around discussion of open source software is the ideal solution. That could be on Lemmy, Mastodon, GitHub, Reddit, Discord, wherever devs and users congregate (and, whatever platforms you find tolerable). I think the information you are seeking is too varied and in some cases subjective to be captured and parsed by an automated tool. And it would be great if you could help others by posting in those communities about changes that you are unhappy with, so others can make informed decisions.
Just here to comment on your PFP.
Shimarin FTW.
I can’t imagine any way this is possible without crowdsourced information, and at that point you’re just interacting with a community (likely the same one as you already are) through a different interface.
But if such an interface existed, it could be a cool project.
I can’t remember what it was called but, I seem to remember there was on you could monitor change of ownership on Github-repo’s.
Define “negative way”… GNOME changes in negative ways in a weekly basis so… Notification DDoS? :P
Bruh I think they’re talking about serious stuff like adding spyware, deprecation, suspicious change of owner etc. But your question is valid