On 29.01.2021 20:35, Neal Gompa wrote:
In the example above - Alice and Bob are employers of company, which are registered Individual Developer Subscriptions using corporate mail, for example, alice@example.com and bob@example.com example.com - domain and mail server owned by Example Corporation.
Is such registration allowed?
Is Alice and Bob allowed together use these 32 subscriptions for servers and VMs used in production for company purposes?
And what changed if we have not 2 but 32 employers? 32 employers of company together can have 512 subscriptions for servers and VMs.
And what changed if we have not 2 but 128 employers? 128 employers of company together can have 2048 subscriptions for servers and VMs.
If Alise of Bob leaves the company - they email will be blocked, servers and VMs will be deregistered from Alise of Bob accounts before Alice and Bob fired from the company, and these servers and VMs anew will be registered to another employers of company.
Such a scheme of work with subscriptions will work without problems or such scheme of work is forbidden and illegal? (on which reason?)
You should probably stop asking about this on this list. I suspect if people really abused this in the way you're describing, it'll just go away entirely. So, please don't abuse the nice things folks give to the community. It'd be more productive to just ask Red Hat for low-cost options for your business vertical.
Why should Red Hat make any exceptions to the rules for me personally? In their place, I would establish the same rules of the game for all users, so I am not even going to ask them to make an exception to the rules for me personally.
Do you remember the article https://www.redhat.com/en/blog/new-year-new-red-hat-enterprise-linux-program...
Quote from there: "We're working on a variety of additional programs for other use cases, and plan to provide another update in mid-February."
Perhaps Brian Exelbierd will be able to answer our questions on this list, if any, after additional programs from the Red Hat are announced.