@-Microboy- glad to see Developer 21 is back. New license? I hope so. Glad to see you like deleting my comments. The more comments you delete the more you prove my point. https://files.catbox.moe/5kpn0s.zip Unzip and either run the .html or load the .sb3 into turbowarp.org This project was made specifically to expose the flaws in @-Microboy-'s Pear eLicense v1.5 Nothing in the license is legally binding and the entire thing is still legal jargon just with a small explanation at the top. @-Microboy- go ahead and take this to court if you want. I wish you good luck winning. Scroll down for a more in-depth look at the flaws. [Below is about the license itself. It is not addressing the lack of being legally binding.] pastaOS Pho still clings to the Pear eLicense v1.5—a license that pretends to be source-available while actively discouraging remix culture. I respect this decision, but it is worded horribly. License Logic Breakdown: You’re allowed to make personal changes, but the moment you try to share those changes, you’re violating the license. You can distribute unmodified binaries, but modified binaries are forbidden, even if they’re minor tweaks or bug fixes. Apps can modify pastaOS at runtime, but you can’t distribute a version that’s already been modified—even if it’s functionally identical. This creates a bizarre loophole where runtime chaos is fine, but pre-baked improvements are illegal. It’s like saying you can decorate your house, but you can’t sell it with the paint still on. Security Theater: Users are told to “click allow” on every security warning or else pastaOS won’t work. That’s not security—it’s forced trust. The system relies on user compliance rather than actual sandboxing or permission logic. AutoCompose: Clipboard Chaos Triggered by ⌃C (or ctrl + shift on PCs), AutoCompose generates a paragraph and dumps it into your clipboard. There’s no preview, no confirmation, and no undo. It’s clipboard roulette. WebSockets & CloudLink: The suggested server wss://ws.postman-echo.com/raw is barely functional and often breaks with CloudLink. There’s no fallback, no error handling, and no guarantee it’ll work in production. Installer Madness: The official installer maker is hosted on GitHub Pages, but if your .poi files magically turn into HTML, you’re expected to unpackage the tool itself and run it in TurboWarp Desktop. That’s not a workflow—it’s a scavenger hunt. Your license is control disguised as openness.