I wonder how many people here, even in this thread, are using a ROM for which they don't own the hardware?
It just seems like the whole project makes it too easy and tempting to take a walk on the "dark side".
There was no 'collaboaration', discoDSP simply took the years of dedicated work (some utterly insane deep level stuff with the JP one in particular) that The Usual suspects did, repackaged it, then misleadingly sold it as 'support' on their shop page, without any conversation even occuring between them.autodafe wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 12:09 pm Legally this is perfectly allowed under many open-source licenses, but it raises interesting questions about the spirit of open-source collaboration versus commercial redistribution.
For example:
• Does the new project add meaningful features or value compared to the original one?
• Does it contribute back to the original project in some way?
• Does it improve the software — fixing bugs, improving performance, or expanding functionality?
Which is worse overall user experience than any of the dedicated UIs.
Also exists in TUS plugins and works just fine.
Also (way) worse than the TUS browser.
Georgie....discoDSP wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 7:52 pm
A clarification:
We will not tolerate public defamation, false accusations of theft, or bad faith narratives about our work.
You do realize that is exactly what The Usual Suspects want right? That is why they distributed it to the way they did so people could do exactly this right? You do realize that everyone who worked on this knew exactly what Open Sourced Software was and what it was going to be licensed to allowArksun wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 7:31 pmThere was no 'collaboaration', discoDSP simply took the years of dedicated work (some utterly insane deep level stuff with the JP one in particular) that The Usual suspects did, repackaged it, then misleadingly sold it as 'support' on their shop page, without any conversation even occuring between them.autodafe wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 12:09 pm Legally this is perfectly allowed under many open-source licenses, but it raises interesting questions about the spirit of open-source collaboration versus commercial redistribution.
For example:
• Does the new project add meaningful features or value compared to the original one?
• Does it contribute back to the original project in some way?
• Does it improve the software — fixing bugs, improving performance, or expanding functionality?
Then when many of my fellow producers expressed their negative feelings about this on social media, they got their comments deleted and were then blocked by discoDSP.
Whole thing just leaves a very sour taste in the mouth. Legal or not, its a very bad look....
Really? Allow me to directly quote one of the TUS team members:You do realize that is exactly what The Usual Suspects want right? That is why they listened it to the way they did so people could do exactly this right? You do realize that everyone who worked on this knew exactly what Open Sourced Software was and what it was going to be licensed to allow
It's not illegal what he has done, but it is scummy. He "sells support" as a way to make money on a product he can't legally sell outright. And he didn't bother reaching out to TUS before slapping his wrapper on it and started "selling support" on a product he largely had no hand in.He basically took our source, put his own wrapper on it and is trying to sell it and use it to promote his own business. Can't prevent it, but frankly this is reprehensible IMHO.
Yes. He knows he cannot legally "sell" it due to the licensing model our code is published under. Therefore he sells "support" of "his development efforts" to include difficult things like "git clone" and other arcane and extremely difficult stuff. sigh... I'd strongly advise anyone using it not to actually pay him for it, but that is just my opinion.
IvyBirds wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 10:35 pm You do realize that is exactly what The Usual Suspects want right? That is why they distributed it to the way they did so people could do exactly this right? You do realize that everyone who worked on this knew exactly what Open Sourced Software was and what it was going to be licensed to allow
If you think that is wrong perhaps your rage is being directed at the wrong entity. Your issue seems to be with The Usual Suspects because they are choosing to do things with their IP that you find triggering
Wow you are quoting one guy who ignorantly doesn't even know the licensing model they are distributed under .TreyM wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 10:38 pmReally? Allow me to directly quote one of the TUS team members:You do realize that is exactly what The Usual Suspects want right? That is why they listened it to the way they did so people could do exactly this right? You do realize that everyone who worked on this knew exactly what Open Sourced Software was and what it was going to be licensed to allow
It's not illegal what he has done, but it is scummy. He "sells support" as a way to make money on a product he can't legally sell outright. And he didn't bother reaching out to TUS before slapping his wrapper on it and started "selling support" on a product he largely had no hand in.He basically took our source, put his own wrapper on it and is trying to sell it and use it to promote his own business. Can't prevent it, but frankly this is reprehensible IMHO.
Yes. He knows he cannot legally "sell" it due to the licensing model our code is published under. Therefore he sells "support" of "his development efforts" to include difficult things like "git clone" and other arcane and extremely difficult stuff. sigh... I'd strongly advise anyone using it not to actually pay him for it, but that is just my opinion.
Why are they unhappy about someone using their software under the license they decided to distribute it by?Arksun wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 10:46 pmIvyBirds wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 10:35 pm You do realize that is exactly what The Usual Suspects want right? That is why they distributed it to the way they did so people could do exactly this right? You do realize that everyone who worked on this knew exactly what Open Sourced Software was and what it was going to be licensed to allow
If you think that is wrong perhaps your rage is being directed at the wrong entity. Your issue seems to be with The Usual Suspects because they are choosing to do things with their IP that you find triggering![]()
Aside from Treys post above quoting The Usual Suspects from their own discord, I happen to be in a private whatsapp group with a couple of The Usual Suspect guys and they are absolutely NOT happy about this.
Sorry to say you've totally misread the situation, and this defence of discoDSP is wild.
What part of that phrase do you think was me claiming discoDSP has done something legally wrong? The TUS member certainly didn't say it was illegal either.
The spirit of the Open-Source community is clearly stated in the type of Open Source License they choose to distribute it under in this case the GPL 3 which clearly states the spirit at which the software is distributedautodafe wrote: Mon Mar 09, 2026 11:05 pm The legality of the whole operation is not under discussion...
The debate seems to be more about the spirit of open-source collaboration versus commercial re-packaging.
Submit: News, Plugins, Hosts & Apps | Advertise @ KVR | Developer Account | About KVR / Contact Us | Privacy Statement
© KVR Audio, Inc. 2000-2026