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I’ve been wanting to write this post for a long time. Months. Probably even longer. The reason I haven’t is, ironically, the exact thing I want to write about. There’s a particular kind of silence that exists in the WordPress ecosystem. It’s not the silence of having nothing to say. It’s the silence of having something to say and deciding that saying it isn’t worth the risk. I know this silence well, because I’ve been living in it off and on myself.
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Well, shit. I didn’t expect the events unfolding last week, that ultimately were mainly hurting the end users of the WordPress software, would be the end of it all. But this whole dispute between Automattic and WP Engine has been cranked up a notch over the last couple days. And that is the biggest understatement I can make. I am deeply uncomfortable with the way this legal battle has been unfolding, with it being fought out in public and affecting end users of the software. If it would end there, maybe it would take some time, but I would be…
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A lot has been said and written on the whole dispute between the WordPress project and WP Engine. In this post, I am not going to describe the issue, as there are far more reputable sources available, for example: “Automattic Responds to WP Engine’s Cease and Desist with Legal Action” over on WP Tavern. What is a fact, is that this dispute has grown into a legal battle now between Automattic (in lieu of the WordPress Foundation) and WP Engine. When this all started to unfold, I didn’t feel like I had a voice in this whole ordeal. This changed…