brucejackson 11 hours ago

That is excellent news, been running ollama locally since 2024 testing out running local models to compare them against the big frontier models and for times when I want to keep my conversations local and private.

  • serf 10 hours ago
    • saeranv 10 hours ago

      From the article: "The project’s binary distributions didn’t include the required MIT license notice for the llama.cpp code they were shipping. This isn’t a matter of open-source etiquette, the MIT license has exactly one major requirement: include the copyright notice. Ollama didn’t."

      I'm always puzzled by how often I see this happen in the open source community. Can the llama.cpp take legal action against Ollama for this? What's the point of these licensing requirements if they aren't (or can't be) enforced meaningfully? Note: I'm not blaming the llama.cpp team for inaction here, I just want to see them get some justice!

      • pshirshov 8 hours ago

        They can but it's hard and expensive.

    • brucejackson 4 hours ago

      Sadly, I had no idea that this was the case. I will be moving on to another solution for local model testing. Thanks for letting me know.

    • davidee 10 hours ago

      This should be front page material if it hasn’t been already.

      On top of it being thorough and illustrative, it’s surprisingly engaging.

      Also: I had no idea.