Apparently that’s something new that only began a couple of years ago. It also appears that it is only licensed for “development” use as well. Nor can you connect to a repository server, for any updates, which makes it very unsafe and completely unpractical.
I’m sure you’ll reply with some hack that works around that license and support requirement, but that’s really just an admission you can’t legally run that way, and have an actual up to date and secure system.
Again--incorrect. I was doing it at least 20 years ago.
For someone who claims to be some sort of tech manager, you are not very current on tech or its licenses.
Recall, if you will, that the GPLv2 (which was in force at the time), that all entities that distributed Linux/GNU software were required to make their code available. It overrides any commercial license that you are obviously thinking about.
Anyway, I was hoping you'd learn a thing or two in the ~20 years-ish since the OS wars. I am disappointed that you have not.