I posted recently about Qualcom buying Arduino, and sure enough, changes are happening and they are not being well received. Specifically, the terms of service agreement has a stipulation that you cannot reverse engineer certain parts of code supplied by Arduino/Qualcom.
The issue being that formerly, before the Qualcom acquisition, Arduino was open source. All of the code was free and open: you could read it, change it, fix errors and upload the fixes to the world. Well, now parts of the code are locked behind Qualcom's corporate doors, never to be seen. Which is the antithesis of open source. And not in the least bit surprising.
Basically Qualcom may make changes to the core OS that may break user code and libraries, and it may become impossible to debug. But I'm sure there will be a paid support tier that will route your tickets to "top experts".
Another change noted that the new "current terms say that users grant Arduino the:
non-exclusive, royalty free, transferable, sub-licensable, perpetual, irrevocable, to the maximum extent allowed by applicable law … right to use the Content published and/or updated on the Platform as well as to distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, translate, publish and make publicly visible all material, including software, libraries, text contents, images, videos, comments, text, audio, software, libraries, or other data (collectively, “Content”) that User publishes, uploads, or otherwise makes available to Arduino throughout the world using any means and for any purpose, including the use of any username or nickname specified in relation to the Content." So any code that you write and upload to Ardcom, or should it be Quadrino, can be taken by them and monitized with nothing going back to you - pure profit for Qualcom.
I can see the OS getting forked really soon, and as long as the forked OS works on the Arduino hardware, people ignoring the Qualcom version of the software. And if Qualcom does something like putting certificates into the hardware and forcing people into their OS, people will be dropping it at a phenomenal rate.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/11/arduinos-new-terms-of-service-worries-hobbyists-ahead-of-qualcomm-acquisition/
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/11/24/2144256/arduinos-new-terms-of-service-worries-hobbyists-ahead-of-qualcomm-acquisition
The issue being that formerly, before the Qualcom acquisition, Arduino was open source. All of the code was free and open: you could read it, change it, fix errors and upload the fixes to the world. Well, now parts of the code are locked behind Qualcom's corporate doors, never to be seen. Which is the antithesis of open source. And not in the least bit surprising.
Basically Qualcom may make changes to the core OS that may break user code and libraries, and it may become impossible to debug. But I'm sure there will be a paid support tier that will route your tickets to "top experts".
Another change noted that the new "current terms say that users grant Arduino the:
non-exclusive, royalty free, transferable, sub-licensable, perpetual, irrevocable, to the maximum extent allowed by applicable law … right to use the Content published and/or updated on the Platform as well as to distribute, reproduce, modify, adapt, translate, publish and make publicly visible all material, including software, libraries, text contents, images, videos, comments, text, audio, software, libraries, or other data (collectively, “Content”) that User publishes, uploads, or otherwise makes available to Arduino throughout the world using any means and for any purpose, including the use of any username or nickname specified in relation to the Content." So any code that you write and upload to Ardcom, or should it be Quadrino, can be taken by them and monitized with nothing going back to you - pure profit for Qualcom.
I can see the OS getting forked really soon, and as long as the forked OS works on the Arduino hardware, people ignoring the Qualcom version of the software. And if Qualcom does something like putting certificates into the hardware and forcing people into their OS, people will be dropping it at a phenomenal rate.
https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/11/arduinos-new-terms-of-service-worries-hobbyists-ahead-of-qualcomm-acquisition/
https://hardware.slashdot.org/story/25/11/24/2144256/arduinos-new-terms-of-service-worries-hobbyists-ahead-of-qualcomm-acquisition