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Red Hat linux piracy?

I have a fedora but I’m curious about Red Hat Enterprise Linux because they say fedora is a community version of red hat. I pirated Windows in years and it’s really easy but is there any way to crack RHEL? I know it’s not magical and I can use a free distro and have anything I need but for the sake of curiosity I need to try red hat linux and test it to find out how much effort they put on an enterprise product. I also know that there is a trial version or something but it’s good for me to learn cracking that (if it’s possible) because my future possibilities.

So please don’t tell me that doing this is not necessary or get the trial version, just be kind and provide what you know about pirating RedHat Enterprise Linux.

StrawberryPigtails ,

RHEL is dead easy to pirate. developers.redhat.com/products/rhel/overviewA developer account is needed (it’s free) but after that you’re golden.

Rodneyck ,

Pirating linux…that is a concept you don’t come across everyday. Dude, just move off of Red Hat and onto a linux distribution that is not a corporate mega-whatever. Debian, Arch…take your pick. Open source is free ship that lets you pirate from the corporate/priopriatary seas. Don’t make it harder.

Nimous OP ,

I want to make it harder. It’s the only big paid distro out there and I wish to claim it. But they say I can install the OS free but taking support and installing packages require subscription so it seems my goal is just an illusion. But thanks for giving advice bro.

DangerMouse ,

You do realize that RHEL is open source, right? The “pirating” has already been done by RockyLinux (formerly CentOS).

sovietknuckles ,

Rocky Linux’s latest response to RHEL shenanigans is particularly cool. Since RHEL made the source code unavailable for packages, Rocky Linux now bases their RPMs on source code scraped from RHEL container images where the source code is still included

Shimitar ,

Make no sense. Just download the ISO (from a torrent if you like “pirate stuff” or from official redhat after free registration) and install it. Dont sign-in, done.

Anyway what you pay for is supoort and online resources, not software.

Also, if you like “new” stuff use other distros. RHEL is for stability and long term support.

razrabotka ,

Obviously I’m not the user you’ve replied to, but what about SUSE Enterprise Linux Desktop, for example? I’ve got an ISO, but can’t update because I need to have a subscription… Am I making stuff up or am I SOL?

isgleas ,

You could use OpenSUSE Leap, which is binary compatible to SLES. Even if you have an already installed SLES and want it to be updated, there are several ways, like setting up leap’s update repos (binary compatible, remember?), or download the latest quaterly updated iso image, or some other more convoluted ways.

nickwitha_k ,

Migrate to openSUSE Leap if you don’t want the enterprise support? From my understanding it’s mostly downstream of SEL.

junipoy ,

There are some clones. Check AlmaLinux, CentOS…

OverfedRaccoon ,

The “enterprise” part is you paying for the ability to get support if you need it.

quat ,

“Hello, support? How do I get through the Gnomish Mines in Nethack?”

noUsernamesLef7 ,

Lots of searching

nickwitha_k ,

Sign up for a free dev account, get a full free license. There’s really no point in trying to “crack” it, unless you want to try collecting bug bounties.

theshatterstone54 ,

Basically this.

No_Huckleberry_2023 ,

Right here is the way… no need to “pirate” RHEL.

When you sign up for the FREE developer account… you actually get 16 instances/entitlements you can run… and you can renew your access yearly… for free of course…

nicocool84 ,

I think when you pay RHEL you mostly pay for support, custom dev and stuff like that so I would say it’s really not worth the trouble getting the software.

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