They're getting free community testing of early software in Fedora.
I don't think you realize just how much RH focuses on releasing stable software. They have SLAs with government agencies, healthcare providers and they need to live up to them. This is why CentOS Stream is in fact more secure than RHEL because they spend so much time testing the patches that go into RHEL that CentOS Stream now gets them before RHEL. A reversal to the state of affairs with old CentOS.
It is also why they were so keen on killing any project that claims to be a RHEL clone, because they want their customers to know what they're downloading, and know what they're running. RHEL comes with guarantees.
Of course I'm the first to admit that most of their motivations to kill the CentOS source repo were financial. That doesn't change the fact that Red Hat is a very enterprise-minded company, and their perspective isn't always obvious to the rest of us.
I don't think you realize just how much RH focuses on releasing stable software. They have SLAs with government agencies, healthcare providers and they need to live up to them. This is why CentOS Stream is in fact more secure than RHEL because they spend so much time testing the patches that go into RHEL that CentOS Stream now gets them before RHEL. A reversal to the state of affairs with old CentOS.
It is also why they were so keen on killing any project that claims to be a RHEL clone, because they want their customers to know what they're downloading, and know what they're running. RHEL comes with guarantees.
Of course I'm the first to admit that most of their motivations to kill the CentOS source repo were financial. That doesn't change the fact that Red Hat is a very enterprise-minded company, and their perspective isn't always obvious to the rest of us.