Of course. Enterprises need stable systems. Unlike the typical experimental software that is created by the Linux hackers.
Oh yes, those "hackers", not really developers are they.
Like me. Linux developers have, typically, not the funding to run testing, or user studies, or...
You are not a Linux developer just because you were hacking around on some ancient graphics drivers that no-one really gives a damn about. Your code was not important. You code broke. Your code is not maintained. Your code will be removed. This is part of the process.
Distributions have, to some degree. So they necessarily have a more conservative approach.
They have whatever approach the distro aims for.
Progress needs a direction to progress to. No, I do not want to keep the status quo, where AmigaOs 3.x is only seen as an annoying old-time competition that blocks the income stream to "more modern" variants that were supposed to be sponsored by "designed to be outdated" PPC hardware.
Very few see OS 3.x that way, I think it must only be Hyperion. The rest of us sees Amiga OS 3.x for what it is, that weird and messy, yet awesome little OS that we can run on ancient hardware, in emulators, on FPGA systems, and pretty much anywhere these days. Too bad it is crippled not only be legacy, but also by being hostage in a legal catch 22 that very few seem to have the nerve to break it free from. At least not in our lifetime.
And AROS will fail
This should be a breaking news item in itself

Famous Amiga Developer announces that AROS will fail!! Because... open source is bad! M'key?!
for exactly the same reason Linux has not managed to become a main-stream Os for end users...
Really now. Please take a look around, how many linux systems can you count in immediate proximity? Do you have a "smart TV" running Android? Do you have an Android phone or tablet? What does your home wifi spot and home router run? Do you have a NAS, what OS did it come preinstalled with? What OS does this very website run on? What OS is used to host the vast percentage of cloud services we use every day? What OS does Facebook run on? How about ChromeOS devices? How about CoreOS? Why are Microsoft implementing Linux compatibility layers in Windows?
So maybe this will not be the "year of the Linux desktop", again, but why is it at all relevant - Linux is pretty much everywhere, providing experiences to end users.
AROS is most often hosted on Linux.
FriendUP runs mostly on top of Linux.
AEON supports development of Linux for AmigaOne systems.
Linux/m68k is still developed and evolving.
Amithlon was running on Linux.
ARIX is/will be running on Lunux.
These are just projects in our own "amiga realm".
Illegal stays illegal, no matter what.
Not at all. Laws change over time. You are German, you should know, sigh.
Just illegal source code, indeed, which leads to illegal software, once compiled. What else could it be? Do you seriously believe it becomes magically legal by somebody touching it or compiling it?
Again, not at all. As anyone in this industry should know by now, this is a gray zone legally. You seriously should read yourself up on how copyright infringements are dealt with when they land in courts. Some hints for you, it is not regarded as "theft", nor is it regarded as "criminal offense".
Anyhow - whether you say "illegal", it does't really matter, you, Cloanto, Hyperion etc can scream as high as you can - it is too late.
Which brings us back to - Now what?!