It means that somebody must maintain it if there is a demand. Quite obvious? Isn't it that I said multiple times that I'll try to look for a solution? Hacking up the software to infinity is not a solution because it leaves an unmaintainable junk of garbadge. Now tell me again I won't look for solution.
At this point you are trapped in a circular argument, defunct by design. We were discussing closed source cases where you claimed the legal rights to the code in question were uncertain effectively preventing existing developers to maintain the source code already in their possession, or releasing it to someone else.
The active Amiga community is pretty small these days, so even though I don't know you or Cosmos personally, I know projects both of you are involved in, past and present.
For example, Cosmos ongoing assembler optimization of classic 68k Amiga libs where performance has been improved and size reduced, mainly because they were written in C to begin with.
Also some of your projects, like this one (the thread) and MMULib.
As mentioned previously in this thread, and where most of us seem to agree, is that the Amiga is mainly used by hobbyists these days and a few hardcore individuals who never really stopped using it productively, at least when it comes to classic hardware.
I for one appreciate the "hack and slash" Cosmos is doing, and your projects as well, one does not rule out the other. When old software needs a fix/update in this community, someone will come up with a working solution, even if it means bare metal hacking of the binary or full source code repository access.