![]() ![]() Is this trap malicious behaviour on the part of Oracle? Readers will have their own opinions. (Update, : Searches for Java 11 and JDK 11 now seem to be resolving to OpenJDK builds, not commercial ones!) Unless you read the text/warnings/legalese very carefully you might not even realise Oracle JDK is now commercial, and that you are therefore liable to pay Oracle for using this particular JDK in production. In other words, Oracle can rely on inertia from Java developers to cause them to download the wrong (commercial) release of Java. ![]() Get a nasty phone call from Oracle's license enforcement teams demanding lots of money.Use it in production (because you didn't realise the license changed). ![]()
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