I think you're getting even further away from open source.
If this tool could connect to a remote repo (like the GitHub repo) and operate on the changelog, then you'd be fine. No one would be able to use it privately without publicly exposing their repo.
Perhaps then you could charge a fee to get an ssh key to add to you authorized_keys file, which would allow for private use.
If this tool could connect to a remote repo (like the GitHub repo) and operate on the changelog, then you'd be fine. No one would be able to use it privately without publicly exposing their repo.
Perhaps then you could charge a fee to get an ssh key to add to you authorized_keys file, which would allow for private use.