Did you mean to add a link or something to explain why you think so?
Flatpack is literally the opposite of the RHEL model that relies on vendor lock-in due to 3rd party software only supporting specific versions of a specific Linux distribution. So this might very well end up helping Flatpak, if vendors make more widely compatible Flatpaks instead of RHEL only versions from now on.
Did you mean to add a link or something to explain why you think so?
Flatpack is literally the opposite of the RHEL model that relies on vendor lock-in due to 3rd party software only supporting specific versions of a specific Linux distribution. So this might very well end up helping Flatpak, if vendors make more widely compatible Flatpaks instead of RHEL only versions from now on.