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  3. I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains.

I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains.

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  • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

    I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

    The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

    iamdannyboling@mstdn.socialI This user is from outside of this forum
    iamdannyboling@mstdn.socialI This user is from outside of this forum
    iamdannyboling@mstdn.social
    wrote on sidst redigeret af
    #42

    @petealexharris

    very astute observation that more people need to understand

    1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

      I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

      The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

      julianoe@mastodon.xyzJ This user is from outside of this forum
      julianoe@mastodon.xyzJ This user is from outside of this forum
      julianoe@mastodon.xyz
      wrote on sidst redigeret af
      #43

      @petealexharris @ohne_sonne « We can't own those blueprints and chairs and tables because they are "free software"?
      No problem, we will make you and your descendants depend entirely on our hammers, nails and saws that we will resell you for a subscription fee that we may increase at any time.
      Also they come with ads now and we sell your personal info.
      Please stop learning anything else.
      Oh and also we will buy every piece of iron and coal making it unaffordable to forge your own tools. »

      1 Reply Last reply
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      • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

        I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

        The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

        mobidic@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
        mobidic@mastodon.socialM This user is from outside of this forum
        mobidic@mastodon.social
        wrote on sidst redigeret af
        #44

        @petealexharris LLM = Layers of Layers of Misunderstandings

        1 Reply Last reply
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        • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

          I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

          The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

          martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
          martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
          martyfouts@mastodon.online
          wrote on sidst redigeret af
          #45

          @petealexharris Not sure what you mean by “appearance” but free software has been around since the late 1950s, when compilers were first passed around.

          petealexharris@mastodon.scotP 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • quasit@kolektiva.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
            quasit@kolektiva.socialQ This user is from outside of this forum
            quasit@kolektiva.social
            wrote on sidst redigeret af
            #46

            @petealexharris @adriano

            Somehow I suspect that once they've finished stealing the entire body of human knowledge, they will *copyright* that knowledge and require anyone who wants to use any part of it to pay through the nose.

            What do you think?

            petealexharris@mastodon.scotP 1 Reply Last reply
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            • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

              I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

              The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

              bob@beamship.mpaq.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
              bob@beamship.mpaq.orgB This user is from outside of this forum
              bob@beamship.mpaq.org
              wrote on sidst redigeret af
              #47

              @petealexharris

              Note: Who owns Github?

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • quasit@kolektiva.socialQ quasit@kolektiva.social

                @petealexharris @adriano

                Somehow I suspect that once they've finished stealing the entire body of human knowledge, they will *copyright* that knowledge and require anyone who wants to use any part of it to pay through the nose.

                What do you think?

                petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                petealexharris@mastodon.scot
                wrote on sidst redigeret af
                #48

                @Quasit @adriano
                I think at some point some investors will be very easily persuaded to recoup their losses on the running costs of data centres with predatory copyright lawsuits, yes. Why wouldn't they?

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • marymessall@mendeddrum.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
                  marymessall@mendeddrum.orgM This user is from outside of this forum
                  marymessall@mendeddrum.org
                  wrote on sidst redigeret af
                  #49

                  @hajovonta @petealexharris

                  Since LLM outputs can't be copyrighted, and since those tools are very good at cloning existing programs, might LLMs not actually be very bad for the software industry?

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                    @trademark
                    If a significant fraction of the global software market is captured by a handful of big players who own and trade shares of that market among themselves, your ability to move from one to the other (at your own inconvenience, risk and expense) is of no concern to any of them.

                    T This user is from outside of this forum
                    T This user is from outside of this forum
                    trademark@fosstodon.org
                    wrote on sidst redigeret af
                    #50

                    @petealexharris As the technology currently stands there really is no barrier to moving in fact I do that every day when I move between the free quota of various providers. You seem to be imagining an entirely different kind of technology. A different technology may of course turn out to be problematic, please complain as soon as you can actually identify it.

                    petealexharris@mastodon.scotP 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                      I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

                      The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

                      landley@mstdn.jpL This user is from outside of this forum
                      landley@mstdn.jpL This user is from outside of this forum
                      landley@mstdn.jp
                      wrote on sidst redigeret af
                      #51

                      @petealexharris Science fiction conventions are a century old. Wikipedia is unrelated. The gutenberg project is unrelated. AO3 is unrelated.

                      The internet is bigger than "free software". That's why Elizabeth Warren keeps trying to kill it: https://bsky.app/profile/dieselbrain.bsky.social/post/3mcatiujjj22h

                      maxoakland@mastodon.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
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                      • T trademark@fosstodon.org

                        @petealexharris As the technology currently stands there really is no barrier to moving in fact I do that every day when I move between the free quota of various providers. You seem to be imagining an entirely different kind of technology. A different technology may of course turn out to be problematic, please complain as soon as you can actually identify it.

                        petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                        petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                        petealexharris@mastodon.scot
                        wrote on sidst redigeret af
                        #52

                        @trademark Please feel free to mute me if my analysis doesn't seem useful to you. Not everyone in the world needs to join every conversation with everyone else.

                        T 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM martyfouts@mastodon.online

                          @petealexharris Not sure what you mean by “appearance” but free software has been around since the late 1950s, when compilers were first passed around.

                          petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                          petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                          petealexharris@mastodon.scot
                          wrote on sidst redigeret af
                          #53

                          @MartyFouts
                          The appearance of the later wave of widely available "Free as in Freedom" software protected by copyleft licences into a growing lucrative market dominated by vendor lock-in in tools, business software and operating systems. Just to clarify what I mean.

                          martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM 1 Reply Last reply
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                          • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                            @trademark Please feel free to mute me if my analysis doesn't seem useful to you. Not everyone in the world needs to join every conversation with everyone else.

                            T This user is from outside of this forum
                            T This user is from outside of this forum
                            trademark@fosstodon.org
                            wrote on sidst redigeret af
                            #54

                            @petealexharris I'm arguing why you're just plain wrong. Feel free to ignore if you're just pontificating instead of wanting a discussion.

                            petealexharris@mastodon.scotP 1 Reply Last reply
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                            • admin@mastodon.slightlycyberpunk.comA admin@mastodon.slightlycyberpunk.com

                              @petealexharris Thing is, free software didn't "appear", proprietary software did. Free software came first. It's the natural state of these machines. Every decade or so they come up with some new tactic to try to overcome that but it never quite works...

                              petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                              petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                              petealexharris@mastodon.scot
                              wrote on sidst redigeret af
                              #55

                              @admin
                              Yes. Reappearance into the mainstream of a newly growing non-free software market in I think the 90s or so?

                              1 Reply Last reply
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                              • simon_brooke@mastodon.scotS simon_brooke@mastodon.scot

                                @petealexharris but all that #LLM generated code has to be considered #GNU #GPL, because GNU General Public License code was certainly included in all the training sets. Clause 5(c) applies.

                                #FreeSoftware

                                https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.en.html

                                amszmidt@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                                amszmidt@mastodon.socialA This user is from outside of this forum
                                amszmidt@mastodon.social
                                wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                #56

                                @simon_brooke the verdict is still out on that…. Only a human can hold copyright, and if a machine or animals creates something then it falls outside of the scope of copyright. Maybe.

                                See the case where an ape made a picture, and the person setting up the camera wasn’t deemed the copyright holder.

                                See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Monkey_selfie_copyright_dispute

                                @petealexharris

                                simon_brooke@mastodon.scotS 1 Reply Last reply
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                                • T trademark@fosstodon.org

                                  @petealexharris I'm arguing why you're just plain wrong. Feel free to ignore if you're just pontificating instead of wanting a discussion.

                                  petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                                  petealexharris@mastodon.scotP This user is from outside of this forum
                                  petealexharris@mastodon.scot
                                  wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                  #57

                                  @trademark
                                  You're basically telling me I should go away and only complain about things when I agree with your interpretation and parameters for discussion. I'm trying to be patient but actually, just fuck off.

                                  T 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • admin@mastodon.slightlycyberpunk.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                                    admin@mastodon.slightlycyberpunk.comA This user is from outside of this forum
                                    admin@mastodon.slightlycyberpunk.com
                                    wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                    #58

                                    @petealexharris I tend to see Gates' letter to the CCC in the 70s as the start of the proprietary software movement, although I'm sure there were some efforts before that...

                                    But all this computing stuff started out in universities and government labs where making your work public was pretty typical. And the ease of sharing digital files just reinforced that. So even by 1976 when Gates wrote that letter proprietary software was already far behind.

                                    Definitely did gain some ground in the 90s though...maybe through a combination of new users who didn't quite understand how all of this worked coupled with software being a thing you bought in a box from the store making it feel more like physical property...although I still remember a lot of sharing CDs and acquiring institutional licenses and such!

                                    1 Reply Last reply
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                                    • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                                      I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

                                      The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

                                      emc2@indieweb.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      emc2@indieweb.socialE This user is from outside of this forum
                                      emc2@indieweb.social
                                      wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                      #59

                                      @petealexharris

                                      The open source movement is arguably the most potent refutation of the necessity and supremacy of profit motive in the modern world.

                                      It is also arguably the most successful and largest-scale implementation of cooperative enterprise in history- something oft referenced in radical literature and whose possibility is denied by the oligarchs' Randian / lasseiz-faire capitalist ethos with equal zeal.

                                      maxoakland@mastodon.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
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                                      • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                                        @MartyFouts
                                        The appearance of the later wave of widely available "Free as in Freedom" software protected by copyleft licences into a growing lucrative market dominated by vendor lock-in in tools, business software and operating systems. Just to clarify what I mean.

                                        martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        martyfouts@mastodon.onlineM This user is from outside of this forum
                                        martyfouts@mastodon.online
                                        wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                        #60

                                        @petealexharris Vendor lock in also dates to the late 50s. “copyleft” licensing only became possible when copyright law changed in the early 80s to allow software copyright, but even it’s 40 years old.
                                        Interestingly, vendors actually encouraged sharing free software, through user groups like IBM Share and DEC DECUS, before the law changed.
                                        The business software market has always been lucrative.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
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                                        • petealexharris@mastodon.scotP petealexharris@mastodon.scot

                                          I think the appearance of free software really broke the oligarch's brains. People are just giving away stuff that should be Shareholder Value? And we *can't* buy it off them and own it? People are just running a compiler whenever they like to make whatever they want without paying anyone?

                                          The push to adopt LLM-powered code generation tools is so frenzied and desperate partly because it's a perceived solution to claw back ownership of the means of production into the Right Hands.

                                          aeoncypher@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          aeoncypher@lgbtqia.spaceA This user is from outside of this forum
                                          aeoncypher@lgbtqia.space
                                          wrote on sidst redigeret af
                                          #61

                                          @petealexharris You can run an LLM that specializes in code on your own PC using open weight models without paying anyone.
                                          So... how does that work?

                                          maxoakland@mastodon.socialM 1 Reply Last reply
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