So I just read Bill Gates’ 1976 Open Letter To Hobbyists, in which he whines about not making more money from his software. You know, instead of being proud of making software that people wanted to use. And then the bastard went on and made proprietary licences for software the industry standard, holding back innovation and freedom for decades. What a douche canoe.

  • FoundFootFootage78@lemmy.ml
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    8 minutes ago

    I’m on the side of abolishing intellectual property, with the caveats that commercializing someone else’s work or taking credit for someone else’s work should be illegal.

    If there wasn’t a profit motive we’d get much less “slop art” and more challenging art made with passion. The slop would also be far less off-putting because at least the slop would be made with love for slop.

    • General_Effort@lemmy.world
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      57 minutes ago

      the caveats that commercializing someone else’s work or taking credit for someone else’s work should be illegal.

      So, not actually abolishing IP, then.

      • FoundFootFootage78@lemmy.ml
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        9 minutes ago

        Commercializing means sell for profit. If a non-profit were to create a cracked version of Windows 7 with security updates and sell that for $200 an install that’d not count as commercialization. The idea here is that if Netflix took someone else’s work and made a bajillion dollars off it they’d need to ask for permission and credit the original author.

        I don’t know if something still counts as intellectual property if it can be infringed upon except by for-profit entities.