this post was submitted on 14 Jan 2024
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You want open source treated well? Remove IP protections from closed-source projects.
It's like patents versus trade secrets. If you show your work and agree to let anyone play with it, there are incentives provided. If you rely on secrecy... and people figure it out anyway... tough shit.
Can you provide some examples of software benefiting from IP protections like you mention?
You want examples of software protected by copyrights, trademarks, and/or patents?
You said 'if people figure it out anyway', so I was interested in an example where people are able to figure it out but not allowed to duplicate it
Reverse-engineering. Binary patches. Basically a free-for-all for anyone who owns a legal copy of a thing.
Please be advised I won't give two shits about any hair-splitting over the word "owns."
Are reverse engineering software and binary patches currently illegal?
In some contexts.
Is there a particular goal for this rhetorical poking?
Uh, genuine interest?
Sorry, it just sounds like it was leading to some "ah-HA!" reversal, being so brief and general in response to normative statements about a complex topic.
Removing DRM is generally somewhere between outright illegal and getting attacked by flesh-eating lawyers.
Blizzard killed an independent Warcraft / Starcraft server called BNetD.
Nintendo's whole attitude toward emulation is infuriating nonsense pushing for digital art to slowly rot.