dw_innovation, to llm
@dw_innovation@mastodon.social avatar

As negotiate with companies that have built , they are starting to think about how to assign a dollar to their .

There are three parts to this problem:

  1. Understanding what can be licensed
  2. Setting a price
  3. Getting the companies to agree to pay

Interesting article by Anya Schiffrin for Poynter: https://www.poynter.org/reporting-editing/2024/google-search-ai-effect-news-publishers-deals/

po3mah, to ai
@po3mah@mastodon.social avatar

I've just noticed Cults3D's license: NO AI.
Good.


kravemir,
@kravemir@hometech.social avatar

@po3mah I do wonder, whether these license terms are even respected.

And, what's opinion of and on this.

And, if like are implicitly no-AI, because derivative work made by AI would be require the same license to be used.

devontechnologies, to productivity
@devontechnologies@devontechnologies.com avatar

Tip of the day: In our user community and in customer support, we receive reports about certain functions of , e.g., OCR, not working. However, after asking for a bit more detail, it often turns out the person has purchased the wrong edition. Here’s how to check your edition and a few of the specific functions in them. https://www.devontechnologies.com/blog/20210713-devonthink-editions

aral, to random
@aral@mastodon.ar.al avatar

GPL is only “viral” if you think freedom is a disease.

aral,
@aral@mastodon.ar.al avatar

@ruisan I’d call it a reciprocating license.

And I’d call licenses where you can take without giving back parasitic licenses.

aral,
@aral@mastodon.ar.al avatar

Licenses like GPL are reciprocative licenses. If you take, you must also give back.

Licenses like MIT are parasitic licenses. You can take without giving back.

fsfe, to ai
@fsfe@mastodon.social avatar

💡 Did you know that the sources of software are protected by licenses like all the other software? 🤔

💭 The :fsfe: ’s Niharika Singhal explained the trend of using non-free in projects in a talk at ! 👀

‼️ Check it out 👇

https://media.fsfe.org/w/thWtSBLxNRRAkiiMPamjdg

juliobiason, to random
@juliobiason@functional.cafe avatar

Still about the Redis thing:

AFAIK, the old Redis was BSD licensed. BSD is very permissive, but it doesn't grab the intellectual property to the project: they still belong to the original author (Apache is the only open source license that says your contribution now belong to the project and it is not yours anymore).

That means there is a lot of code belonging to someone not Redis Labs, which Redis Labs should've asked if they can changed the license of the contributor's intellectual property.

This means that the old, BSD-license Redis still exists and Redis Labs should still provide it with the old license. The new, bullshit-licensed Redis should be a fork and, as a fork, have another name.

Am I missing something here?

paoloredaelli,
@paoloredaelli@mastodon.uno avatar

@juliobiason
#Copyright holders can relicense their work under any license they like anytime.
Yet: 1)Usually the original authors are the copyright holders
2) #relicensing should comply with other licensed works (I.e. libraries, frameworks and so on)
3) AFAICS #BSD and #Apache #licenses does not have termination clauses that actually works

kdkorte, to opensource
@kdkorte@fosstodon.org avatar

43% of companies have conflicting open source license terms in their products. It is even more interesting how developers might poison their codebase by copying snippets from Stack Overflow (my preferred method to writing code)

https://securityboulevard.com/2024/03/2024-ossra-report-open-source-license-compliance-remains-problematic/

aral, (edited ) to foss
@aral@mastodon.ar.al avatar

If you see the AGPL licenses on my free and open source work and you think “damn you, I can’t use this to enrich myself or my corporation without sharing back what I’ve built on top of what you’ve freely shared and thus contribute to cultivating a healthy commons where others might enjoy the same benefits from my work that I want to obtain from yours” (a) you really have long-winded thoughts and (b) well, you already see the flaw in your reasoning.

aral,
@aral@mastodon.ar.al avatar

(Remember this whenever anyone complains about ‘the viral nature of GPL’ or sings praises for (neo)’liberal’ licenses like MIT and BSD that enable corporations to partake of the free labour of others and enclose the commons.)

Susan_Larson_TN, to Florida
@Susan_Larson_TN@mastodon.online avatar
Susan_Larson_TN,
@Susan_Larson_TN@mastodon.online avatar

[Video] The of people from 's

Florida will no longer allow updates to driver's licenses to reflect a change in a person's .

https://www.nbcnews.com/video/florida-bans-transgender-people-from-updating-driver-s-licenses-203404869693

forteller, to Wikipedia
@forteller@tutoteket.no avatar

I don't understand Wikipedia's article Comparison of machine translation applications. Under "license" a lot of them just says SaaS. But Software as a service is not a license, it's a business modell or mode of distribution, right? It could be free with the AGPL license, for example, or proprietary. Both can be SaaS, that doesn't tell you anything about their license?

What am I missing here?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_machine_translation_applications

devontechnologies, to productivity
@devontechnologies@devontechnologies.com avatar

Tip of the day: In our user community and in customer support, we receive reports about certain functions of , e.g., OCR, not working. However, after asking for a bit more detail, it often turns out the person has purchased the wrong edition. Here’s how to check your edition and a few of the specific functions in them. https://www.devontechnologies.com/blog/20210713-devonthink-editions

kkarhan, to random
@kkarhan@mstdn.social avatar

I can confirm this observation by ...

And yes, and is the reason why huge broadcasters have their workstations' and servers' drives cloned and backed up as setup in a ready-to-go-state because they can't be bothered dealing with shitty DRM and product activation if a device decides to die.

And money isn't the problem: They literally have fully-decked out hp z-series workstations on cold standby in case one breaks.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAx3yCNomkg&t=594s

kkarhan,
@kkarhan@mstdn.social avatar

And yes, I think that people should press charges for amidst these cases of !

Seriously...
I wish for to make the precedent that mean they'll have to honor that perpetually.

In fact, does even have provisions and insurances in place to provide people their purchased of without their in case they were to fold / declare bankrupcy / dissolve their platform...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YAx3yCNomkg

wikimediauk, to languagelearning
@wikimediauk@wikis.world avatar

Openly sharing content to the Wikipedia projects is our bread and butter, but it's important to involve native language speakers where possible. With the help of the Islamic Civilization User Group, Martin Poulter discovered that this Arabic manuscript describing how to treat a tarantula bite with a pomegranate had been uploaded backwards, making it impossible to read. The image has now been reversed on Commons: https://bit.ly/417Wnw1

AAKL, to opensource
@AAKL@noc.social avatar

deleted_by_author

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  • pmonks,
    @pmonks@sfba.social avatar

    @AAKL @theregister @sjvn Betteridge’s Law of Headlines strikes again.

    devontechnologies, to productivity
    @devontechnologies@devontechnologies.com avatar

    Tip of the day: In our user community and in customer support, we receive reports about certain functions of , e.g., OCR, not working. However, after asking for a bit more detail, it often turns out the person has purchased the wrong edition. Here’s how to check your edition and a few of the specific functions in them. https://www.devontechnologies.com/blog/20210713-devonthink-editions

    Nonilex, to business
    @Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

    So Far at Trump’s

    On Wed, Justice Arthur explained why he alone would decide the trial’s outcome rather than a .

    went on trial this Oct in a courtroom, facing a threat to the “empire” that informed his & undergirded his run for the . Wed was the 7th day of the .


    https://www.nytimes.com/article/trump-fraud-trial-takeaways.html?smid=nytcore-ios-share&referringSource=articleShare

    Nonilex,
    @Nonilex@masto.ai avatar

    As a consequence, canceled the that allow to operate his companies in
    On Fri, an court judge, Peter , paused that part of Justice Engoron’s order, but refused to stay the itself, as Trump’s attys had requested. While Trump’s control of his companies is still at risk, he will not immediately need to the entities he uses to manage . The issue will be argued in front of a panel of appeals court judges.

    juliaferraioli, to opensource
    @juliaferraioli@floss.social avatar

    Developers make legal decisions everyday without consulting a lawyer, just by choosing open source software to use. But how well-equipped are they to make judgement calls on legal documents? This month, we look at research around that very question.

    https://www.juliaferraioli.com/blog/2023/influential-articles-sept/

    osi, to opensource
    @osi@opensource.org avatar
    universalhub, to boston
    @universalhub@mastodon.online avatar

    Four residents sue police commissioner over delays in their gun-permit applications

    https://www.universalhub.com/2023/four-boston-residents-sue-police-commisisoner-over

    cazabon, to tech

    There are many large and in the world. Many people are victimized by the in a thousand different ways. This is not their story; it is not about their problems, but this should not be seen as minimizing them.

    I'd like to talk about something a little closer to home: in the field. I've been in this field for <mumble> years and worked for tiny companies, medium consulting companies, large orgs, and as a one-man independent contractor.

    [...]
    1/x

    cazabon,

    "Here's this the company buys for that you need to use; here's how to get the most use out of it."

    "Tips and tricks for using the company's ."

    "Advanced techniques in <technology>, which the company uses in many ."

    All that sort of stuff. It's information people need to do their jobs, especially if they want to be and .

    5/x

    doctorambient, to ai
    @doctorambient@mastodon.social avatar

    Has thought about and licenses that exclude that?

    I've done a lot of work that I released as CC-BY, but I can't do that anymore, because I don't consent to have my work scraped for AI. That violates the BY part!

    Any ideas about good to deal with that?

    I want to share, but I don't want my work to be absorbed into a model that will take my job from me or not cite me.

    petersuber, (edited ) to random
    @petersuber@fediscience.org avatar

    I just released Methods of Rights Retention, an Google doc.
    https://bit.ly/MethodsRightsRetention

    I wrote it in May and held it for a while to think about what to do with it, for example, move it to my blog or submit it as an article somewhere. But for now I think I'll just release it in this form and consider next steps later.

    I hope it's useful. I'd welcome methods, examples, links, or details I might have overlooked.

    tallship, to foss en-us

    Let's pretend we're proponents of free and open source software, enlist an army of week intentioned FOSS developers to contribute to our project, and once successfully deployed in many enterprises across the industry...

    Pull the rug out and convert it into a proprietary product with a bunch of undisclosed, hidden code that we won't ever show you - Muahahaha...

    Yeah. I see this happening right now in several prominent and celebrated open source projects that you're probably completely oblivious to those sinister objectives.

    This is why the most ubiquitous desktop operating system in the world is Minix.

    What's that you say?

    Yup, Minix. But that's no secret, the cat was out of the bag on that one a few years back (after being secretly so for many years).

    Before you contribute any more code, translations, or documentation to a software project, consider this:

    drewdevault.com/2023/07/04/Don…

    Next up? How Minix became the most prolific operating system in the world today. Stay tuned!

    .

    tallship,

    Here we go folks!

    How Minix got to be the most prolific desktop operating system in the world...

    lukesmith.xyz/articles/why-i-u…

    Now, there's another point to be made here, without specifically naming any projects currently abusing user contributions. Let's call this hypothetical project "hammer&anvil", itself a fork of a popular software project - but claims it's all about being free and transparent, wanting to distinguish itself from the project it's forked from by adopting GPL3 instead of a permissive license.

    Sure, the project's BDFL (let's call her "Strawberry Daiquiri"), says one day, "were forming a fork of project X because they've formed a company and I'm afraid what they are going to do with X because it's under a permissive license. This girl will be brutally transparent and completely run by the community under the philosophy of anarchy, but we're going to call it a sociocracy so you don't know that it's really just me making a proprietary product for my own ambitions".

    Well, Miss Daquiri decides to capture by capitalizing upon the sentiment that folks have for Copyleft - it's supposed to protect free software, right?

    Well, this fork (hammer& anvil) is a hosted solution - meaning SaaS, meaning, it runs elsewhere (other than in your computer) in the cloud as a publicly accessible service. Hmmmm.

    That means that the most appropriate Copyleft license is likely the AGPL, and not the GPL as one would expect fur a desktop or other local program that you actually download and install in your laptop or server.

    The GPL requires that when you distribute (give away or sell) your program, either by letting someone download or handing it to them on a USB stick, Etc., You must also make available ALL of the source code, including any changes you've made to the program.

    But if you run a modified GPL program as a service in the cloud you don't have to provide ANY off the changes you've made to the code.

    Hmmm.

    With AGPL you do have to supply your users with ANY code modifications you've made to the running service to which they have accounts...

    So let's just say that you fork Mastodon, and call it Glitch-Soc, modify it, and run it in the cloud for people to create accounts on and use (for free or for monthly subscription fees - it doesn't matter). ANY and ALL changes to the code base that you make MUST be made available anytime a user asks for the source code, because it's an licensed product.

    And in reality, such is actually the case with this exceedingly popular and capable . It's a fine product in it's own right.

    But had you changed the license to all contributions moving forward to , you wouldn't have to provide any modifications you made (unless you give or sell the software product itself on say, a USB stick or via download).

    Why? Because you're just allowing them to access and use your service, your not actually giving them the program to use for themselves elsewhere - so any modifications you made since forking under a different license (GPL instead of AGPL) isn't something you have to show them.

    You've essentially created a product (if you're so nefarious as to hide your code changes by butt disclosing them), the only code of which you must supply being that which existed under the AGPL before you forked it.

    Both and permissive open source like and can be a good thing, or they can be abused beyond the intentions of the inclined project contributors. Just make sure that you understand what can and cannot be changed where your intended purpose for the and of source code is concerned....

    There are BIG differences between the ramifications of each and how they can affect transparency and distribution of your free gifts to the world.

    In our hypothetical scenario with hammer&anvil, the , Daiquiri, has decided that she's going to launch a hosted service, and she's going to include things that you don't see and can't be aware of behind the scenes which, if disclosed, you would have nothing to do with - but you'll never know what kinds of scary things she's done with the product that only resembles the original on the surface, because Miss Daquiri will never have to show you the code she has added behind the scenes.

    "Beautiful Victor, Beautiful."
    -The Monster, speaking to his creator in the film, 'Frankenstein, The True Story'.

    .

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