• 15 Posts
  • 929 Comments
Joined 3 years ago
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Cake day: June 13th, 2023

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  • In this hypothetical situation would there be any point in licensing that code under the LGPL? No, there wouldn’t be, because it wouldn’t be possible to be enforced.

    There would be exactly equally as much point in licensing it under the LGPL as there would be under anything else (in particular: including the MIT license they apparently actually chose). If their argument were really that AI makes it uncopyrightable, they would’ve claimed it to be in the Public Domain rather than attempting to apply any license at all.

    So obviously, that can’t be their argument. Their only possible argument has to be that AI magically lets them launder out the copyleft and make it permissive instead, which is straight-up obvious bullshit.

    More to the point, you weren’t speaking hypothetically about what they might’ve thought. You were speaking concretely about what you thought. Read it again:

    LGPL is unenforceable with AI-generated code.

    That’s what you said. Not “the devs claim the LGPL is unenforceable with AI-generated code,” or “hypothetically maybe somebody could argue that the LGPL is unenforceable with AI-generated code” or anything like that. Nope, you just made a straight-up unambiguous claim on your own behalf, full stop.

    Your follow-up could be “whoops, I didn’t mean to say that,” but it cannot be “you misunderstood me.” What you wrote was very unambiguous. Don’t insult us by trying to pretend we read it wrong.





  • LGPL is unenforceable with AI-generated code.

    No, all AI-generated code violates the LGPL because the training data was tainted with it.


    Edit: I’m going to consolidate the rest of my replies to your comments in one place.

    From https://lemmy.world/post/43996592/22548619 :

    There has already been a ruling in the US that AI-generated art cannot be copyrighted because it lacks human authorship, so it stands to reason that the same is true for code. Even copyleft is ultimately dependent on copyright to be legally enforceable.

    Not being able to be copyrighted because it lacks human authorship is beside the point, if it violates somebody else’s copyright (namely, the human author of the LGPL’d code) to begin with.


    From https://lemmy.world/post/43996592/22548971 :

    You’re not wrong, but I don’t see how it’s relevant to what I’m trying to say. Whether or not they’re legally allowed to change the license has nothing to do with why they might want to change the license.

    You weren’t talking about “why they might want to change the license,” you were claiming that “LGPL is unenforceable with AI-generated code.”






  • Way to ignore the BIGGEST point in my comment to hyper focus on a secondary point just for ego.

    Fuck off with that. I am only participating in this conversation solely because I’m sick and tired of seeing influencers like Other Linus flounder and damage the reputation of Linux because they keep taking trendy bad advice spouted by people like you.

    This is your key disconnect. You see the OS as an experience. Most people don’t. They see it as a tool to get want they want.

    🙄

    Quit reaching, you’re only damaging your credibility even further.


  • Also, if you’re directing the average joe to use the terminal, it’s too hard. Seriously.

    Okay, I admit, that’s one flaw (out of many) with Kubuntu: there are two different entries for Steam in DIscover (the graphical software installer interface) because of Canonical’s obsession with Snaps, so that’s why I wrote an unambiguous console command instead.

    To be clear, I don’t actually like Snaps or some of Canonical’s other business practices. I don’t want to be recommending Kubuntu. But I can’t deny that it’s the easiest distro I’ve ever used.




  • Except none of that gaming performance value matters if you can’t get it working in the first place!

    People, especially ones new to Linux, shouldn’t have to know or care about the tools you mentioned. Hell, I had to DDG them to find out WTF you were talking about, and I’ve been gaming exclusively on Linux for damn near a decade! They don’t matter, and they’re especially not worth risking fucking up your entire experience for!




  • Trying to go for a “Linux gaming distro” is the wrong thing to do in the first place, IMO. Even if they’re gamers, they’re switching the computers they use for everything. What they needed was a general-purpose distro and then to install Steam or whatever on top of that.

    The notion of a “gaming distro” should be considered harmful for everything other than maybe running it on one of those Steam Deck knock-offs.