Meanwhile I expect that intellectual property protections for software are completely unenforceable and effectively useless now. If something does not exist as MIT, an LLM will create it.
The playing field is level now, and corpo moats no longer exist. I happily take that trade.
> If something does not exist as MIT, an LLM will create it.
Nitpicking on the license here, but please don't use MIT, it has no patent grant protections.
And those are never covered in any AI-washing anyway.
There are equivalent licenses with patent grant protection, like 'Apache2+LLVM exception' or 'Mozilla Public License 2' and others...
The corporate moat is the army of lawyers they have. It doesn’t matter whether they win or not if you can’t afford endless litigation. Is the same for patents.
This means that all copyleft is MIT but it doesn't change the closed source stuff... So once again it benefits corpo more than most.
Generating software still token costs, generating something like ms-word will still cost a significant amount, takes a lot of human effort to prompt and validate. Having a proven solution still has value.
Ironically, I actually suspect the exact opposite. Linux has no real choice in this matter because most of the code is written by Google, Red Hat, Cisco, and Amazon at this point, and these big cos are all going to mandate their developers have to use AI coding agents. Refuse to accept these contributions and we're just going to end up with 20 Linuxes instead of one, and the original still under the control of Linus will be relegated to desktop usage and wither and die.
Isn't the "corpo moat" bigger now?
They can wash the copyright by AI training, but the AIs don't get trained on closed source.
"corpo" also has a ton of patents, which still can't be AI-washed.
What will become unenforceable are Open Source Licenses exclusively, how does that make it a "level field"?