- Freedom 0: The freedom to run the program as you wish, for any purpose (personal, commercial, or otherwise).
- Freedom 1: The freedom to study the source code and change it to do what you wish.
From the Open Source Initiative:
- No Discrimination Against Persons or Groups: No one can be barred from using the software.
- No Discrimination Against Fields of Endeavor: Users cannot be restricted from utilizing the software for specific purposes, such as commercial use or scientific research.
jqwik is no longer Free Software or Open Source. Looking sec at the hidden "payload", jqwik can be deemed malware. Whatever happened to the stance that field of use restrictions are anathema to FOSS? Even if you want to use it for "sharks with lasers attached to their heads". It seems that the FOSS hacker ethos is dead and any Joe, Dick and Harry is attaching their own political beliefs and hurt fee fees to it. You either believe in FOSS and keep your own politics (except for license choice) out of the code, or you don't release your stuff under a FOSS license.
Putting malicious commands in FOSS code is NOT the way. There are a myriad ways you can protest the use of LLMs. You can refuse to accept any LLM generated code. You can refuse to give support to LLM users. You can put long anti-LLM screeds on your project website. You can stop developing your code in protest. What you don't do is inserting hidden, malicious commands in software that claims to be FOSS. If you want to distribute malware that utilizes field of use restrictions, change the license accordingly.
The cheering on of this deterioration in FOSS ideals is simply revolting. What is next? Targeting citizens of the United States in FOSS, because you want to protest "president" Trump? Deleting European user's files, because you don't like the setup of the EU? Targeting people because of their skin color or orientation? Causing damage to end-user machines, 'cause you think they aren't skilled enough?
From the Free Software Foundation:
- Freedom 0: The freedom to run the program as you wish, for any purpose (personal, commercial, or otherwise). - Freedom 1: The freedom to study the source code and change it to do what you wish.
From the Open Source Initiative:
- No Discrimination Against Persons or Groups: No one can be barred from using the software. - No Discrimination Against Fields of Endeavor: Users cannot be restricted from utilizing the software for specific purposes, such as commercial use or scientific research.
jqwik is no longer Free Software or Open Source. Looking sec at the hidden "payload", jqwik can be deemed malware. Whatever happened to the stance that field of use restrictions are anathema to FOSS? Even if you want to use it for "sharks with lasers attached to their heads". It seems that the FOSS hacker ethos is dead and any Joe, Dick and Harry is attaching their own political beliefs and hurt fee fees to it. You either believe in FOSS and keep your own politics (except for license choice) out of the code, or you don't release your stuff under a FOSS license.
Putting malicious commands in FOSS code is NOT the way. There are a myriad ways you can protest the use of LLMs. You can refuse to accept any LLM generated code. You can refuse to give support to LLM users. You can put long anti-LLM screeds on your project website. You can stop developing your code in protest. What you don't do is inserting hidden, malicious commands in software that claims to be FOSS. If you want to distribute malware that utilizes field of use restrictions, change the license accordingly.
The cheering on of this deterioration in FOSS ideals is simply revolting. What is next? Targeting citizens of the United States in FOSS, because you want to protest "president" Trump? Deleting European user's files, because you don't like the setup of the EU? Targeting people because of their skin color or orientation? Causing damage to end-user machines, 'cause you think they aren't skilled enough?
Note: Previously posted to OSNews.com
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