• I personally think some types of openly developed software projects should have a strict non-commercial license: if companies aren’t willing to contribute back to the source IMO they shouldn’t be granted permission to freeload & have volunteers fix issues their paying customers run into

      Donations are possibly a bit of an exception here - there are quite a few companies that still do this, albeit growing slimmer by the day.

      Another big problem IMO is the subset of users that start attacking maintainers and volunteers because their “free app stopped working” etc. I see that a lot, mostly in the arduino community, but especially egregiously on the Zabbix project - I imagine a lot of those users are companies who aren’t even paying/donating to the project

      • Lightfire228@pawb.social
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        6 months ago

        It’s an explicit “opt-out” by the OP, such that their content cannot (legally) be used to train LLMs or such (Chat GPT, Github Copilot, etc)

        Well, that’s what I assumed until i read the license terms. It doesn’t explicitly mention AI or LLMs, but it does say

        You may not use the material for commercial purposes

        Which i assume has the same limitations for AI training, for commercial AI

        (I am not a lawyer)

        • barinzaya@lemm.ee
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          6 months ago

          Also not a lawyer, but my understanding has always been that a license grants permissions, not limits them. No license means no permissions granted. Most sites have terms that you agree to (by posting to the site) that tell you what they may do with your content, and I don’t think a license you tack onto it can change that (though it can grant permission to others).

          As for scrapers and such, they were never granted any permissions to use anything. They just don’t care. A license is also unlikely to change that.

          I think licenses on posts are pointless and tacky, personally, but I could be missing something.