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Technology is an amplifier and what Big Tech amplifies is fascism.

You want to amplify the opposite? Then build, raise awareness about, and help fund the opposite:

Small Tech.

small-tech.org/about/#small-te…

#BigTech #SmallTech #fascism #democracy #humanRights #technology

in reply to Aral Balkan

I like that you stipulated "share-alike" rather than open source, I think this highlights an important distinction between copyleft licences and permissive licences like BSD and MIT, that, as you put it, "if you benefit from technology that has been put into the commons, you must share back"
#OpenSource #MIT #Copyleft #ShareAlike #GPL
in reply to CheekyBadger☭

@frechdachs Thanks. I’ve been trying to articulate that as simply as possible for a while now; hopefully it works :)
in reply to CheekyBadger☭

in reply to David Chisnall

@david_chisnall @frechdachs “Share alike” is not a complex concept. It just so happens to be incompatible with capitalism and the privatisation and hoarding that goes with it.

Small Tech isn’t concerned with the needs of corporations and neither is it concerned with achieving vertical scale. And we’re not going around burning every permissive license we find either. Small Tech is its own thing and will evolve in its own way. Slowly. At human scale. Sharing as we go.

in reply to Aral Balkan

It’s not a complex concept, it’s a complex thing to enshrine in legalese. And when you do, you are giving power to lawyers and people who can afford to pay lawyers, not to individuals.

If you want to peg a small tech thing to copyleft, that’s your choice. As someone who has written and released a few hundred thousand lines of code under permissive license, I won’t be joining in. I’ve seen people adopt the position that you are taking (that copyleft is the only true way) and it almost never achieves the goals that are stated.

You’re starting by saying that your licensing ideology is more pure than that of many successful projects. I don’t know how you expect that to build an inclusive environment.

This entry was edited (2 days ago)
in reply to David Chisnall

@david_chisnall @frechdachs Here’s all I’m doing: I’m saying “dear corporation, you see this thing that I’ve spent the last however many years of my life working on? You can’t take it and enclose it. You can’t privatise it. I mean, you can, and, if you did, I’d likely not be able to afford to pursue you legally but I could maybe do so in the court of public opinion.”

At the very least, I’m making my intent crystal clear.

It’s not an attempt at purity or perfection. Neither exist.

in reply to Aral Balkan

Corporate business period amplifies fascism. By definition and law, every single one is controlled by a dictator or oligarchy. Bosses' retort to dissent: "this ain't a democracy, buddy". Nope, it really ain't.

Perhaps if we want true democracies we must overhaul our economies to remove the dictatorships festering right under our noses?