Comment by makeitdouble
20 hours ago
I think it's fair to put it as a failure, as the overtone window moved so much it now sounds normal that regulation, liability or econ interfere with openness.
The very fact "right to repair" had to be coined, proclaimed and we're fighting for it is a regression from the early days when repairing a radio wouldn't be violating some clause.
Of course, the openness was more accidental or pragmatic than really intended, and we saw companies slowly put up the barriers as they found technical and legal ways to do it (like forbidding plugging third party phones to the network for instance). If it's a frontier, IMHO it would be more akin to the battlefields front lines than anything else.
Put another way, the battle has always been social and legal.
The other famous example which people have mentioned here is that "sideloading" is now used to refer to installing software on a computer, which used to be a normal, routine (and required) thing to do in order to use any computer. So the idea that someone curates what software you're allowed to run, and there's no way to even opt out of that, has become normalized for huge numbers of users and parts of the tech industry.
It's true that malware authors are much better funded and more aggressive than they were a few decades ago, so we have some long threads talking about how there is an element of the paternalism here that's protecting people from some pretty malicious stuff, which could also cause a lot of harm. However, seeing this paternalism as the basic normal way that software is used shows that we've lost a lot.