Comment by Pannoniae

2 days ago

Yup :P

As in their post:

"The future of software is not open. It is not closed. It is liberated, freed from the constraints of licenses written for a world in which reproduction required effort, maintained by a generation of developers who believed that sharing code was its own reward and have been comprehensively proven right about the sharing and wrong about the reward."

This applies to open-source but also very well to proprietary software too ;) Reversing your competitors' software has never been easier!

If they really believed that their process eliminated any licensing conditions, why would they limit themselves to open source projects?

High quality decompilers have existed for a long time, and there's a lot more value in making a cleanroom implementation of Photoshop or Office than of Redis or Linux. Why go after such a small market?

I suspect the answer us that they don't believe it's legal, they just think that they can get away with it because they're less likely to get sued.

(I really suspect that they don't believe that at all, and it's all just a really good satire - after all, they blatantly called the company "EvilCorp" in Latin.)

  • >If they really believed that their process eliminated any licensing conditions, why would they limit themselves to open source projects?

    Because this is satire by FOSS people :)