Partly it’s more of “destroy an ecosystem”. Among languages, Rust is at the frontlines of a continuing trend to remove GPL-licensed, community toolkits and put corporate-friendly, AI-friendly toolkits in their place, eg.: replacing grep with openaigrep, which would basically be step 2 in the process of privatizing or corporatizing the Linux ecosystem (and leads to the loss of a number of user freedoms).
Licenses don’t matter when corpos don’t care anyways. Especially for training LLMs. They don’t care about copyright. I choose to use tools based on there merits over simply going “it has my favorite license.” Even though I say that, I still prefer AGPL even though I understand that of the corpos want to steal, they’ll steal it.
Why would a programming language destroy an operating system?
No, no, the architectures! The Debian architecture (apparently)!
Partly it’s more of “destroy an ecosystem”. Among languages, Rust is at the frontlines of a continuing trend to remove GPL-licensed, community toolkits and put corporate-friendly, AI-friendly toolkits in their place, eg.: replacing
grepwithopenaigrep, which would basically be step 2 in the process of privatizing or corporatizing the Linux ecosystem (and leads to the loss of a number of user freedoms).Licenses don’t matter when corpos don’t care anyways. Especially for training LLMs. They don’t care about copyright. I choose to use tools based on there merits over simply going “it has my favorite license.” Even though I say that, I still prefer AGPL even though I understand that of the corpos want to steal, they’ll steal it.