• hobata@lemmy.ml
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    2 days ago

    I don’t agree, and your conclusions aren’t obvious to me. All I see is that the only problems are getting information, not putting something into web. And we’re not in hell; in fact, we’re in the very best place and time.

    • Hetare King@piefed.social
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      2 days ago

      In order to be able to get information on the web, people need to put it on the web first. And for that to happen, there needs to be something to motivate them to do so. What those motivations are is going to differ between people and situations, could be a pure desire to contribute to the commons, could be part of how they make their income, could be any other number of things. But if putting something on the web means accepting that you’re going to be helping vile companies achieve their goals and the way most people may see this information is in a perverse form, riddled with falsehoods and with no attribution (or maybe worse, mostly falsehoods attributed to you), and there’s nothing you can do about it, that’s going to put a damper on a lot of those motivations, and the ones that aren’t tend to be the less desirable ones.

      And it’s not just information that’s on the web, it’s also collaborative efforts like open source software. Why do people release source code under licenses like the GPL? Because they believe those constraints lead to a better outcome than if they had just put it in the public domain. That their contributions to the commons lead to more contributions to the commons, even from people who may not be inclined or incentivised to do so. If it becomes trivial to undermine those licenses (and for the record, those licenses do get enforced and there have been companies that had to release the source code of their products because they violated the license), that may undermine the reasons for many to contribute to the project.

      You can be all cool and cynical about how social contracts are made up and whatnot, but let’s be honest here; if someone beats you to a pulp because they didn’t like the way you looked at them, you’re not going to just coolly accept your broken nose and displaced ribs as just the way things work.

      • chunes@lemmy.world
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        23 hours ago

        Not my problem if people are too lazy to go to actual sites. I couldn’t care less if they decide to use dogshit tools to bypass my page. Why on earth would that damper my motivation to make a page? Intelligent people will still see my page.

      • hobata@lemmy.ml
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        2 days ago

        People publish things for all sorts of reasons, sure, but the main one is that they think the information has value. Whether some corporation profits from it is completely irrelevant, the data doesn’t care who benefits. The author doesn’t matter either, what matters is the information itself. Licenses just try to put fences around what should be free, and most of the time they only get in the way. People can follow them or ignore them, and life goes on. The scene understands that better than anyone else. It’s the purest form of the web: information shared for its own sake, without permission, limits, or fake moral theater.