Ask HN: Why is the $0 hijacking of intellectual labor so normalized in OSS?
I’ve noticed a fascinating paradox in this community. We celebrate "disruption" and "innovation," yet we maintain a cultural dogma where individual's lifework is expected to be donated for $0. "Open Source" has become a polite euphemism for the legalized looting of independent inventions. We expect creators to sacrifice years of life-force, only for Big Tech to strip-mine the logic and patent the derivatives—effectively banning the original author from their own work. I’m curious about the collective ethics here: 1. The Cognitive Tax: If one requires an LLM summary to "verify" a non-perturbative logic, does that person truly qualify as a "contributor," or are they just an end-user of someone else’s cognitive sacrifice? 2. The "Hacker" Spirit: Since when did the spirit of hacking—understanding things from first principles—get replaced by the spirit of "I want this for free and I want it now"? I’m not interested in a charity model where the loudest influencer claims my years of work as their own overnight. I'd rather have a constructive dialogue on why we've normalized this parasitic transfer of value. Is the "community" built on shared growth, or just on the efficient consumption of outliers who don't have a legal department?
I agree, the world has indeed improved for those who consume. But I'm asking about the creators. Or does your 'constructive' worldview require the author's bankruptcy as a prerequisite for progress? Who is doing the "expecting" here? I've contributed to open source projects, both as a volunteer and in return for compensation, but if someone "expected" me to contribute to an open source project I had no desire to contribute to I'd laugh and tell them to piss off. > Since when did the spirit of hacking—understanding things from first principles—get replaced by the spirit of "I want this for free and I want it now"? 1989, the year the GPL was published. A charming historical reference. However, using 1989 logic to justify the 'cognitive looting' of 2026 is like refusing to patch a kernel vulnerability because you're fond of the legacy code.
Back then, the battle was over hardware monopolies. Today, the crisis is the asymmetric strip-mining of human intellect by massive compute. If your worldview hasn't received a security update since the 80s, you’re not a hacker; you’re just a legacy system waiting to be deprecated. Back then the battle was over $100 C compilers. You likely haven't ever paid for a C compiler in your life, and I guarantee you that your life is better off for it. I’d gladly pay $100 for a compiler if it meant my life's work wasn't strip-mined for $0 by the companies providing the 'free' tools.
A free pen is no consolation for the theft of the novel written with it. You're mistaking a reduction in overhead for a gift of sovereignty. Enjoy the free birdseed; I'd rather own the sky. Your life's work is only worth what someone will pay for it. You can't sell a $100 C compiler when the free one works just as well (or better). If you want to make software that is valuable, you should compete for market share by doing it better than anyone else. Otherwise, your work kinda is worthless. Stallman noted this in the 1980s, acknowledging that the cost of manufacturing software is only limited by the cost of storing it on-disc and transmitting it over the internet. He was right. You’re quoting the Gospel of Stallman while the temple is burning. Stallman talked about the cost of distribution; I’m talking about the cost of creation.
In the age of LLMs, 'market share' is a joke when the infrastructure providers can ingest your logic for free and sell the derivative of your consciousness back to the masses. You think you're competing in a 'market,' but you’re actually just a unpaid research department for big compute.
If my work is 'worthless' unless it's bought, then humanity’s collective intelligence is being marked down to zero. Enjoy your free compiler—it’s the leash you use to walk yourself into obsolescence. The Cathedral & The Bazaar are both alright. You are describing the failure of businesses to compete against the bare minimum. I will enjoy my free compiler, thanks. So only those with money should be allowed to play with tools? If you have no income, are unbanked, or are in an area with low earnings, that compiler is out of reach. And then you're back to piracy. Because the "open source" movement has been co-oped by corporations which promote for precisely this reason. Actually contributing to a common good is done by building Free and Copyleft software, not "open source" which is term that offers no legal protections and the things you're talking about. Typical HN response: pivoting to a pedantic debate about licenses to avoid the actual ethical crisis. Whether I use GPL, MIT, or a custom Copyleft, it doesn't solve the Cognitive Tax problem. Licensing doesn't fix the fact that a 'community' of highly-paid engineers expects me to provide years of non-perturbative logic for free, while they lack the bandwidth to even peer-review it without an LLM. You say 'Free Software' protects the user. Fine. But who protects the outlier creator from being mentally strip-mined by a sea of Takers? You’re suggesting a better cage, not a path to sovereignty. Again: If you can’t verify the math without a chatbot, are you a 'contributor' to the common good, or just a sophisticated parasite?" No one actually forces anyone to create opensource. It is a choice of creation and licensing. A choice of giving. The fact that you are "supposed" to then maintain and work on it it's just in your mind. If you don't want to give to the public, you can avoid it by not creating, publishing, or licensing differently. You got plenty of choice. Just stop being annoying.