How you got here
Open licenses have served us well for more than two decades, but they need help if we're going to survive the era in which computers invade our bodies and the structures we keep those bodies in. Cory Doctorow explains that we can lock the whole future Web open, if we do it right.
Talk Title | How you got here |
Speakers | |
Conference | O’Reilly Open Source Convention |
Conf Tag | |
Location | London, United Kingdom |
Date | October 17-19, 2016 |
URL | Talk Page |
Slides | Talk Slides |
Video | Talk Video |
“Desperate” is often the opposite of “open”: it’s when we’re in trouble that we’re most likely to compromise on our principles. How, then, did open become the default for so many tools and applications? Because when you use irrevocable open/free licenses, you lock your code open, defending it from anyone who would lock it up again—including a future version of you, in a moment of weakness. Open licenses have served us well for more than two decades, but they need help if we’re going to survive the era in which computers invade our bodies and the structures we keep those bodies in. Cory Doctorow explains that we can lock the whole future Web open, if we do it right.