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ClassAndBurn | 1 year ago
Authors from several countries were already suspicious, such as Iran. Anyone from Russia and China or unknown places are all potential risks now.
Combined with recent inclusive ideologies, it’s gonna cause hard conversations. There will be a furthering in segmenting the Internet. Why fight contributing to an open source project when you could fork it and contribute with your allies?
For true enemies, there’s no risk to licensing or copyright issues. You can merge changes from the original, no problem. China even falls into this as there’s a limited ability for US companies to litigate within the country.
People think the Network State is hot, but at the end of the day, the Internet still has borders.
Thorrez|1 year ago
int_19h|1 year ago
Keep in mind that most places allow you to literally buy citizenship through investment. The amount you need for a country like US is prohibitive for the vast majority, but, again, is not really a problem for another government.
jen20|1 year ago
As an American company they must presumably already do this to avoid violating sanctions, and least for anyone giving them money. It’s not a huge stretch to imagine they could also do so for free tier users.
Palomides|1 year ago
FOSS is one of the most beautiful examples of supranational collaboration, and is in my experience much more integrated than the web at large, in a way that has nothing to do with "recent inclusive ideologies"
mdavidn|1 year ago