
Open Source, Closed Exit
The cartoon mocks companies that market themselves as champions of openness and community while using legal barriers, licensing traps, and monetization schemes to control the very users they claim to empower.
A bustling tech conference booth is styled like a grand welcoming gate, with a charismatic startup founder onstage under a huge banner reading OPEN FOR EVERYONE, cheerfully tossing T-shirts and stickers to the crowd. From the front, everything looks like a festival of freedom and collaboration. But the wider scene reveals that attendees who enter the booth area cannot simply leave: the only exit path narrows into a cramped corridor jammed with waist-high turnstiles constructed from stacked patent filings, licensing contracts, and terms-of-service binders. Developers with laptops and conference badges are squeezed single-file toward a tiny doorway marked PAID ACCESS or APPROVED USE ONLY, while a few glance back in disbelief at the giant openness slogan above them.
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