
Open Source, Closed Door
The cartoon mocks corporate 'open' rhetoric as a PR performance: companies enthusiastically open-source the aura, the branding, and the applause, while locking away the legal power, commercial rights, and real control. It satirizes openness as a stage-managed product launch where transparency is for
A single-panel editorial cartoon set inside a sleek, glass-walled AI startup headquarters. In the bright foreground, a founder at a minimalist podium beams beneath an oversized banner reading 'OPEN FOR HUMANITY' while a livestream camera and ring light broadcast the launch of a new AI model to applauding engineers in branded hoodies. Everything in this front stage is transparent, airy, and performatively public. In the very same frame, just behind the founder and visible through the glass partitions, the backstage reality contradicts the speech: movers wheel out filing cabinets, servers, and boxed documents from an office labeled 'Legal,' as if openness has no use for accountability. Nearby, construction workers bolt an enormous bank-vault door onto a room newly relabeled 'Patents & Licensing,' with sparks flying and a keypad being installed. One employee hangs a small sign on the vault reading 'Authorized Access Only.' The founder gestures grandly toward the audience as if unveiling a gift to humanity, while literally turning the valuable rights, restrictions, and leverage into a locked treasury behind them.
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