
Open Source, Closed Exit
The cartoon mocks companies that loudly brand themselves as open and community-friendly while using legal, technical, and contractual mechanisms to convert shared participation into private control. The humor comes from the contrast between the inclusive marketing language and the predatory architec
A bustling tech conference booth is styled like a cheerful public pavilion, covered in oversized banners proclaiming 'OPEN AI FOR EVERYONE' and 'JOIN THE COMMUNITY.' Smiling startup founders in branded hoodies hand out stickers, tote bags, and free T-shirts to a line of eager developers. But the booth floor is a rigged maze of trapdoors disguised as welcome mats, each labeled 'Patents,' 'Licensing,' 'API Lock-In,' and 'Terms of Service.' As developers step forward, they drop through the floor into a massive underground vault visible in cutaway view below the booth, where their code, data, and ideas are swept onto shelves stamped 'Proprietary Assets.' Aboveground, the founders keep grinning and waving people in, as if nothing is wrong.
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