
Open Source, Closed Exit
The cartoon targets performative openness in tech: companies market themselves as community-friendly and accessible, but use legal and financial mechanisms to convert shared participation into private control once value appears.
At a glossy tech-conference booth, giant banners proclaim “OPEN FOR EVERYONE” while smiling startup founders hand out tote bags, stickers, and swag shaped like open padlocks. In front, developers eagerly step onto a demo stage labeled “Community.” But the stage is actually a trapdoor: its surface is cracked into layers of patent filings, licensing clauses, and terms-of-service fine print. As unsuspecting developers slip downward through the floor, the founders keep waving and pointing to the openness branding, while a row of investors in the background applauds and takes photos. One founder casually pulls a lever marked “Monetization,” making the trapdoor open wider.
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