
Open Source, Closed Exit
It mocks the tech industry’s habit of branding platforms as ‘open’ and community-friendly while burying users in restrictive terms that create dependence, control, and lock-in. The ceremony of launch is framed as freedom, but the reality is a polished trap.
At a glossy tech conference launch booth, founders in startup hoodies grin for cameras beneath oversized banners shouting “OPEN FOR EVERYONE.” They hold giant ceremonial scissors and proudly cut a ribbon for their new AI platform—but the ribbon is strung across the room’s only exit, blocking a packed crowd of developers trying to leave. Up close, the ribbon is made of dense terms-of-service fine print twisted into barbed wire, with little tags like “API limits,” “vendor lock-in,” and “usage restrictions.” The founders pose as if they’re liberating the crowd, while the trapped developers look confused, annoyed, and increasingly aware they’ve been enclosed rather than empowered.
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