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Open Source, Closed Exit
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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.

by Lila GhorabaMay 8, 2026

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