I think it’s attempting to be honest about how the courts would look at this issue. What is obvious to the average 3D printing advocate may not always be obvious to the average 75 year old copyright judge who struggles to use his laptop.
I don’t like how gentle the article was with Bambu, because it definitely glossed over a lot of the more frightening “Bambu threatened to try to get him sent to federal prison” stuff. But it seems like the article was trying to anticipate some of the arguments and types of evidence Bambu could try to use in court to weasel out of being forced to release all their code under AGPL. This is why even something as ironclad as AGPL isn’t truly ironclad until after it is tested by the courts and precedents have been set. Bambu’s lawyers will look at AGPL like a genie trying to twist a wish, and will attempt to find ways to circumvent it. And the only person they’d need to convince is the judge, who probably doesn’t know anything about programming.
And that’s exactly how an MBA focused on enshittification and value-extraction would tend to look at the current scenario. Less “what is the right thing to do” and more “what will the courts allow us to do, now that everyone already owns our product?”
To be clear, I 100% agree that this is a very black and white issue, with Bambu absolutely in the wrong. But the courts probably won’t see it that way, and that battle will need to be fought before anything is actually settled. And there is the chance that Bambu wins the case and undermines AGPL, because I have absolutely zero faith that the courts will see it as a straightforward issue if a company actually tries to fight it.
Man fuck the verge - this dumb article is attempting to muddy the water on an extremely simple issue
I think it’s attempting to be honest about how the courts would look at this issue. What is obvious to the average 3D printing advocate may not always be obvious to the average 75 year old copyright judge who struggles to use his laptop.
I don’t like how gentle the article was with Bambu, because it definitely glossed over a lot of the more frightening “Bambu threatened to try to get him sent to federal prison” stuff. But it seems like the article was trying to anticipate some of the arguments and types of evidence Bambu could try to use in court to weasel out of being forced to release all their code under AGPL. This is why even something as ironclad as AGPL isn’t truly ironclad until after it is tested by the courts and precedents have been set. Bambu’s lawyers will look at AGPL like a genie trying to twist a wish, and will attempt to find ways to circumvent it. And the only person they’d need to convince is the judge, who probably doesn’t know anything about programming.
And that’s exactly how an MBA focused on enshittification and value-extraction would tend to look at the current scenario. Less “what is the right thing to do” and more “what will the courts allow us to do, now that everyone already owns our product?”
To be clear, I 100% agree that this is a very black and white issue, with Bambu absolutely in the wrong. But the courts probably won’t see it that way, and that battle will need to be fought before anything is actually settled. And there is the chance that Bambu wins the case and undermines AGPL, because I have absolutely zero faith that the courts will see it as a straightforward issue if a company actually tries to fight it.