▲ | EGreg 16 hours ago | |||||||
I guess that's why patents are annoying. I have been Mr. Open Source and against intellectual property for most of the past 15 years. But with AI companies rampantly taking everyone's work and repurposing it, and with VC companies not being very eager to invest in open source, I'm taking a different tack with my AI ventures. My first two companies are radically open source, and no one cared: And this is what we're doing now with AI, but it's not going to be as open: https://engageusers.ai/deck.pdf Don't worry, we're not looking to get into it with some random other projects. It's mostly to protect our business model against the Big Tech and enterprises. | ||||||||
▲ | weitendorf 16 hours ago | parent [-] | |||||||
I think I gave you product feedback on Qbix at some point in the past. I also know several founders who’ve secured funding for open source products and built successful businesses off of them. Open-core is pretty popular out here in the Bay Area. One thing I’ve learned since staring a company is that early on, your greatest asset is trust in your founder/brand, because it’s the only reason for someone to pay you for something until you get your shit together. I’ve personally had a hard time noticing it in myself sometimes, but I think it’s easy to overlook how outward signaling that might look like distrust (eg making users sign NDAs) damages your own ability to build trust. Since early startups tend to be considered untrustworthy by default it can be really counterproductive. Anyway, I appreciate your non-aggression policy | ||||||||
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