| ▲ | Barbing 4 hours ago | |
>anything wrong with that? Wonder if the courts will move fast enough to generally matter. | ||
| ▲ | josephg 2 hours ago | parent [-] | |
As I understand it, reverse engineering for the purpose of interoperability is allowed under the law. The only thing subject to copyright is your code. So long as a separate implementation (made by an AI model or made by hand) doesn't use any of your actual code, you have no claim over it. Only the code is yours. AI models make the process of reversing and reimplementing drivers much cheaper. I don't understand the problem with that - it sounds like a glorious future to me. Making drivers cheaper and easier to write should mean more operating systems, with more higher quality drivers. I can't wait for asahi linux to support Apple's newer hardware. I'm also looking forward to better linux and freebsd drivers. And more hobbyist operating systems able to fully take advantage of modern computing hardware. I don't see any downside. | ||