That's incredibly insightful!

You are precisely the true leader OpenBSD needs to compete in the
harsh corporate environment that gives us no respect!



Justina Colmena ~biz <just...@colmena.biz> wrote:

> 
> 
> 
> On May 14, 2020 5:24:38 PM AKDT, Theo de Raadt <dera...@openbsd.org> wrote:
> >
> >So you go find a mailing list noone in the industry reads,
> >and *cry* into it.
> >
> >never know, it might change the world.  Or not.
> >
> "In the industry" again. Here we go again. I've been banlisted and 
> blackballed out of all those "labor unions" since my youth. They had a "VICA" 
> club at my high school many years ago, and I was not invited.
> 
> >> I'm not trying to be religious here, but Martin Luther and others
> >have explained that we cannot make it to heaven or achieve success in
> >this life by works of the law.
> >
> >nor can you by crying about hardware injustice on a mailing list
> >read by noone
> 
> Certain "working class" people aggressively claim all sorts of collective 
> bargaining, work-related and employment rights and then they ride roughshod 
> over basic human rights for everyone and everything else. It's the Mob. And 
> then the bosses play right into their hands with delusions of "intellectual 
> property," 100-year corporate copyrights, employee non-compete agreements and 
> non-disclosure agreements, business-method patent portfolios, selectively 
> enforced trademarks on common dictionary words, and government top secret 
> classification for business trade secrets.
> 
> Then the "free software" folks hired some of the same lawyers to come up with 
> the "GPL," and there's an "established" Linux kernel to boot all that GNU 
> software, and the Santa Cruz Operation ("SCO" out of the same vice district 
> as Las Vegas, Salt Lake City, and Denver) hit them with poisoned code, cartel 
> copyright allegations, and a magic solution, "Well, if you didn't release 
> such reliable mission-critical code to the public, all would be well for the 
> mil-spec employment market in Silicon Valley (San Francisco, California.)
> 
> Noone? I don't know. In French they say «personne» unless they're lawyers, in 
> which case they say «nulle personne» … they're workers. You can't fire them. 
> They never quit. They're always "serving" you in court or at law with 
> something or another you didn't order and you don't want.
> 
> -- 
> Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.
> 

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