I just read @rasterweb ’s post about sharing code and it was poignant because I’ve recently stopped sharing my code. I’ve done this because I don’t want to keep feeding LLM’s, especially because one of my projects is intended to make them obsolete, but could be used in its incomplete form to their benefit.
I hate this, but I don’t know what else to do. Maybe I can share my code in physical form (a zine!) so that it’s very unlikely to be scraped into an LLM?
Lykso
in reply to requiem 🦫 • • •requiem 🦫
in reply to Lykso • • •I’ve been thinking about something like that.
My new projects live on a server in my lab running Forgejo, and I know they’ve been working on adding federation support.
I’m wondering if it will be possible at some point to federate with other instances used by humans I trust?
@rasterweb
requiem 🦫
in reply to requiem 🦫 • • •Hey @forgejo how’s federation support coming along?
@lykso @rasterweb
Forgejo
in reply to requiem 🦫 • • •We work on federation. Please check out our monthly reports for more information!
floss.social/@forgejo/11477983…
~ @mahlzahn
Forgejo
2025-07-01 20:21:47
Robert Wolff
in reply to Forgejo • • •I think, we need ethical, FOSS LLMs that value the author rights, e.g. crediting each bit where essential (non-trivial) information was taken from and, of course, obeying to licences! Thus, e.g., GPL code must be relicensed by GPL and not to be mixed with non-free (GPL-incompatible) code.