Ah, I see. I was going to recommend you a link to the audiobooks that I found.
I managed to find what I assume are English fansubs.
It was on Amazon Prime’s streaming service for a while so there should be official subs at least floating around.
https://github.com/KerfuffleV2 — various random open source projects.
Ah, I see. I was going to recommend you a link to the audiobooks that I found.
I managed to find what I assume are English fansubs.
It was on Amazon Prime’s streaming service for a while so there should be official subs at least floating around.
It’s fairly entertaining but you really have to suspend disbelief. I’d call it fantasy with some sci-fi jargon more than actual sci-fi. I guess I could say overall plot doesn’t make a lot of sense but scenery on the way isn’t too hard on the eyes.
Just curious, to you speak Mandarin?
A more restrictive license wouldn’t help in that case.
Well, it depends. Elsewhere in the thread, people mentioned licenses that have ethics clauses:
How enforceable (or whether I would actually have the resources to do something) these are is another problem, but it still might give some entity pause. Just generally though, using a restrictive license like GPL is pretty likely to make Puppy Punching Worldwide Inc look for other alternatives as well. Odds are, their puppy punching software isn’t going to be compatible with a license like the GPL.
I usually use MIT, partially because my current interests (AI/LLM stuff) involve interfacing with some other projects that are MIT and partially because it’s just a simple “do whatever” license and I don’t really care to enforce terms. Of course, if I thought some government or company was going to use stuff I develop to launch the nukes or control a robot fist to punch cute little puppies right in the snout then I’d start using a more restrictive license but the odds of that are… pretty much nonexistent for everything I’ve ever created.
That certainly sucks all the joy out of pirating it.