So I just read Bill Gates’ 1976 Open Letter To Hobbyists, in which he whines about not making more money from his software. You know, instead of being proud of making software that people wanted to use. And then the bastard went on and made proprietary licences for software the industry standard, holding back innovation and freedom for decades. What a douche canoe.

  • rozodru@pie.andmc.ca
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    16 minutes ago

    Watch the TV movie from the late 90s “Pirates of Silicon Valley” which pretty much paints both Bill Gates and Steve Jobs as really shitty people. I mean just look at what Gates did with the Altair. Said he had an operating system, didn’t have an operating system, and what have you.

    Then there’s the whole Xerox Park thing where neither Apple nor Microsoft would be where they’re at today without the engineers at Xerox who were pretty much forced to hand over their stuff because Xerox execs didn’t see value in a GUI and Mouse. Gates and Jobs both were more than happy to go in there and pillage what was developed in order to create Windows and The Macintosh/MacOS

  • wolfinthewoods@lemmy.ml
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    1 hour ago

    “Well, Steve [Jobs]… I think it’s more like we both had this rich neighbour named Xerox and I broke into his house to steal the TV set and found out that you had already stolen it.”

  • tetris11@feddit.uk
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    16 minutes ago

    His mother was an influential person on the board of directors of several firms. She met with John Opel, who was the IBM chairman, and secured her son’s Microsoft contract with IBM in the 1980s, where it then became dominant.

    It’s who you know.

  • kindred@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 hours ago

    There is a viable alternative to the problems raised by Bill Gates in his irate letter to computer hobbyists concerning “ripping off” software. When software is free, or so inexpensive that it’s easier to pay for it than to duplicate it, then it won’t be “stolen”.

    —Jim Warren, July 1976

  • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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    4 hours ago

    AstraZenica COVID vaccine was going to be opensource but he used with weight as a donor to pressure the university to sell it to a firm he had ownership instead

    • Maerman@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 hours ago

      I read about that, yeah. All hail Mammon; money above all. Sometimes I think wealth changes something in a person’s brain, like psychologically or neurologically. It’s as if they get so detached from reality that they lose all empathy and sense of community. I’ve heard the term ‘affluenza’ used as a joke, but the more I think about it, the more it makes sense as a legitimate thing.

      • jol@discuss.tchncs.de
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        3 hours ago

        It takes a certain kind of personality to even become a billionaire. You don’t become a billionaire by being kind and ethical

      • fruitycoder@sh.itjust.works
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        4 hours ago

        Its any position of power in my experience. People get power, justifying in their mind that they and people like them should be in power. Even games about being in charge run into that problem. Maintaining power becomes a major part of the game at some part.

        • Maerman@lemmy.worldOP
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          4 hours ago

          Well, it would make sense. Rich people have always creeped me out, just instinctively.

          • Townlately@feddit.nl
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            3 hours ago

            I’m sure the threshold varies, but I would back research that attempts to pinpoint or at least narrow down what amount of wealth starts to change your brain chemistry for the worse.

    • Maerman@lemmy.worldOP
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      4 hours ago

      Yup. He stole a bunch of ideas and code, then got upset that people were stealing his ideas and code. Do as I say, not as I do.

      • WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        3 hours ago

        Wait… You’re telling me that people born into extreme privilege and wealth turn out to be self-aggrandizing, egotistical, sociopaths who drastically over-estimate their own importance and contribution to society?

        My world view is shook!

  • UNY0N@lemmy.wtf
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    2 hours ago

    And he is one of the “better” billionaires. He has donated over $100 Billion to help people around the world, which makes him look like a great guy on paper.

    I think it’s not so much him as a person, but his business decisions in the context of capitalism. That’s the real evil, not any one person.

    Just to be clear, I’m not defending him or his actions.

    • CountryBreakfast@lemmygrad.ml
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      1 hour ago

      Honestly it makes me so fucking depressed when I hear people saying something as fundamentally disconnected from reality, something so needless and unthinking, something so flavorless and insipid as even ironically implying Gates is one of the “better” ones, that “as a person” he may be fine and that no one is “defending him.”

    • Maerman@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Yeah. He has shaped the world in very negative ways through his decisions. He could donate his entire fortune today and live out the rest of his life in a monastery, but I would still hate him.

  • thefactremains@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    I think he genuinely believed it was the best thing for society. He, like so many, was (and likely still is) convinced that everyone thinks like he does. So he believes the only thing that drives people is money.

    Now if that were the case, the only way to advance society and facilitate growth in software would be to offer smart people a lot of money.

    In that flawed logic, he really thought it was for the best.

    • Maerman@lemmy.worldOP
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      2 hours ago

      Fair point. It’s not an excuse, but it does explain a lot. Nobody is the villain in their own story, after all.

  • Cosmoooooooo@lemmy.world
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    3 hours ago

    His wife left him when she found out he’s in the Epstein files. Because Bill Gates rapes children.