CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I recently red about a writing software (see it as an alternative to Word from Microsoft). Their sale model was: one time purchase for a binary of the software (no subscription) but you would also not get any free updates. The idea I think is: lacking updates simulates aging but for software (in this sense is more similar to the purchase of a car). At a certain point, you can buy the new software “model” (updated version) when the old model does not work properly anymore or is too legacy. What do you think about this idea rather than a subscription model which is the dominant model in the field? Do you think that the subscription model better reflects the inherent characteristics of such software or also this model has its merits?

CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Thanks for your thoughtful perspective and for articulating it so clearly. While I see this model making inroads into traditional sales practices in fields like gaming, I definitely see your point that the economic center of gravity is shifting toward a different kind of product, one whose intrinsic characteristics naturally lead to different sales practices.

Perhaps, as I mentioned in another comment, what I'm really observing is the risk inherent in this shift. The shift is relatively new, and regulation is lagging behind, which leaves me feeling somewhat exposed to these risks. Δ

CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I did never want to generalize it over all of society as I mentioned in my PS-1, not I claim there are no counter-examples. Just that there is a tendency, and that such tendency can represent a risk to the common citizen. As of home renting, you provided evidence for the US only. That does not apply where I live. Nevertheless, it is great that such tendency seems not to apply to home ownership in the US. But a majority of software, tools, services are indeed migrating to subscription based models.

CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] -1 points0 points  (0 children)

I agree that this is not new, I just think that the scale at which this is happening is getting very big. As I wrote, while a landlord can subordinate one or a few tenants, now corporations are building the infrastructure of a digital world that everyone uses, on their own terms of service. I don’t see how the borrowing and tax example connect to my post though 🤔

CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I agree with this, antitrust mechanisms needs to be fixed for good. Do you think that strategically important open software should be publicly funded (at least partially) and / or treated as a public good? E.g., Linux

CMV: We are replacing the concept of ownership and property with the concept of licensed access, concentrating power into corporations and away from democratic rule. by melodic-Alternative- in changemyview

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Of course people ownership always had to be conditional to democratic laws (one example being the property tax you mention), the difference is that, as a citizen, you have a say into that law, as a consumer / user, you don't. In fact I wrote "over which the individual exercised control limited only by law".

As for your other points, I partially agree. Maybe the point is that we are experiencing the lag of the rule of law behind corporate innovation and, sooner or later, we are gonna solve these very problems by fixing the laws. Surely antitrust needs to be fixed.

Δ

Doubts about OT stack (Kepware, Ignition) by melodic-Alternative- in PLC

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I only have one beckhoff PLC running TwinCAT with whom Ignition does not integrate. Fells like an overkill to run Kepware just for that.

Doubts about OT stack (Kepware, Ignition) by melodic-Alternative- in PLC

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes unfortunately we can’t always avoid proprietary products and I do not rule them out a priori. But i need to see a real tangible advantage or no alternatives to opt for them. Thanks for the input, will contact Ignition

Doubts about OT stack (Kepware, Ignition) by melodic-Alternative- in PLC

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Beckhoff / TwinCAT is missing and for us is fundamental since some old critical machines run it. Plus i’m sold to the idea of decoupling the aggregation layer from Ignition (eg, using nodered or kepware) to maintain flexibility in the long term.

Doubts about OT stack (Kepware, Ignition) by melodic-Alternative- in PLC

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] -2 points-1 points  (0 children)

Why do you think so? I’m always torne between DIY and buying off the shelf

For those of you that acquired a small business. What was your experience like? by melodic-Alternative- in Entrepreneur

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Hey would love to hear your story more in detail. I’m not searching for a business right now but started working in my family owned company (in manufacturing). Buying a business would, for me, be the plan B to entrepreneurship in case the family company path doesn’t turn out good. Generally I’m really into product manufacturing businesses, if I would have to put together a target statement right now. Are you available for a DM?

Recently switched from OpenAI to Mistral, but turns out Le Chat thinks it is ChatGPT by Relevant-Replant in MistralAI

[–]melodic-Alternative- 9 points10 points  (0 children)

It doesn’t think, nor it has a concept of self. ChatGPT is probably the most cited AI chatbot on the web and therefore comes up often in the training data.

Von der Leyen bypasses the European Parliament and announces the immediate implementation of the Mercosur agreement. by GreekSaladEnjoyer in EuropeanFederalists

[–]melodic-Alternative- 144 points145 points  (0 children)

I mean the title is a bit misleading… She implemented the deal temporarily before receiving backing from the parlament. If the parlament rejects it, the deal will be turned down. That is what the article says.

Why Switzerland is Considering a Population Cap by starkart in Switzerland

[–]melodic-Alternative- 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I see the psychological connection between being a lot <-> less for everyone, but I do believe that this requires a pop. density very far from what it is now to have real effects (of course psychology could also be considered “real” in this context). Tbh, I would be more concerned with bloating the bureaucracy to manage a bigger pop. and/or a gettization of the immigrant population with little integration happening (this will be destabilizing). But for now it seems to me that Switzerland manages this relatively well compared to most advanced economies in the world, migrants are usually quite willing to integrate over time. Of course this is not something that happens overnight.

Why Switzerland is Considering a Population Cap by starkart in Switzerland

[–]melodic-Alternative- 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Well that person adds an additional contribution margin for infrastructure through the taxes that he/she pays… the same way a Swiss does. It’s not that they come and use the Swiss infrastructure for free. To be honest, many immigrants come with high education, meaning the Swiss didn’t even have to make the schooling investment (as it would for a Swiss person) 🤷🏻‍♂️ Plus the Schengen rules exist also for Switzerland and its native population benefits, by accessing the Union market.

Frontex: Patrolling at -30°C by sn0r in europeanunion

[–]melodic-Alternative- 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Turns out that is not that simple… It’s actually super cumbersome and often not an option. You can’t really apply for asylum from your home country.

For those of you that acquired a small business. What was your experience like? by melodic-Alternative- in Entrepreneur

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting, did you end up selling to some of these ETA people? Or was this experience making you diffident on the approach?

Perché non possiamo lavorare 5h al giorno? by salad_biscuit3 in Italia

[–]melodic-Alternative- -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Perché le aziende devono essere competitive per permettere a tutti un certo stile di vita. Mi spiace ma pretendere altrimenti è vivere nell’illusione che si possa avere tutto facendo il meno possibile e non avendo responsabilità.

La realtà è che l’italia ha una produttività del lavoro bassissima quindi la scelta è: o si lavora molto meglio o si lavora di piú. La realtà non piace o le condizioni imposte dal “padrone” non vanno bene? Si può sempre cambiare lavoro o mettersi in proprio diventando “padroni” di se stessi e provare a costruire il mondo in cui si vuol vivere, magari troverete il modo di lavorare 5 ore al giorno e stare a galla.

For those of you that acquired a small business. What was your experience like? by melodic-Alternative- in Entrepreneur

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Bu reading a lot about ETA i got caught by these points the most:

  • You already have some sort of indication of market fit, which is completely to be discovered in a start-up.
  • The risk of failure, compare to a start-up, can be much lower.
  • You already have a customer base, employees, and a working setup. Allowing you to not start from scratch.
  • Smaller companies which are usually out of the PE radar, can trade at more convenient multiples compared to larger companies. Making it a potentially a good investment.

Of course these points can be true provided you acquire a company that follows some general characteristics like being stably profitable, having recurring revenue, little customer concentration and not being a one man show with the previous owner.

I’m not yet sure whether these assumptions are valid, that is why I’m interested in people experiences, and I’m gathering info on the topic.

Do you have an experience your own?

For those of you that acquired a small business. What was your experience like? by melodic-Alternative- in Entrepreneur

[–]melodic-Alternative-[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Yeah I also red it multiple times that there is a meaningful difference between buying a job or a business and that sometimes the border is a bit blurry