I couldn't sleep last night, so I started browsing posts on SO, including older ones. I noticed a pattern from a certain user. So I clicked on that user's profile, just to browse his questions. He has lots of questions. In fact, by going back through his [iphone] tagged questions, I was able to find all of the code necessary to write the iphone app that he now has on the app store! I'm not kidding here. All of the nontrivial code was written by lushes at SO (sadly, myself included) who took the time to answer his (largely unaccepted) questions. Should SO get some of the proceeds for this app? I ask somewhat in jest, but I would love to hear reactions from the community about situations such as this. Anyone else find this amusing/sad/annoying?
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Technically, if he did use that code then isn't he bound by the attribution clause of the cc-wiki license at least?
and I believe he's also bound by the share-alike clause as well
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I've noticed a couple of instances where I wondered if something like this was going on. That does indeed make me sad, but for this person, not for us. It can't be all that satisfying to be so directly reliant on others' help. Also for all their customers, and co-workers if such exist. I imagine it will be difficult for this person to maintain the app. Then again, if the questions are at least okay, maybe they'll help someone else with the one piece that person needs to finish their cool app. Who knows, though? Maybe the user you found now understands everything they need to write a great app on their own. A new role for SO: custom-built tutorial? If not, well, we will just have to wait for karma to do its work. |
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Are you saying that asking questions should no longer be free, when you manage to get something out of them? Well, I better do something about my questions, then: each has been prompted by an actual problem.
Now, I ought to calculate what part was my original contribution, what part was answers from SO, what part was C&P'd from TDWTF, what was shared by my colleagues, and what part was supernatural inspiration, and accordingly divide the proceeds between my account, SEI, Alex, all my previous cow-orkers, and a religious organization of your choosing. No, seriously: everything my first ever web app did, I have all learned from the Internet - by reading what others wrote, and by asking. It would have been unfair then, and it would be rather unfair now, to change the rules when it's convenient - and say "oh, sure, it was free, but not really: now that you're bathing in hundreds of cents, we want a cut too". Hopefully, that other user has learned something programming-related, like I have. |
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The thing is, with all this code freely available there is nothing is to stop you from putting the same app together and listing it in the app store yourself. Continuing on this line, that leads me to believe the user in question did add some value of his own to the project: the conception, design, (possibly) graphic arts, the execution of piecing it all together and actually listing it, and (presumably) some end-user support as well. That fact that he was unable to code much of it himself simply means he is now forced to risk competition in the app store that is on entirely equal footing. |
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Lack of initiative is disappointing, but we’ll never agree on a threshold below which the sluggardly has to pay. In fact, we’ll probably never come up with a measurable definition of initiative. |
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