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There is no Claude, just other people's code

Michiel Leenaars for @nlnet at @fosdem

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Everything you’re hearing about AI is completely true and not at all made up by sycophants

The only thing that is real is your FOMO

Also ducks. Ducks are real

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Traditional #FOSDEM lunch break, club-mate and kernel CVE assignments.
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Another day, another stage. Same duo.

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Prediction for the potential future:

When the AI coding agent companies are just about to run out of money, down to their last few % raised as none of their customers are actually paying the real cost required to run these services, they pivot and take all of the uploaded code that was willingly sent to them, turn it into thousands of products / services to sell / rent, disconnect the public api endpoints leaving their old customers helpless as they no longer remember how to program "in the raw" and can not understand their own codebases, and compete directly against them putting their own customers all out of business which finally results in a positive income stream and "validation" of the coding agent companies previously over-hyped business valuations.

"But copyright law will prevent this!" you say...
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@bagder It was an amazing honor to receive this, thank everyone so much, and for your great speech at the event.

RE: https://mastodon.social/@bagder/115980733920028429
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The @europeanOSacademy‘s Excellence in Open Source Award 2026 goes to @gregkh , presented by @bagder.

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"We will ban you and ridicule you in public if you waste our time on crap reports."

https://curl.se/.well-known/security.txt

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Thorsten Leemhuis (acct. 1/4)

These two @lwn articles are prime examples of why good journalism matters and why you should pay money to make sure it thrives:

They both look beyond the shiny statements from the different parties involved and outside commentators such as @torvalds in this case and explain just how it is from a mostly neutral[1] point of view so that you can make your own judgments.

* GPLv2 and installation requirements – https://lwn.net/Articles/1052842/

* SFC v. VIZIO: who can enforce the GPL? – https://lwn.net/Articles/1052734/

[1] We are humans, and even if we try, we are never completely neutral – and a publication like that targets the FLOSS community obviously will somewhat look at things from the view of its target audience.

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This post by Bruce Schneier contains so many thoughtful soundbites:

> The question is not simply whether copyright law applies to AI. It is why the law appears to operate so differently depending on who is doing the extracting and for what purpose.

> Like the early internet, AI is often described as a democratizing force. But also like the internet, AI’s current trajectory suggests something closer to consolidation.

https://www.schneier.com/blog/archives/2026/01/ai-and-the-corporate-capture-of-knowledge.html

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Edited 16 days ago

I talked for more than two hours (135 mins to be precise) about upstream Linux kernel hardening at Okayama University this afternoon. 🐧👨🏽‍💻🎙

I just uploaded my slides here: https://embeddedor.com/blog/presentations/#Enhancing_spatial_safety_Better_array-bounds_checking_in_C_and_Linux_Okayama_University_%E2%80%93Guest_talk

I really enjoyed the session. The students were amazing. They were well prepared and asked a lot of questions. 👏🏼👏🏼

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A thought that popped into my head when I woke up at 4 am and couldn’t get back to sleep…

Imagine that AI/LLM tools were being marketed to workers as a way to do the same work more quickly and work fewer hours without telling their employers.

“Use ChatGPT to write your TPS reports, go home at lunchtime. Spend more time with your kids!” “Use Claude to write your code, turn 60-hour weeks into four-day weekends!” “Collect two paychecks by using AI! You can hold two jobs without the boss knowing the difference!”

Imagine if AI/LLM tools were not shareholder catnip, but a grassroots movement of tooling that workers were sharing with each other to work less. Same quality of output, but instead of being pushed top-down, being adopted to empower people to work less and “cheat” employers.

Imagine if unions were arguing for the right of workers to use LLMs as labor saving devices, instead of trying to protect members from their damage.

CEOs would be screaming bloody murder. There’d be an overnight industry in AI-detection tools and immediate bans on AI in the workplace. Instead of Microsoft CoPilot 365, Satya would be out promoting Microsoft SlopGuard - add ons that detect LLM tools running on Windows and prevent AI scrapers from harvesting your company’s valuable content for training.

The media would be running horror stories about the terrible trend of workers getting the same pay for working less, and the awful quality of LLM output. Maybe they’d still call them “hallucinations,” but it’d be in the terrified tone of 80s anti-drug PSAs.

What I’m trying to say in my sleep-deprived state is that you shouldn’t ignore the intent and ill effects of these tools. If they were good for you, shareholders would hate them.

You should understand that they’re anti-worker and anti-human. TPTB would be fighting them tooth and nail if their benefits were reversed. It doesn’t matter how good they get, or how interesting they are: the ultimate purpose of the industry behind them is to create less demand for labor and aggregate more wealth in fewer hands.

Unless you happen to be in a very very small club of ultra-wealthy tech bros, they’re not for you, they’re against you.

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8 minutes video of commuting in the snow by bike here in the Netherlands earlier this week:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SmMRVeRs3vU
(note, not my video, but I was out in that mess, taking a tram and walking to where I needed to go that day.)
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Another post in my Linux kernel CVE process series, "How the Linux kernel security process works": http://www.kroah.com/log/blog/2026/01/02/linux-kernel-security-work/
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Edited 1 month ago

I've been trying to quit Google for years, and I finally did it: https://jimmunroe.net/writing/divestment-december.html
Anger at the techno-fascists wasn't enough on its own:
I got a big boost of inspiration and mutual aid from the brilliant community at @yunohost who provide ways to install and maintain -- with very little technical knowledge --
digital services like forums, cloud services and media streaming apps. Check them out at https://YunoHost.org !

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All 5960 GSD kernel security reports are now finally processed and CVE ids have been assigned for those that meet the cve.org criteria. Only took me almost 2 years of manual review, ugh, that was a grind:

https://lore.kernel.org/r/2025123055-directory-hemlock-a282@gregkh
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The kernel CNA assigned their 10000th CVE last week, CVE-2025-68750

So far the “stats” look like:

 Year	Reserved	Assigned	Rejected	 A+R		Returned	Total
  2019:	   0		   2		   1		   3		  47		  50
  2020:	   0		  17		   0		  17		  33		  50
  2021:	   0		 732		  24		 756		  16		 772
  2022:	   3		2041		  47		2088		   0		2091
  2023:	   1		1464		  47		1511		   0		1512
  2024:	   6		3069		  96		3165		   0		3171
  2025:	  73		2421		  39		2460		   0		2533
 Total:	  83		9746		 254		10000		  96		10179

Note, the “year” is the year the bug was fixed in the kernel tree, NOT the year the CVE was applied for/assigned.

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Edited 1 month ago

Rare footage of @gregkh signing an autograph with the phrase "do not use old kernels!" at Open Source Summit Korea 2025, after one of his sessions.

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Just found that the 2026 edition of the Linux Plumbers Conference will be in Prague 🇨🇿 , Oct. 5-7, on the same week as Open Source Summit Europe and Embedded Linux Conference Europe.

Save the dates and see you there! That's too early to book my train tickets though 🤔

https://lpc.events/event/20/

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Whenever I see a “rice my Arch w/hyprland” video, I’m like:

You think that’s badass? You should’ve tried getting X11 running on a Linux machine in the mid-90s. You needed your monitor & video card manuals & a calculator (seriously) so you could calculate “modelines” for your X11 config file.

If you got the math wrong you’d fry your monitor by driving it at too high a frequency (back then nearly all monitors were fixed-frequency).

Typing “startx” for the first time was *so* stressful.

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