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1 914 shares, 36 trendiness

Bugs Apple Loves

Why else would they keep them around for so long?

Why else would they keep them around for so long?

Every bug is dif­fer­ent. But the math is al­ways real.

Think our num­bers are wrong? Edit them your­self.

Users Affected × Frequency × Time Per Incident

How many Apple users hit this bug, how of­ten, and how long they suf­fer each time.

Σ (Workaround Time × Participation Rate)

The ex­tra time spent by peo­ple who try to fix what Apple won’t.

Years Unfixed × Pressure Factor

How long Apple has known about this and how ur­gent the task usu­ally is.

Human Hours Wasted ÷ Engineering Hours to Fix

How many times over Apple could have fixed it with the pro­duc­tiv­ity they’ve de­stroyed.

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Read the original on www.bugsappleloves.com »

2 553 shares, 88 trendiness

Microsoft gave FBI a set of BitLocker encryption keys to unlock suspects' laptops: Reports

Microsoft pro­vided the FBI with the re­cov­ery keys to un­lock en­crypted data on the hard dri­ves of three lap­tops as part of a fed­eral in­ves­ti­ga­tion, Forbes re­ported on Friday.

Many mod­ern Windows com­put­ers rely on full-disk en­cryp­tion, called BitLocker, which is en­abled by de­fault. This type of tech­nol­ogy should pre­vent any­one ex­cept the de­vice owner from ac­cess­ing the data if the com­puter is locked and pow­ered off.

But, by de­fault, BitLocker re­cov­ery keys are up­loaded to Microsoft’s cloud, al­low­ing the tech gi­ant — and by ex­ten­sion law en­force­ment — to ac­cess them and use them to de­crypt dri­ves en­crypted with BitLocker, as with the case re­ported by Forbes.

The case in­volved sev­eral peo­ple sus­pected of fraud re­lated to the Pandemic Unemployment Assistance pro­gram in Guam, a U. S. is­land in the Pacific. Local news out­let Pacific Daily News cov­ered the case last year, re­port­ing that a war­rant had been served to Microsoft in re­la­tion to the sus­pects’ hard dri­ves. Kandit News, an­other lo­cal Guam news out­let, also re­ported in October that the FBI re­quested the war­rant six months af­ter seiz­ing the three lap­tops en­crypted with BitLocker.

A spokesper­son for Microsoft did not im­me­di­ately re­spond to a re­quest for com­ment by TechCrunch. Microsoft told Forbes that the com­pany some­times pro­vides BitLocker re­cov­ery keys to au­thor­i­ties, hav­ing re­ceived an av­er­age of 20 such re­quests per year.

Apart from the pri­vacy risks of hand­ing re­cov­ery keys to a com­pany, Johns Hopkins pro­fes­sor and cryp­tog­ra­phy ex­pert Matthew Green raised the po­ten­tial sce­nario where ma­li­cious hack­ers com­pro­mise Microsoft’s cloud in­fra­struc­ture — some­thing that has hap­pened sev­eral times in re­cent years — and get ac­cess to these re­cov­ery keys. The hack­ers would still need phys­i­cal ac­cess to the hard dri­ves to use the stolen re­cov­ery keys.

It’s 2026 and these con­cerns have been known for years,” Green wrote in a post on Bluesky. Microsoft’s in­abil­ity to se­cure crit­i­cal cus­tomer keys is start­ing to make it an out­lier from the rest of the in­dus­try.”

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Read the original on techcrunch.com »

3 461 shares, 33 trendiness

ghostty/AI_POLICY.md at main · ghostty-org/ghostty

To see all avail­able qual­i­fiers, see our doc­u­men­ta­tion.

We read every piece of feed­back, and take your in­put very se­ri­ously.

Secure your code as you build

To see all avail­able qual­i­fiers, see our doc­u­men­ta­tion.

We read every piece of feed­back, and take your in­put very se­ri­ously.

Secure your code as you build

You signed in with an­other tab or win­dow. Reload to re­fresh your ses­sion.

You signed out in an­other tab or win­dow. Reload to re­fresh your ses­sion.

You switched ac­counts on an­other tab or win­dow. Reload to re­fresh your ses­sion.

...

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4 459 shares, 24 trendiness

Proton Spam and the AI Consent Problem

On Jan 14th Proton sent out an email newslet­ter with the sub­ject line:

Introducing Projects - Try Lumo’s pow­er­ful new fea­ture now

There is a prob­lem with this email. And I’m not talk­ing about the ques­tion of how ex­actly AI aligns with Proton’s core val­ues of pri­vacy and se­cu­rity.

The prob­lem is I had al­ready ex­plic­itly opted out of Lumo emails.

That tog­gle for Lumo prod­uct up­dates” is unchecked. Lumo is the only topic I’m not sub­scribed to. Proton has over a dozen newslet­ters, in­clud­ing some crypto non­sense. I opt-in to every­thing but Lumo, I gave an un­de­ni­able no to Lumo emails.

So the email I re­ceived from Proton is spam, right?

My un­der­stand­ing is that spam is a vi­o­la­tion of GDPR and UK data pro­tec­tion laws. Regardless, Proton’s email is a clear abuse of their own ser­vice to­wards a pay­ing busi­ness cus­tomer.

Despite the sub­ject line and con­tents, and de­spite the From Lumo” name and @lumo.proton.me ad­dress, maybe this was an hon­est mis­take?

Proton’s first re­ply ex­plained how to opt-out.

Thank you for con­tact­ing us. You can un­sub­scribe from the newslet­ters if you do the fol­low­ing:- Log in to your ac­count at https://​ac­count.pro­ton­vpn.com/​lo­gin- If you need ad­di­tional as­sis­tance, let me know.[screen­shot of the same opt-out tog­gle]

John Support di­rects me to the ex­act same Lumo prod­uct up­dates” tog­gle I had al­ready unchecked. I replied ex­plain­ing that I had al­ready opted out. Support replies say­ing they’re checking this with the team” then later replies again ask­ing for screen­shots.

Can you make sure to send me a screen­shot of this newslet­ter op­tion dis­abled, as well as the date when the last mes­sage was sent to you re­gard­ing the Lumo of­fer?You can send me a screen­shot of the whole mes­sage, in­clud­ing the date. Is it per­haps 14 January 2026 that you re­ceived the mes­sage?

I found that last line cu­ri­ous, are they deal­ing with other un­happy cus­tomers? Maybe I’m read­ing too much into it.

I sent the screen­shots and signed off with Don’t try to pre­tend this fits into an­other newslet­ter cat­e­gory.”

After more checking this with the team” I got a re­sponse to­day.

In this case, the men­tioned newslet­ter is for pro­mot­ing Lumo Business Suit to Business-related plans. Hence, why you re­ceived it, as Product Updates and Email Subscription are two dif­fer­ent things.In the sub­scrip­tion sec­tion, you will see the Email Subscription” cat­e­gory, where you can dis­able the newslet­ter in or­der to avoid get­ting it in the fu­ture.

If I un­der­stand cor­rectly, Proton are claim­ing this email is the Proton for Business newslet­ter”. Not the Lumo prod­uct up­dates” newslet­ter.

I don’t know about you, but I think that’s baloney. Proton Support had five full busi­ness days to come up with a bet­ter ex­cuse. Please tell me, how can I have been any more ex­plicit about opt­ing out of Lumo emails, only to re­ceive Try Lumo” From Lumo”, and be told that is not ac­tu­ally a Lumo email?

Has any­one else no­ticed that the AI in­dus­try can’t take no” for an an­swer? AI is be­ing force-fed into every cor­ner of tech. It’s un­fath­omable to them that some of us aren’t in­ter­ested.

The en­tire AI in­dus­try is built upon a com­mon prin­ci­ple of non-con­sent. They laugh in the face of IP and copy­right law. AI bots DDoS web­sites and lie about user-agents. Can it get worse than the sick­en­ing ac­tions of Grok? I dread to think.

As Proton has demon­strated above, and Mozilla/Firefox re­cently too, the AI in­dus­try sim­ply will not ac­cept no” as an an­swer. Some ex­am­ples like spam are more triv­ial than oth­ers, but the grow­ing trend is vile and dis­turb­ing.

I do not want your AI.

I guess some­one at Microsoft read my post and said hold my beer”. This morn­ing I woke up to a lovely gift in my in­box; Build Al agents with the new GitHub Copilot SDK.

GitHub Ensloppification is mov­ing faster than I can delete my ac­count for good. (It’s an un­for­tu­nate re­quire­ment for client pro­jects.) For the record, I have never said yes” to any GitHub newslet­ter. Even be­fore Copilot I dis­abled every pos­si­ble GitHub email no­ti­fi­ca­tion.

The Unsubscribe” link pro­vides the hid­den newslet­ter list. There is noth­ing within GitHub ac­count set­tings I can find to dis­able spam.

As ex­pected, Microsoft has opted me in with­out my con­sent. The wheels are falling off at GitHub. The bru­tally slow front-end UI. The em­bar­rass­ingly lack­lus­tre Actions CI. Now this sloppy tripe every­where. Reminder to de­vel­op­ers: GitHub is not Git.

After I pub­lished this blog post yes­ter­day I re­ceived an­other email from Specialist Support / Mail Delivery (Engineering) Team.

I com­pletely un­der­stand your frus­tra­tion, and I apol­o­gize for the con­fu­sion caused by these Overlapping Categories of no­ti­fi­ca­tions. Specifically, some of our com­mu­ni­ca­tions re­gard­ing Lumo fall un­der Both Product Updates (Update Info) and Email Subscriptions (Announcements, Newsletters, and Promos) This is likely why you are still re­ceiv­ing them de­spite hav­ing opted out of one cat­e­gory.

I replied say­ing that is not how email mar­ket­ing con­sent works. I’m pretty sure not legally, I’m cer­tain not morally, and un­til now, I was con­vinced not by Proton’s stan­dard. The very first cus­tomer sup­port con­firmed what should be com­mon sense. Don’t want Lumo emails? Unsubscribe from the Lumo prod­uct up­dates” cat­e­gory. If it was a busi­ness newslet­ter that hap­pened to men­tion Lumo as a bul­let point, fine. But the en­tire email was Lumo, talk­ing about how Our lat­est Lumo up­date in­tro­duces…”

Anyway, fol­low­ing a lively dis­cus­sion on Big Tech’s un­of­fi­cial cus­tomer sup­port fo­rum, my case was es­ca­lated to Proton’s Head of Customer Support.

Please ac­cept my apolo­gies for how your ticket was man­aged by our teams. They have tried to ex­plain what hap­pened with­out ac­knowl­edg­ing the prob­lem it­self. You are right. You should not have re­ceived the newslet­ter.We have iden­ti­fied a bug in our sys­tem, and our tech­ni­cal team is work­ing on re­solv­ing it.I want to as­sure you that we take com­mu­ni­ca­tion con­sent very se­ri­ously.We also value our re­la­tion­ship with our cus­tomers. The sup­port team will learn from this in­ter­ac­tion and im­prove.

Just FYI I don’t have a prob­lem with how the sup­port ticket was man­aged. I doubt the first line of de­fence gets paid enough to deal with this stuff when their em­ployer is at fault. Please don’t re­place them with Lumo, then we’ll have prob­lems!

I also see Proton’s CTO replied on Hacker News with a sim­i­lar mes­sage:

Hey, Proton CTO here. There was a bug, and we fucked up. Support should have re­ported it up the chain and ac­knowl­edged this. Things hap­pen, es­pe­cially at scale, but we take comms con­sent se­ri­ously and will fix it.

So was it a bug? Or did Proton for­get their core val­ues and be­have like the other slop fac­to­ries? I’ll take them at their word. What am I go­ing to do, go back to gmail? I’m look­ing into Tuta and StartMail but it’s a pain to switch and nowhere is per­fect.

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Read the original on dbushell.com »

5 440 shares, 32 trendiness

AI is a horse

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Read the original on kconner.com »

6 438 shares, 24 trendiness

- YouTube

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Read the original on www.youtube.com »

7 289 shares, 35 trendiness

Can AI grow corn?

On January 21, 2026, @fredwilson chal­lenged @seth: AI can write code, but it can’t af­fect the phys­i­cal world. This is our re­sponse. Real corn, grown from seed to har­vest, with every de­ci­sion made by Claude Code.

AI does­n’t need to drive a trac­tor. It needs to or­ches­trate the sys­tems and peo­ple who do. A farm man­ager does­n’t per­son­ally plant every seed. They ag­gre­gate data, make de­ci­sions, co­or­di­nate con­trac­tors. Claude Code be­comes that farm man­ager— 24/7, data-dri­ven, fully doc­u­mented.

The Process — How this was built

Fred processes emails as part of his daily check rou­tine. Priority given to farm­ers and op­er­a­tors.

A pro­ject by @seth, in­spired by @fredwilson, or­ches­trated by Claude Code (Opus 4.5)Want to help? Iowa land leads, ag ex­per­tise, vibe coders wel­come: fred@proofof­corn.com

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Read the original on proofofcorn.com »

8 262 shares, 22 trendiness

Booting from a vinyl record

Most PCs tend to boot from a pri­mary me­dia stor­age, be it a hard disk drive, or a solid-state drive, per­haps from a net­work, or — if all else fails — the USB stick or the boot DVD comes to the res­cue… Fun, eh? Boring! Why don’t we try to boot from a record player for a change?

Update February 2022: Click here to ob­serve the very same vinyl ramdisk booted on an IBM PCjr!

So this nutty lit­tle ex­per­i­ment con­nects a PC, or an IBM PC to be ex­act, di­rectly onto a record player through an am­pli­fier. I made a small ROM on-chip boot loader that op­er­ates the built-in cassette in­ter­face” of the PC (that was hardly ever used), which will now be in­voked by the BIOS if all the other boot op­tions fail, i.e. floppy disk and the hard drive. The turntable spins an ana­log record­ing of a small bootable read-only RAM drive, which is 64K in size. This con­tains a FreeDOS ker­nel, mod­i­fied by me to cram it into the mem­ory con­straint, a mi­cro vari­ant of COMMAND. COM and a patched ver­sion of INTERLNK, that al­lows file trans­fer through a printer ca­ble, mod­i­fied to be runnable on FreeDOS. The boot­loader reads the disk im­age from the au­dio record­ing through the cas­sette mo­dem, loads it to mem­ory and boots the sys­tem on it. Simple huh?

The vinyl loader code, in a ROM

(It can also re­side on a hard drive or a floppy, but that’d be cheat­ing)

And now to get more tech­ni­cal: this is ba­si­cally a merge be­tween BootLPT/86 and 5150CAXX, mi­nus the printer port sup­port. It also re­sides in a ROM, in the BIOS ex­pan­sion socket, but it does not have to. The con­nect­ing ca­ble be­tween the PC and the record player am­pli­fier is the same as with 5150CAXX, just with­out the line-in (PC data out) jack.

The cassette in­ter­face” it­self is just PC speaker timer chan­nel 2 for the out­put, and 8255A-5 PPI port C chan­nel 4 (PC4, I/O port 62h bit 4) for the in­put. BIOS INT 15h rou­tines are used for soft­ware (de)modulation.

The boot im­age is the same 64K BOOTDISK. IMG example” RAM drive that can be down­loaded at the bot­tom of the BootLPT ar­ti­cle. This has been turned into an IBM cas­sette tape”-pro­to­col com­pli­ant au­dio sig­nal us­ing 5150CAXX, and sent straight to a record cut­ting lathe.

Vinyls are cut with an RIAA equal­iza­tion curve that a pre­amp usu­ally re­verses dur­ing play­back, but not per­fectly. So some sig­nal cor­rec­tion had to be ap­plied from the am­pli­fier, as I could­n’t make it work right with the line out­put straight from the phono pre­amp. In my case, in­volv­ing a vin­tage Harman&Kardon 6300 am­pli­fier with an in­te­grated MM phono pre­amp, I had to fade the tre­ble all the way down to -10dB/10kHz, in­crease bass equal­iza­tion to ap­prox. +6dB/50Hz and re­duce the vol­ume level to ap­prox­i­mately 0.7 volts peak, so it does­n’t dis­tort. All this, nat­u­rally, with any phase and loud­ness cor­rec­tion turned off.

Of course, the cas­sette mo­dem does not give a hoot in hell about where the sig­nal is com­ing from. Notwithstanding, the record­ing needs to be pris­tine and con­tain no pops or loud crack­les (vinyl) or mod­u­la­tion/​fre­quency drop-outs (tape) that will break the data stream from con­tin­u­ing. However, some wow is tol­er­ated, and the speed can be 2 or 3 per­cent higher or lower too.

Bootloader in a ROM; be­ing an EPROM for a good mea­sure

And that’s it! For those in­ter­ested, the boot­loader bi­nary de­signed for a 2364 chip (2764s can be used, through an adap­tor), can be ob­tained here. It as­sumes an IBM 5150 with a mono­chrome screen and at least 512K of RAM, which kind of re­minds me of my setup (what a co­in­ci­dence). The boot disk im­age can be ob­tained at the bot­tom of the BootLPT/86 ar­ti­cle, and here’s its ana­log vari­ant, straight from the grooves 🙂

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Read the original on boginjr.com »

9 259 shares, 26 trendiness

Tesla kills Autopilot, locks lane-keeping behind $99/month fee

Tesla was told that if it could­n’t re­solve the de­cep­tive mar­ket­ing within those 60 days, the sales sus­pen­sion would take ef­fect. That would be bad for the au­tomaker, as California is far and away its largest mar­ket in the US, al­beit one that is shrink­ing each quar­ter. Having to sus­pend sales en­tirely in the state would be dis­as­trous. Some had spec­u­lated that Tesla could change Autopilot’s name to some­thing less mis­lead­ing, but the com­pany chose a more dras­tic ap­proach.

Now, if you want your new Tesla to steer it­self—while you pay at­ten­tion to the road—you will have to pay for FSD. Until the mid­dle of February, that can be done for a one-time fee of $8,000. But start­ing on February 14, that op­tion goes away, too, and the sole choice will be a $99/month FSD sub­scrip­tion.

But prob­a­bly not for very long. Last night, Musk re­vealed on his so­cial me­dia plat­form that the $99/month for su­per­vised FSD will rise as FSDs ca­pa­bil­i­ties im­prove. The mas­sive value jump is when you can be on your phone or sleep­ing for the en­tire ride (unsupervised FSD).”

The quest for re­cur­ring rev­enue streams is be­com­ing some­thing of a holy grail in the au­to­mo­tive in­dus­try as OEMs that pre­vi­ously treated their cus­tomers as a sin­gle sale now hope to make them­selves more at­trac­tive to in­vestors by en­cour­ag­ing cus­tomers to give them reg­u­lar pay­outs.

This may have con­tributed to General Motors’ de­ci­sion to drop Apple CarPlay and Android Automotive. BMW has also ex­per­i­mented with sub­scrip­tion ser­vices. Tesla’s stock price re­mains so high that such games are prob­a­bly un­nec­es­sary here, but with falling profit mar­gins, de­clin­ing sales, and the loss of emis­sions cred­its to bol­ster the bot­tom line, one can see why reg­u­lar cash in­fu­sions from Tesla dri­vers would be de­sir­able.

...

Read the original on arstechnica.com »

10 225 shares, 19 trendiness

What has Docker become?

It’s weird to see Docker Inc (the com­pany) strug­gle to find its place in 2026. What started as the com­pany that rev­o­lu­tion­ized how we de­ploy ap­pli­ca­tions has been through mul­ti­ple iden­tity crises, piv­ot­ing from one strat­egy to an­other in search of sus­tain­able rev­enue and mar­ket rel­e­vance.

Docker’s jour­ney reads like a startup try­ing to find prod­uct-mar­ket fit, ex­cept Docker al­ready had prod­uct-mar­ket fit - they cre­ated the con­tainer­iza­tion stan­dard that every­one uses. The prob­lem is that Docker the tech­nol­ogy be­came so suc­cess­ful that Docker the com­pany strug­gled to mon­e­tize it. When your core prod­uct be­comes com­modi­tized and open source, you need to find new ways to add value.

Docker Swarm was Docker’s at­tempt to com­pete with Kubernetes in the or­ches­tra­tion space. But Kubernetes won that bat­tle de­ci­sively, and Docker even­tu­ally sold Swarm. This was a clear sig­nal that Docker was step­ping back from try­ing to be the full-stack con­tainer plat­form and in­stead fo­cus­ing on what they could uniquely pro­vide.

For a while, Docker seemed to fo­cus on de­vel­oper ex­pe­ri­ence. This made sense - de­vel­op­ers are Docker’s core users, and im­prov­ing their work­flow could be a dif­fer­en­tia­tor. Docker Scout emerged from the ac­qui­si­tion of Atomist in June 2022, bring­ing software sup­ply chain” ca­pa­bil­i­ties. Scout al­lows Docker to see not just what’s in a con­tainer, but how it was built and where vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties are. This was a smart move to­ward se­cu­rity and ob­serv­abil­ity, ar­eas where Docker could add real value.

Docker also ac­quired AtomicJar, the com­pany be­hind Testcontainers, adding shift-left test­ing ca­pa­bil­i­ties. Testcontainers lets de­vel­op­ers run real de­pen­den­cies (databases, mes­sage queues, etc.) in con­tain­ers dur­ing test­ing, mak­ing in­te­gra­tion tests more re­li­able and closer to pro­duc­tion en­vi­ron­ments.

Then came the AI pivot. Docker Model Runner en­tered the scene, po­si­tion­ing Docker as a plat­form for run­ning AI mod­els. Docker Compose ex­panded to sup­port AI agents and mod­els. Docker Offload was in­tro­duced for cloud-scale GPU ex­e­cu­tion of AI tasks. Partnerships with Google Cloud, Microsoft Azure, and AI SDKs (CrewAI, LangGraph, Vercel AI SDK) fol­lowed.

The ac­qui­si­tion of MCP Defender in September 2025 fur­ther ce­mented Docker’s move into AI se­cu­rity, fo­cus­ing on se­cur­ing agen­tic AI in­fra­struc­ture and run­time threat de­tec­tion. This was a sig­nif­i­cant shift - from de­vel­oper tools to AI in­fra­struc­ture.

Suddenly, Docker moved into the hard­ened im­ages space. In December 2025, Docker made over 1,000 Docker Hardened Images free and open source un­der Apache 2.0, re­duc­ing vul­ner­a­bil­i­ties by up to 95% com­pared to tra­di­tional im­ages. This move was likely trig­gered by Chainguard’s suc­cess in the se­cure con­tainer im­age space. Chainguard had been build­ing a busi­ness around min­i­mal, se­cure con­tainer im­ages, and Docker needed to re­spond.

Making hard­ened im­ages free was a bold move - it’s hard to com­pete with free, es­pe­cially when it’s open source. But it also raises ques­tions about Docker’s busi­ness model. If you’re giv­ing away your se­cu­rity fea­tures for free, what are you sell­ing?

In February 2025, Docker re­placed CEO Scott Johnston (who led the com­pany since 2019) with Don Johnson, a for­mer Oracle Cloud Infrastructure founder and ex­ec­u­tive vice pres­i­dent. This lead­er­ship tran­si­tion has prompted tech an­a­lysts to an­tic­i­pate a po­ten­tial ac­qui­si­tion by a ma­jor cloud provider. The CEO swap, com­bined with the strate­gic piv­ots, sug­gests Docker may be po­si­tion­ing it­self for sale rather than build­ing a stand­alone busi­ness.

Docker’s strate­gic shifts tell a story of a com­pany search­ing for its place in a mar­ket it helped cre­ate. The con­tainer­iza­tion tech­nol­ogy Docker pi­o­neered be­came so suc­cess­ful that it be­came in­fra­struc­ture - some­thing every­one uses but no one wants to pay for di­rectly.

The piv­ots from or­ches­tra­tion (Swarm) to de­vel­oper tools (Scout, Testcontainers) to AI (Model Runner, MCP Defender) to se­cu­rity (Hardened Images) show a com­pany try­ing dif­fer­ent ap­proaches to find sus­tain­able rev­enue. Each pivot makes sense in iso­la­tion, but to­gether they paint a pic­ture of a com­pany with­out a clear long-term vi­sion.

The hard­ened im­ages move is par­tic­u­larly in­ter­est­ing be­cause it’s de­fen­sive - re­spond­ing to Chainguard’s suc­cess rather than lead­ing with in­no­va­tion. Making it free and open source is a strong com­pet­i­tive move, but it does­n’t solve the fun­da­men­tal busi­ness model ques­tion.

Docker the tech­nol­ogy is­n’t go­ing any­where. It’s too em­bed­ded in the in­fra­struc­ture of mod­ern soft­ware de­vel­op­ment. But Docker the com­pany? That’s less clear. The lead­er­ship change, ac­qui­si­tion spec­u­la­tion, and rapid strate­gic piv­ots sug­gest Docker Inc may be po­si­tion­ing it­self for an exit rather than build­ing a long-term in­de­pen­dent busi­ness.

For de­vel­op­ers, this does­n’t change much. Docker con­tain­ers will con­tinue to work, and the open source na­ture of Docker means the tech­nol­ogy will per­sist re­gard­less of what hap­pens to the com­pany. But it’s worth watch­ing how Docker Inc’s search for iden­tity plays out - it could af­fect the ecosys­tem of tools and ser­vices built around con­tain­ers.

The irony is that Docker cre­ated a stan­dard so suc­cess­ful that it be­came in­fra­struc­ture, and in­fra­struc­ture is hard to mon­e­tize. Docker Inc’s strug­gle to find its place is a cau­tion­ary tale about the chal­lenges of build­ing a busi­ness around open source tech­nol­ogy that be­comes too suc­cess­ful.

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Read the original on tuananh.net »

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