When I look at this website, which seems to be intended as a serious project and not a joke, to me it kind of feels like it would be the end of FOSS… https://malus.sh/ Is it just me?
Or will the majority of contributors still bother if they won’t even get the most basic attribution anymore, let alone GPL and other complex licenses being enforcable at all?
There are also these events that make me wonder if this service can even work, given the apparent training data plagiarism problem. This feels kind of independent from whether a gen AI being fed a project can ever be “clean room”:
https://dl.acm.org/doi/10.1145/3543507.3583199
https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/2026/01/ai-memorization-research/685552/
I feel like there are more reasons than ever to tell people to cut out gen AI code from FOSS entirely, if they care about respecting attribution and the work of others. Even if just morally. This whole ride seems to be going in a bad direction.
I’m curious about other people’s thoughts, however.
PS: Don’t trust me on any law-related guesses, IANAL. This isn’t legal advice. I’m just a concerned coder.
Update: seems like it is satire https://malus.sh/blog.html but the trend as a whole seems to be real: https://www.mrlatte.net/en/stories/2026/03/05/relicensing-with-ai-assisted-rewrite/ https://www.theregister.com/2026/03/06/ai_kills_software_licensing/ https://writings.hongminhee.org/2026/03/legal-vs-legitimate/


The problem is cultural, not technical or legal. Most people are at best indifferent and more often supportive of the exploitation of others. Unless that changes, the exploitation will be relentless. AI is a new tool that facilitates a kind of exploitation. But the fundamental inclination to exploit with minimal appreciation and compensation is nothing new. Exploitation is not merely tolerated. It is broadly encouraged and venerated. The law is primarily a tool of the elite to protect themselves. It does little to protect the interests of a typical FOSS contributor and the state does even less. There have been a few cases fought and won but compared to the scale of the industry, the resources committed to defending FOSS are trivial. That’s no more the end of FOSS now than it was in the beginning. It will probably reduce revenue for a few companies that have been exploiting FOSS and FOSS producers for profit. The vast majority of contributors were never compensated. Of those that were, it was typically far less than the value of their contributions.