A few years ago, a grainy photo from the 1960s went viral on tech forums. It depicts a group of men gathered around a large terminal in what appears to be a university basement, passing around a printout with handwritten notes in the margins. No one was being compensated. What they had constructed belonged to no one. Since that was the purpose, they were merely sharing. It’s difficult to look at that picture now without experiencing something akin to nostalgia. When people discuss the open source ideal, they are referring to a collaborative, unglamorous, truly communal version of technology culture. And that’s precisely what an increasing number of developers and proponents of digital rights think needs to be restored before it completely vanishes.
The majority of people’s experiences with the internet today differ greatly from those of its early creators. The underlying model was initially decentralized, meaning that anyone could create, publish, and theoretically browse the entire web. Consolidation then took place. Facebook evolved into a platform for social interaction, Amazon into a marketplace, and Google into a source of information. At first, this wasn’t malicious. People were free to select these platforms because they were actually helpful. However, the computation changed at some point. The tools began to serve their advertisers instead of their users. Eventually, only their owners.
| Field | Details |
|---|---|
| Movement | Free and Open Source Software (FOSS) |
| Origins | 1950s–60s programming culture; hobbyists and tinkerers sharing code freely |
| Core Principles | Free use, free study, free distribution, free modification of software |
| Key Term | “Enshittification” — coined by Cory Doctorow to describe how platforms degrade over time |
| Major Antitrust Cases | US DOJ vs. Google (search monopoly), FTC vs. Meta, DOJ vs. Apple |
| Court Outcome (2025) | Judge Amit Mehta ruled Google an illegal monopolist but rejected the DOJ’s most aggressive remedies including forcing Chrome sale |
| Key Regulatory Body | Federal Trade Commission (FTC), led briefly by Lina Khan (2021–2025) |
| Notable Policy Development | U.S. AI Action Plan (July 2025): 103 recommendations partly built around open source strategy |
| Threat to Open Source AI | Ongoing definitional battle — companies lobbying to redefine “open source” to retain competitive control |
| Central Tension | Courts reluctant to break up Big Tech; open source community building structural alternatives instead |
The term “enshittification” was created by author and digital rights activist Cory Doctorow to characterize this arc, and it has emerged as one of the more accurate terms created in the last ten years. A platform draws users by being good, then squeezes those users to benefit advertisers, then squeezes advertisers to maximize its own returns. Eventually, the entire process devolves into a virtual mall with no way out. You can see how widely acknowledged the issue has become by observing how this description permeates tech culture and appears in academic papers, congressional testimony, and opinion pieces. However, recognition and a solution are not the same thing.
The US government tried to provide one through the legal system for a number of years. For a while, it was a vigorous endeavor. Cases against Google, Meta, Amazon, and Apple started piling up when Lina Khan joined the Federal Trade Commission in 2021 with a persuasive theory about how antitrust law had not kept up with digital markets. There was genuine momentum. Judge Amit Mehta, who had previously determined that Google had an unlawful monopoly on search, then issued his remedy ruling in September 2025. He refused to compel a sale of Chrome. He limited the requirements to data sharing with competitors. Depending on how generously you interpret it, it was either a partial victory or an indication that the courts aren’t prepared to act as the situation demands. The tech antitrust renaissance may already be over, according to The Verge’s coverage of the decision, which was somewhat understated.
That might be too depressing to read. It’s not a crazy one, though. It also raises the question of what will happen next, which is when the open source community re-enters the picture with a great deal of urgency.
Since the start of the tech era, the free and open source software movement has existed. It is based on a set of moral principles regarding how software should function: it should be freely usable, freely studied, freely modified, and freely distributed. It powered servers and operating systems that the majority of users never saw, functioning as a sort of parallel infrastructure alongside the commercial internet for decades. The energy surrounding it has changed, with a new generation of developers viewing open source as a political position in addition to a technical preference. This is a conscious reaction to the consolidation that has distorted so much of digital life.

In artificial intelligence, the stakes are especially high. The definition of “open source AI” has become the subject of a quiet but genuinely significant dispute. Some businesses have published models under names that sound open but have limitations on access to training data, commercial use, and modification that, according to more conventional open source proponents, completely go against the spirit of the movement. As The Economist pointed out in late 2024, businesses that wager on the correct definition stand to gain a substantial competitive advantage. The outcome of this definitional dispute is still unknown, but it is crucial. The term “open source AI” loses its meaning if it starts to mean whatever the biggest labs say.
This is not an easy task. Internal conflicts within open source communities include concerns about sustainability, labor distribution, and the survival of collaborative ethics when large corporations begin to fund projects they previously disregarded. Google and Meta both publish code under open licenses. It’s worthwhile to consider whether that generosity is sincere or calculated. The movement seems to be both winning and being absorbed at the same time.
The fact that something genuine is taking place appears to be true. Developers are creating alternatives, such as federated communication tools, open AI models, and decentralized social networks, not because they are commercially obvious but rather because they think the current internet architecture is seriously flawed and the courts won’t fix it. In basement labs, people shared printouts to create the first internet. If the term “open source renaissance” is appropriate, it is being developed by those who either remember that experience or wish they had witnessed it.