Qualcomm-owned Arduino quietly pushed a sweeping rewrite of its Terms of Service and Privacy Policy, and the changes mark a clear break from the open-hardware ethos that built the platform. The new documents introduce an irrevocable, perpetual license over anything users upload, broad surveillance-style monitoring of AI features, a clause preventing users from identifying potential patent infringement, years-long retention of usernames even after account deletion, and the integration of all user data (including minors) into Qualcomm’s global data ecosystem. Military weird things and more.

  • perestroika@slrpnk.net
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    4 days ago

    If they close the IDE, someone will fork the last open version.

    If they close the company, Chinese clone makers will pretty certainly ignore them and keep on making clones.

    The problem: clone makers rarely take a platform forward, so eventually stagnation will set on.