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by vertex-four
3352 days ago
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> If you take this interpretation then we're back to the same thing, what does this story have to do with "Writers could do it for fun and give away their work for free." Why should writers be relegated to only ever being allowed to "do it for fun" while programmers are not? |
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If I want someone to pay me for programming, I have to write something they want. The same is true for writers.
The point the original post was making is that if not enough people want what you are writing (code or text), you can do it for fun and give it away free. You can't expect to get paid for doing something you love. It's amazing if you can, and I'm incredibly lucky that I do, but it's not something I expect.
Hopefully in the future with enough automation people can just do things for fun, and all the jobs we need can be automated. We aren't there yet - but most people can work a job and have time for hobbies in modern developed countries.
Now, arguably, there is a lot of value in this work and we should be supporting it. That may be true, but that is a separate problem. The solution to this may be getting enough people to take note and care, and this post might be a start on that.