Why I don't "work" in the computer software industry
Too many workers and bosses (apparently) are being forcibly re-educated and having their ways of thinking chemically coerced into line with the prevailing corporate state communist mental health culture.
I'm not a psychic or an intellectual property pervert or a control freak. I much prefer free and open source software for auditing, general accountability and technical troubleshooting and I do not trust people or corporations who hide their sources or conceal their code on computer systems.


The entire concept of "intellectual property" is a fraud. If you're in business, you have a trademark and make a quality product, you have right to protect your name and reputation, but property rights as such have to be restricted to tangible goods, and property which is real and not imaginary.
Mental health is in the same category. Intellectual property businesses tend to collapse like a house of cards and experience mass layoffs, especially when the "product" or "service" as sold by the industry is imaginary or intellectual or too nebulous to be tangible or real.
So we see a lot of motivational speeches and excessive psychological coaching or counseling on the job or at unemployment offices in the computer software industry. This is no accident and it is anything but decent. One may philosophize over "suicide" or attempts at it that are claimed or alleged, but ultimately it does more harm than good for employers and law bosses to go to law with slanderous reports that people are at risk of suicide or self harm.
Moreover, people alleged to be a danger or threat to others always have the right to be presumed innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The head-shrinks need to be thrown out of court along with the patent shysters and copyright freaks.
And I'm not saying a "copyright" as such isn't legitimate. If I buy a book or some artistic work, I want to know it's genuine, but copyright only applies to actual tangible works of authorship or artistic merit. "Intellectual property" is not copyrightable.
I don't really want to print genuine documents with fake HP toner or make coffee with contaminated Keurig pods, but that's too much corporate law and ownership over other people's property for what it is for the money.

