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The Codebase Is No Longer a Moat

John Jeong

John Jeong

The Codebase Is No Longer a Moat

For the last two decades, the software industry believed a simple rule: if you keep your code closed, competitors cannot catch you. It was a rule built on fear and on a world where writing software required armies of engineers and thousands of hours.

That world is gone.

AI has rewritten the economics of building. A small team with strong taste now writes and ships at a pace that used to require a company of fifty. Tools like Cursor, Devin, Zed, Claude Code, GitButler, and Warp let you generate features in hours, not weeks. They let you refactor entire systems in a single morning. They make impossible timelines feel normal.

So the idea that secrecy protects you no longer holds up.

The codebase is not the moat anymore. Taste is. Philosophy is. Architecture is. Execution is. Community is. Trust is.

Why Open Source Is Having a Second Wave

For years, open source dominated infrastructure. Linux, PostgreSQL, Docker, Kubernetes, Redis, Python, Rust—these became the backbone of modern software. But when it came to applications, open source never fully broke through. Most teams assumed real product companies could not be open. They needed proprietary edges, branding control, or complex business models.

Yet the pattern was already visible: OBS Studio, Blender, VLC, Krita. People used these apps every day without knowing or caring that they were open source. They cared because the apps were good. Because they respected users. Because they did what they said they would do.

These were early signs of what was coming.

Now we are seeing the shift in real time. Open source is moving past infra and into applications—productivity, creativity, knowledge, research, AI interfaces, browsers. Real tools for real work.

AI Is Accelerating Open Source, Not Replacing It

There is a misconception that AI will replace open source. In reality, AI strengthens it.

AI lowers the cost of contribution. AI speeds up iteration. AI expands what a small, focused team can achieve. AI makes it easier for a community to collaborate. AI lowers the barrier to creating high quality interfaces and polished UX.

Instead of slowing open source down, AI gives it superpowers.

Open source no longer means slow. It no longer means clunky. It no longer means "good enough for free."

With AI, open source can match or surpass the velocity of any closed team. And when you combine speed, transparency, and a passionate community, you get something more durable than secrecy.

The Real Moat Has Shifted

When code becomes cheap to generate, the real moat becomes your product philosophy.

Can you build something that is not only functional, but respectful? Not only efficient, but intentional? Not only fast, but meaningful? Not only convenient, but trustworthy?

Closed code once signaled ownership and advantage. Today, it increasingly signals fear.

Open source signals confidence. It signals clarity of thought. It signals that you want your users to own their tools, not be locked inside them.

In a world shaped by opaque AI systems, transparency becomes a feature. And in a world where data privacy matters more each year, user control becomes essential.

Why We Built OSS Friends

With all of this happening, we wanted to give back to the community that shaped how we build.

So we created OSS Friends, a directory of open source applications that inspire us. Not infra. Not libraries. Not frameworks. Actual apps that normal people use every day. Tools that prove open source is not just technical infrastructure—it is a product philosophy.

You can explore the directory here: OSS Friends

Our goal is simple: highlight the teams pushing software toward transparency, user ownership, and good taste. Show the world that open source applications are not niche. They are the future.

And if you know an open source app that deserves attention, tell us. We want OSS Friends to grow into a place that champions the builders who are shaping this new wave.

The Future Is Open, Not Because of Ideology, but Because of Reality

The shift is not about politics or purity. It is about practicality.

Code is no longer scarce. Taste is. Execution is. Philosophy is. Trust is.

The companies that understand this early will define the next decade of software. The ones that cling to secrecy will try to move faster, only to find they cannot keep up with the speed of a global open source community powered by AI.

The moat has moved. And it is not where most people are looking.

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