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Be Like Clippy

https://be-clippy.com/
52•Aloha•1h ago

Comments

cowsandmilk•39m ago
What makes them think they can license Clippy out under the GPL?
hyperhello•37m ago
Parody should be protected. But what makes it parody?
poly2it•14m ago
To graphically trivial to be copyrightable, at least in the US.
hfsh•37m ago
This clippy white-washing is annoying as hell. Just like clipppy was.
windowshopping•37m ago
Literally everyone hated Clippy. It was an absolute mockery of a useful assistant or feature, and at the time everyone detested Microsoft. I think this post is satire.
o11c•30m ago
Clippy really ... wasn't bad? It mostly stayed out of your way, occasionally showed a button to perform a useful task, and could interact with the help system without having to click through 3 menus.

It wasn't a panacea but it was at least positive-value, unlike most current AI.

brokensegue•26m ago
I never got value from him
rijoja•30m ago
yes obviously it's clippy because everyone hated clippy that is the point

the idea is that when your CEO goes on slack or teams or whatever and see 100 clippies they'll be "oh wow, nobody likes how we earn our dollar."

or the very least people who are concerned about surveillance will know who is on their team!

so just do it

I'm serious

Tempest1981•2m ago
I think we have our hacker/power-user blinders on. It was cool to hate Clippy.

But many non-tech-savvy users felt differently, and were accepting of the attempt to provide help.

balamatom•37m ago
>"Clippy didn’t sell your data. Clippy didn’t hold your data hostage. Clippy was there to help you."

Clippy was there to demonstrate to you that it's now the computer "who" is in control.

NietTim•34m ago
Clippy was never open source or "good" in any way, it not selling your data was a result of its time, not a conscious choice by its creators. The entire forced clippy "movement" is incredibly poorly thought out
canyp•10m ago
Yes, I see the same flaw in the argument. Retrospectively looking back and saying it was good because it didn't do any of the shit companies do today; but, really, it wasn't as bad as it could be because the technology just wasn't there to begin with. Counter-factual either way, but calling it "good" is a stretch.

Not to take away from the movement, though. I think it's great.

lillecarl•31m ago
Be like clippy, entirely useless and annoying?
ImHereToVote•13m ago
Yes. As opposed to sleazy and exploitative.
yosito•29m ago
Clippy was Microsoft was absolutely DO sell your data.
0xbadcafebee•29m ago
Apparently this is a movement started by Louis Rossman (Clippy meme explanation: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0xAGUrkDsj4) to protest the fact that the world feels like a dystopian hellscape run by evil corporations and greedy politicians. He's not wrong, but it's kinda felt that way since the 70s (see the movie Network for reference)

This is strange, because for those of you who aren't old enough to remember the ambient noise in this video (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3G_uCbKoG5A), you won't know that Clippy was infuriating. But I guess the choice is controversial, which someone popular on YouTube knows will get lots of discussion. So... cool?

For fun: Clippy being annoying on Family Guy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WPeKsBmqlZs

ghm2180•28m ago
A most forward thinking Bayesian network consumer product ever.
SteveJS•27m ago
My grandmother loved clippy.

Melinda French Gates back when she was Melinda French had a part in Clippy.

“Melinda French (then the fiancée of Bill Gates) was the project manager of Microsoft Bob”

Microsoft Bob is where Clippy was born.

Reference: https://www.artsy.net/article/artsy-editorial-life-death-mic...

prism56•22m ago
Clippy would have absolutely having sold your data if Microsoft were forethinking enough.
chemotaxis•7m ago
Most importantly, Clippy happened before computers were permanently online. For it to harvest any data, I guess you'd need to mail in a floppy disk.
Lammy•20m ago
The assistant's name is Clippit, not Clippy.
shayway•17m ago
Looking forward to the "Be Like ChatGPT" site 20 years from now.
xandrius•13m ago
Interesting how many people in a hacker forum seem to be so pro-establishment and instead try to denigrate the goals of this initiative because of the chosen character. I guess that's how many earn their dollar after all?

Sure, if it had been today, Clippy would have been evil but that's the point, it wasn't back then. Why are we so accepting of the change?

amarant•8m ago
Clippy was pretty universally hated back in it's day though. The way it just refused to let you do anything without it's help was annoying.

People complain about getting AI shoved down their throats. Clippy was worse in this regard. At least AI doesn't have a dancing animated character that eats up half your processing power with it's silly animations.

poly2it•12m ago
Is it just me, or does something feel wrong about the comments on this post? Where is the intellectual commentary? Clippy, the movement, is obviously not the same as the assistant.
gdelfino01•4m ago
It is not just you. This is sad. Not one mention of right to repair, right to own, privacy etc.
ryandrake•2m ago
Clippy was annoying for the same reasons a lot of software today is annoying. It was one of the O.G. poster children of the industry's "flipping the narrative" around computing: In the good old days, the user commanded the computer, and the computer obeyed, and then waited for the next command. Instead of the user being the sole operator, Clippy "suggested" and "recommended" and intruded into your computing. It inserted itself into your work in a way that computers hadn't really done before. This is why it was deeply hated.

No longer was computing a stream of commands from the user, telling the computer what to do: Now the computer itself had an opinion about what you should be doing on your computer. And the opinions kept getting stronger and stronger throughout the years. This was the beginning of the long, horrible march towards what we have today: Notifications, alerts, suggestions, "discovery," pop-ups, "did you mean...," forced upgrades, hundreds of processes running in the background that you never ran (but the computer manufacturer or OS vendor decided on their own to run). Now our computers are mostly just running what other people tell them to run, and occasionally loop the user in or offer them a token choice. The user is more of a passenger than the driver now.

This is Clippy's legacy: A computer you barely own, running software you barely have a choice in running, force-feeding you what the computer manufacturers, OS vendors, and 3rd party apps want you to be fed.

All it takes is for one to work out

https://alearningaday.blog/2025/11/28/all-it-takes-is-for-one-to-work-out-2/
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