The otherside in this case is selling you a thing and in some cases restricting you what you can and can't do with the hardware you bought. Which means you don't really own it.
We have given them money. They should let us use our hardware as we see fit. In the case of nvidia literally detecting certain workloads and deliberately reducing the performance. Whether you think Crypto mining should be a thing or not, they purchased the hardware legally and should be able to use it as they see fit (as long as it is not illegal).
With AMD GPUs it literally doesn't make anysense. They've released millions of lines of code to the Linux kernel so their GPUs work correctly with Linux and then I have to download a proprietary firmware for my card to initialise properly. Is the firmware really that secret? I doubt it.
We have given them money. They should let us use our hardware as we see fit. In the case of nvidia literally detecting certain workloads and deliberately reducing the performance. Whether you think Crypto mining should be a thing or not, they purchased the hardware legally and should be able to use it as they see fit (as long as it is not illegal).
With AMD GPUs it literally doesn't make anysense. They've released millions of lines of code to the Linux kernel so their GPUs work correctly with Linux and then I have to download a proprietary firmware for my card to initialise properly. Is the firmware really that secret? I doubt it.