@Stargateur It seems to be possible but with very low income today, and you'd need some talent for publicizing your work. If I choose to be freelance, I would also activate things like patreon, but more by curiosity than really hoping to gain anything significant.
While the first paragraph still seems a little-off topic, OP has worked hard to clarify they're asking about the relationships between ownership, lifetimes, and borrow-checking. Which I think is probably on-topic and answerable.
well, I disagree: I think it's basically an invitation to speculate ("would it be possible?") and fails to clearly define what a good answer could be (what, exactly, is "Rust-style ownership and lifetimes"? How would you know whether a language, which is not Rust, is "Rust-style"?)
the grouping of "ownership and lifetimes" vs. "borrow checking" is particularly puzzling to me because lifetime analysis is part of borrow checking
I think as a question it could probably be beaten into shape over the course of a lot of back and forth in the comments, but that sounds like a lot of effort for a counterfactual
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier you could say that, but then it basically comes down to "did OP specify this in exactly the right way to allow it to be answered in the affirmative"
@Jason I was able to order a new one in a relatively ok price, with 2 year warranty. I also realized, while entering my actual parts in pcpartspicker, that my geforce 1070 is now priced 4k $ at some places. this on is pleased to have gotten it at 600
I've had a very nice experience using pcpartpicker just now (I promise I am not affiliated with them and will stop spamming right after!), putting my current pieces and choosing a replacement one that corresponds to their specs is nice
@FélixAdriyelGagnon-Grenier Yes! I am familiar with pcpartpicker.com, I also use it! :-) Commonly used in the Netherlands is tweakers.net. It has an excellent section for comparing the prices of components (or other electronics) at different shops.