Comment by MiddleEndian

1 year ago

I don't see a problem with this. If it's an extension on my machine, why do I care about the TOS?

The extensions themselves have licenses that prohibit their use with anything other than VSCode.

(You should keep this in mind next time someone tells you that VSCode is "open source", by the way. The core IDE is, sure, but if you need to do e.g. Python or C++, the official Microsoft extensions involved all have these kinds of clauses in them.)

  • I don't use VSCode (or Cursor in this case (which I do think was malicious in the way it blindly hallucinated a policy for a paying customer)); I use vim or notepad++ depending on my mood.

    I just don't have a problem with people "violating" Terms of Service or End User License Agreements and am not really convinced there's a legal argument there either.

Its different if you do it. Or if a public company is actively encouraging you.