Comment by hirako2000
11 days ago
If offering a tie in thing supposedly free of charge without warning that would end once it serves a party less profit purpose then yes.
Ethics are not obligations, they are moral principles. Not having principles doesn't send you to prison that is why it isn't law. It makes you lose moral credit though.
That is ridiculous. If you buy a sandwich for a homeless person, you do not need to warn them that you won't give them another one tomorrow. If you think generosity is an obligation of slavery, you have your morals backwards.
However, almost every open source license actually DOES warn that support may end. See the warranty clause.
https://github.com/minio/minio/blob/master/LICENSE#L587
If you give them a free sandwich every day for 500 days.....yeah, you should probably tell them you're not coming tomorrow.
Okay, well they did.
1 reply →
> If offering a tie in thing supposedly free of charge without warning that would end once it serves a party less profit purpose then yes
Claiming that you’re entitled to free R&D forever because someone once gave you something of value seems like a great way to ensure that nobody does that again. You got over a decade of development by a skilled team, it’s not exactly beyond the pale that the business climate has changed since then.
Those might be your moral principles, but others reject this nonsense of an obligation to perpetual free labor you think you're entitled to, and don't grant you this moral high ground you assume you have.