| > No, the attempt to make somebody do what you want by brigading is what's attempting to exert force and what's rude. Unless the critics are engaging in threats, intimidation, and/or violence, we're talking about criticism and not force. > Criticism isn't "force" or "attempted force". If you think criticism is rude, that's fine. Hypocritical, but fine. No, the attempt to make somebody do what you want by brigading is what's attempting to exert force and what's rude. > The author of the package didn't force their code onto the users. No one is arguing this. Weird straw man. > The authors of the criticism forced their criticism on him by throwing it his way in the form of bug reports etc. even when it was clear that there's no interest in it. Wow. I really didn't anticipate the "bug reports == force" equivalence. |
Re. "The author of the package didn't force their code onto the users," it's not really a straw man. People are arguing that the author has moral responsibility for their use of his code. That ignores the fact that they actively chose to use his code. The only way the author would be morally responsible for their use of his code is if he had forced them to use it somehow. So yes, people are basically arguing this.