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by lab
1489 days ago
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Technically, the compiled source published to NPM is MIT licensed (it's minified JS), and the end-user can reverse-engineer it however they like. MIT license does not mean human-readable source afaik :p ^ j/k fyi, since your comment sounded serious so I just wanted to ease the tension. We're planning to open-source the repo, but ATM we have not set up everything to welcome the community yet (CoC, contribution guideline, CI for testing, issue templates, etc...) BTW, love your passion for open-source and appreciate the criticism (esp your effort in taking a deep look at the stuff we are building). The NPM page is nowhere ready for public view yet. The thought of slapping the TOS and Privacy Policy in the readme is so that if the user installed our CLI and managed to initiate some of the extra undocumented capability, we wouldn't be responsible for any damage to their hardware. But perhaps the MIT license should suffice for that case? On the other hand, I am asking for feedback on the documentation, so if we can stay on that topic that would be much appreciated :D |
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Surely you can see the problem with that.
You are also vastly misrepresenting the contents of your ToS here, which actually contain a binding arbitration clause and this unbelievable gem: "you agree not to [...] disparage, tarnish, or otherwise harm, in our opinion, us and/or the SERVICE"