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by Expurple 340 days ago
"Doing the right thing" (whatever that means for a person specifically) can be considered a goal too. Goals don't have to be selfish.
1 comments

A goal implies a clear objective. "Doing the right thing" is a guiding principle.
"Following my inner guiding principles without compromising" seems clear enough. I don't think that you have to fully verbalize and rationalize your principles in order to commit to a clear goal of following them. You clearly feel when you do the wrong thing.
> Following my inner guiding principles without compromising" seems clear enough.

To me, it's not. What are the outcomes that we are talking about here?

> You clearly feel when you do the wrong thing.

Do you think that the developers of, e.g, KHTML felt they were doing the wrong thing when they started working on a browser engine for Konqueror under LGPL? Would they continue working on it had they known that Apple would take their work to build what is arguably the most freedom-restricting web browser out there?

> What are the outcomes that we are talking about here?

Living a life free of guilt and regrets. People make mistakes and can't foresee everything. That's normal. That shouldn't imply any guilt. I was talking specifically about cases where, in advance, you think that you're doing the wrong thing at the cost of short-term convenience.

Regarding KHTML, I don't have any data and can't say for sure. But I'd be surprised if most developers regretted their decision later. They knew in advance that they were getting into an LGPL project that can be used as part of something freedom-restricting. And, in my subjective opinion, Safari isn't so catastrofic and harmful that it defies common expectations of how harmful a freedom-restricting product can be

> Living a life free of guilt and regrets.

Sorry, this is not an outcome. Maybe you can say it's an strategy to help you define your priorities and it can help you set your goals in whatever endeavor you're taking on, but it's not something that has a clear goal post.

> Safari isn't so catastrophic and harmful

Taken in isolation, no it's not so bad. But the issues of Safari are the context where its development happens. Safari is intentionally stripped of any feature that could threaten Apple's market dominance in the mobile market.

And that is the problem with too-permissive software licenses.