| I just come from writing a comment on the other Datastar post on the home page, literally saying that I don't see the point of it and that I don't like it. But I'm now here to defend Datastar. It's their code, which, up to now, they built and literally given away totally for free, under a MIT license. Everything (even what "they moved to the Pro tier") should still be free and under the MIT license that it was published under originally. You just decided to rely and freeload (as, as far as I can tell, you never contributed to the project). You decided to rely on a random third party that owns the framework. And now you're outraged because they've decided that from now on, future work will be paid. You know the three magic words: Just. Fork. It. |
The software was released as a free version, with NO expectation for it to go commercial.
The fact that they switch to a paid version, and stripping out features from the original free version, is called "bait and switch".
If OP knew in advanced, he will have been informed about this and the potential 299 price tag. And he will have been able to make a informed decision BEFORE integrating the code.
> You just decided to rely and freeload (as, as far as I can tell, you never contributed to the project).
But you complaint about him being a freeloader for not contributing to a project. What a ridiculous response.
I feel like you never even read the post and are making assumption that OP is a full time programmer.
Datastar can do whatever they want, its their code. But calling out a *bait and switch* does not make OP the bad guy.