> But shouldn't we be striving for a world where it isn't a bad call? Reputation used to mean something,
Reputation isn’t proof. It also carries no context.
If the service is very meaningful to you, then why wouldn’t you want a legal contract?
> I don't know what your intent was, but you come off as defending twitter on this as there was no written contract. While everyone is equal under codified law, we shouldn't forget some people have more influence than others over what gets codified.
Case and point of reputation. You assume I’m defending Twitter, because you can’t imagine that I can agree that it’s a scummy move while also pointing out that it’s bad practice to rely on a company’s word.
As for my intent?
I’m annoyed, dealing with like-minded individuals and engineers.
Having to teach engineers that coding and behavioral contracts get broken, and so code must be written defensively; in a world where pushing out features and adoption is “impact” is quite the uphill battle.
It just took a couple of decades for businesses to realize that “free” has some severe hidden costs.
And appealing on social media hoping to get attention, in a world where there’s too much information and noise?
I’m flabbergasted.