(no title)
elagost | 5 years ago
When I decide to use software, move to a new location, purchase cereal at the grocery store, buy music, and a variety of other daily activities, these are choices I make based on my values. Many times I end up picking something that I find slightly less convenient or usable because it aligns with my values better, and I'm unwilling to compromise my ethical stance for a little bit of convenience.
It seems unrealistic to me that people would choose otherwise, given enough information.
oblio|5 years ago
I find that one of the few places where people act based on their values is raising children. And even there, a lot of people skip raising their children completely.
For everything else: convenience, price, maybe risk.
erostrate|5 years ago
tpush|5 years ago
brutal_chaos_|5 years ago
rusk|5 years ago
bhaak|5 years ago
Remember that everyone of us is in an information bubble. We constantly filter out unimportant information based on our experiences.
If you are using Emacs and encounter a new problem you will first try to solve it with the tools you are used to (if you have a hammer, everything looks like a nail).
Finding new sources of information to change our filters is hard. Think back to the last time you came to a completely new technology and how lost you feel until you get a good grasp about it and how much of an uphill battle this can be.
The sunk cost fallacy runs deep there as well. Going back to something you know already well enough is often a tempting option.
Ozzie_osman|5 years ago
As a user/consumer, sure, you mostly decide pragmatically. Though values do come into play. For instance, if you value extensibility over approachability, you might be ok choosing a more complex tool even if it is more difficult to use at first.
But if you're building or designing a tool and you're making trade-offs, your values end up defining what you design and build.
irrational|5 years ago
Other than Richard Stallman, I don’t think I’ve ever heard anyone talk about how their personal values determine what software they will use. If I can afford it (free is better!) and it does the job, I use it.
oblio|5 years ago
Apparently a Nestlé representative recently declared that if a law that requires large corporations to disclose and to stop getting raw materials from suppliers which use forced labor (i.e. slavery) passes, coffee customers might be impacted, probably by higher coffee prices. It's at best a clumsy statement and at worst an endorsement of slavery (!), all for reducing coffee costs by probably a few percent.
A moral choice, based on values, would be to never buy coffee from Nestlé brands and instead buy from companies that guarantee that their suppliers don't use forced labor.
ohthehugemanate|5 years ago
> If I can afford it (free is better!) and it does the job, I use it.
OK so one value is clear. But there are literally tens of software options that fit into those requirements. So why do you pick gdocs over libreoffice, or your workplace MS365 subscription?
Every choice you make is determined by your values, whether you're conscious of it or not. Very often, people think they hold one set of values (eg "i'm a vegetarian because I value animal life") but that is belied by their actions (eg wearing leather soled shoes). You can guess which one is a better indicator of their real values.
eigenket|5 years ago
einpoklum|5 years ago
* Would you buy cereal made by slaves?
* Would you not prefer cereal made by a small cooperative of people you know, over something made by BigCorp inc. ?
etc.
indy|5 years ago
tjalfi|5 years ago
"When you're young, you have all these things to worry about - should you go there, what about your mother. And you worry, and try to decide, but then something else comes up. It's much easier to just plain decide. Never mind - nothing is going to change your mind. I did that once when I was a student at MIT. I got sick and tired of having to decide what kind of dessert I was going to have at the restaurant, so I decided it would always be chocolate ice cream, and never worried about it again - I had the solution to that problem."
uncledave|5 years ago
jrochkind1|5 years ago
Which is not so different from when the OP article talks about emacs prioritizing "stability" really. "stability" isn't, like an ethical value or something really, it's a practical one, as are many of the others listed in OP.
tome|5 years ago
yrimaxi|5 years ago
eeZah7Ux|5 years ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hacker_ethic
[edit: let's the downvote fest begin...]