I’m sure you mean well but I re-added it and kept it :) (It was re-added inline, right after the link. It says “I’m the maintainer”. I never re-removed it).
I shouldn’t have removed it in the first place, and I re-added it right when someone called me out on it, and explained why I did it (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48156765). But again, it’s not like it’s hidden, it’s right in my bio.
But let’s say I didn’t add a disclaimer in the first place, and didn’t even disclose it in my bio, would it matter much?
If the maintainer of pnpm would link to the first link I shared, would i care if they disclose it or not? If it works, it works. It’s a free tool. I know depsguard is not pnpm, and I do think disclosing “plugs” is the ethical thing to do, and that’s why I re-added it, but I don’t understand the obsession with disclosures on free and open source tools that are helping people. You get hated if you disclose it (people hate plugs…) and hated if you don’t.
Again I understand the criticism, but I’m not a marketer, I’m someone who is tired of everyone posting on these attacks on LinkedIn for marketing (yes including me), and decided to do something about it (I put my company logo as I used my company laptop and resources)
If the tool works, is free, and asks for nothing in return, is clear in my bio that I’m the maintainer, has now a clear disclaimer (inline) is it really that bad of a crime to build something useful for free and link to it in 2026?