By that same argument, you could also make security patches exclusive to the enterprise version for a certain amount of time after they've been released.
Only big corporations need security, after all, if a small company gets hacked, well, they should've paid more?
What kind of late-stage capitalism is that? You're knowingly selling an insecure version and somehow it's the customer's fault they didn't buy the "actual security" addon?
I am ready to agree with you if you’re not being hypocritical here. Surely you’re doing only the best work for your employer, and spending your own unpaid leisure and sleep time on honing your non-marketable but company-demanded skills, undergoing psychotherapy to get along better with your manager, and thinking of all the opportunities to save your employer more money.
It would be a shame though if you demanded unpaid work from others, but didn’t live by the same rule yourself.
I've forked quite a lot of open core projects to add enterprise tier SSO support to the open version, with my forks published under AGPLv3. I'm true to my word.
Only big corporations need security, after all, if a small company gets hacked, well, they should've paid more?
What kind of late-stage capitalism is that? You're knowingly selling an insecure version and somehow it's the customer's fault they didn't buy the "actual security" addon?