You listed a number of opinions which went against the stated wishes of the Diku team and claimed that they were "easy, essentially rock-solid ways to avoid violating the license" (while profiting from the code), and then went on to say that you'd "be happy to help any mud that wants it do this" and that "it's never going to get to court as the license holders suffer no damage from third parties generating revenue from DIKU". That sure sounds like encouragement to me, and not at all "ethically neutral".
No, my mud identity is built on having created the most popular PK codebase on the net, and was well established long before you started creating your first mud. My interest in defending the rights of mud developers is just a sideline interest.
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