(With some legal effects, granted, but it’s status as a contract is slightly more than a Values doc is but lots less than a contract is.)
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"We don't work with assholes" is the "We don't use outdated technology" of values; it doesn't actually expect anyone to self-disqualify.
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There exist many non-vacuous statements one could make, though, where people of good will could reasonably select to either side of line.
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Here's a good one: "We are enthusiastically compliant with legitimate authority" is something that is legitimately controversial in startups
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You could find folks in the industry who'd say "Absolutely that describes my company" and other folks who'd say "Compliant? Is that ironic?"
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Sidenote: some of the issues tech, broadly construed, has with the wider world are caused by values that neither side acknowledges having.
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Here's a thing reasonable people can disagree on, and it underlies A LOT of discontent: "Technology is [more/less] important than politics."
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End of conversation
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Kind of like "falsifiability" in philosophy. Values are meaningful when you can outline a scenario where the statement would be made false.
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