The meaning of the "don’t be evil" motto is "We believe strongly that in the long term, we will be better served — as shareholders and in all other ways — by a company that does good things for the world even if we forgo some short term gains."
How changing an undocumented function, that was used to circumvent an SDK that is clearly marked as beta and "could change significantly" can be classified as evil is beyond me.
The problem is that people are using the "don't be evil" whenever they see something that simply bothers them.
Damn, they closed a bug in android that allows me to remove advertisement from apps! Google don't be evil!
They shut down a product that was offered for free for almost a decade! Google don't be evil!
So what adjective will people use if Google starts charging if you search more than 10 times a day, or obscuring the maps a few miles from the destination asking for a fee to see the rest, or blackmailing people based on data extracted from the mail? Google don't be.... evillest maybe?
Ripping functionality out from under paying customers is not something that just "bothers" people. Hiding behind terms of use on SDKs isn't something that mellows the sting of this to users who probably don't even know what "SDK" means.
This situation invokes to comparisons to certain companies that had rather poor reputations in the 90s. Companies the slogan was almost certainly meant to differentiate Google from.
If hyperbole to shareholders is a-okay with you but hyperbole from angered consumers is out of line, then we just are not going to see eye-to-eye on this. I hope people inside Google do not share your attitude or Google truly is doomed to become what they assured us they wouldn't. This attitude towards consumers is extremely toxic.
1) I responded to you. Obviously. You just replied to my response to you.
2) Because your comment was in response to one of mine, it is impossible for me to downvote it. I can only downvote comments that are in response to others.
Do you really think that the phrase, associated with Google, was intended to mean "We're not going to commit any war crimes?"
If you dislike hyperbole, that is fine, but blame the people who are actually responsible for introducing the hyperbole.