If more people use a FOSS platform, that platform's developers inevitably get more influence and tend to get more funding. That's how FOSS works, and that's usually not a problem.
In this particular case it (in my opinion) is a problem.
If development was done by someone else, for example through a fork, that might solve things.
For example, that's what happened when Audacity's owners went bad and the software was forked to @tenacity.