I've been asked variations of this question a few times recently, as I'm studying value drift for my undergraduate thesis, so I thought I would seek out others' thoughts on this.
I suppose part of this depends on how we define value drift. I've seen value drift defined as broadly as changes in values (from the Global Optimum podcast) and as narrowly as becoming less motivated to do altruistic things over time (from Joey Savoie's forum post). While the latter seems almost certainly net-negative, how the former plays out is a little less clear to me.
This leads me to wonder if there might be different kinds of value drift that may be varying degrees of good or bad.
Thoughts?
It's a convergent instrumental goal to preserve one's values. If you change your goals / values, you will generally achieve / fulfill them less.
Value-drifting someone else might be positive for you, at least if you only consider the first-order consequences, but it generally seems pretty unvirtuous and uncooperative to me. A world where value-drifting people is socially acceptable is probably worse than a world where it's not.
if by "something good" you mean "something altruistic", then yes I agree. it's good for someone when others become altruistic towards them.