Absolutely not. Also, whenever corporations appear to do something altruistic or philanthropic, you can bet that it is only for PR and marketing reasons, and they’ll abandon whatever PR stunt they’re doing as soon as it is expedient to do so.
It’s problematic, though. Corporations have amassed so much wealth, so much power, and monopolise the world’s resources so much, that there’s no simple way of opting out or boycotting them in any way.
They buy government power to write laws and regulations. and set policy decisions to suit their interests.
They own most of the mass media and popular news outlets, paying professional propagandists millions a year to present a narrative of world, economic, and political affairs to suit their interests (you’ll find them on Fox, MSNBC, CNN, etc.)
They pour vast resources into various ideological think-tanks masquerading as quasi-academic institutions, presenting economic and political theories which just happen to suit their interests.
We’re inundated with the language of corporations. Their slogans, their self-serving narratives. Whatever they touch (with money, of course) they will twist to serve their purposes and interests. This is the nature of the beast. They have no choice but to strive for every more profit, and all while doing their best to avoid actual competition—so many markets are now oligopolies dominated by a few corporations acting effectively as cartels.