The SCP does things we (the audience) presumably like and approve of and interacts with the Foundation (our PoV "character") in a manner that, while not friendly, is also not antagonistic. She isn't explicitly, textually morally good, but it'd be hard to call any other character the protagonist.
As for containment, space-based SCPs are often difficult or impossible to contain, but that doesn't mean the Foundation doesn't try. No attempt is made to determine how the SCP could be prevented from making phone calls or accessing the internet, despite the sheer volume of communication itself being a potential breach of the veil. They don't try to physically approach and investigate the SCP, even though there are hundreds of satellites in geostationary orbit, some of which the Foundation presumably owns or at least can commandeer, assuming the Foundation doesn't have any space assets for this article. Given that the most visible anomalous activity happening is communication, just boosting a lead box into orbit might be enough to render this Safe. If everything else fails, they could at least attempt to convince her not to breach the veil. She's a sapient SCP, after all. But they barely try to communicate with her! Their intervention convinces her to stop stalking Joel Osteen, which is a step forward, but she goes from stalking a random televangelist to redistributing his money (and judging from the final line, looking to do it again), which is arguably far more visibly disruptive.
Maybe there's genuinely nothing the Foundation could do. As far as we know, the SCP has no limits to her electrical reserves, computing power, communication capabilities, or delta-V. But the Foundation doesn't make any attempt to find those limits, to find ways to properly establish containment. It feels like the Foundation didn't even try, and isn't interested in trying because the SCP has a quirky personality.