On Sunday 17 June 2007 01:09:01 Alexandre Oliva wrote:
"Charging for programs is an crime against humanity"
See, you can't even keep the FSF's "Free Software Definition" and its
inherent "religion" out of the discussion. Sure, the FSF can claim that the
GPL is intended as a way to "defend" the "Four Freedoms" defined *BY* *THEM*,
but unless alluded to in the license, the only bearing it can have, anywhere,
is on the "intent" of the license, as seen by the FSF. And if the "ability to
run a "covered work" on any piece of hardware" is "freedom 0" then binary
distribution is in violation of the "spirit" - I can't run an x86 binary on a
PPC. Isn't that a "designed in hardware restriction" that violates
the "spirit" of the license ?
Not in the least. They still have to release their changes if they want to
sell their devices. Or are you so blinded by your belief that the FSF and RMS
can't be wrong that you can't understand that?
It is only *YOUR* opinion that the GPLv3 is the better license. As Linus has
explained, he doesn't share your viewpoint.
No, it reduces their motivation to improve the software on *those* devices. If
they like the software enough to actually download the source, they probably
also liked it enough to install it on their computer *AND* will modify it to
make it work better on their computer.
With your argument about reduced motive shotten down this portion falls apart.
Agreed. The disagreement is about what that spirit is. I feel that its spirit
is in the free and open exchange of ideas, as personified by the software
people write. I *ALSO* feel that it's spirit lies in the phrase "do whatever
you want with the software as long - but if you add your own ideas to it,
give them back to the people like your inspiration was given to you."
You, the FSF and, apparently, RMS, feel it is about the "Four Freedoms" as
defined by RMS. I'm quite sure that my view is much more common among the
people that *DON'T* think that the FSF and RMS are never wrong.
Again, that is *your* version of the "spirit".
I agree to the "can't enjoy or test" bits. But I don't believe that it reduces
anything. Personally I feel that anything that exposes people to "Free
Software" is a *BONUS*.
Yes. Because a number of your "facts" are massively flawed. Now, please,
you've proven to me that you can't, in fact, do any *objective* thinking
about this topic.
When you are ready to drop your pre-conceptions and think *objectively* about
the topic, come back and talk. Until then, go away.
DRH
--
Dialup is like pissing through a pipette. Slow and excruciatingly painful.
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