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Re: A GNU “social contract”?
From: |
Ludovic Courtès |
Subject: |
Re: A GNU “social contract”? |
Date: |
Thu, 12 Dec 2019 17:07:26 +0100 |
User-agent: |
Gnus/5.13 (Gnus v5.13) Emacs/26.3 (gnu/linux) |
Hi!
I don’t think I replied before, but this last version LGTM!
I have nothing against adding “5. Reserved for future use”. :-)
Thanks,
Ludo’.
Andreas Enge <andreas@enge.fr> skribis:
> On Thu, Nov 07, 2019 at 09:46:56PM +0100, Ludovic Courtès wrote:
>> Thanks, Andreas, for this new version! Some comments below.
>
> They are integrated into the attached new version. For good measure,
> I have capitalised "GNU System" as you did and thrown in a few italics
> as suggested.
>
> Andreas
>
> GNU Social Contract
>
> This document states the core commitments of the GNU Project to the
> broader free software community.
>
> The purpose of the GNU Project is to provide software and systems that
> respect users' freedoms.
>
> * The GNU Project respects users' freedoms
>
> The GNU Project provides software that guarantees to users the
> /Four Essential Freedoms/, without compromise:
> 0. The freedom to run the program as they wish, for any purpose.
> 1. The freedom to study how the program works, and change it so it does
> their computing as they wish.
> 2. The freedom to redistribute copies so they can help others.
> 3. The freedom to distribute copies of their modified versions to others.
> By doing this they can give the whole community a chance to benefit
> from their changes.
> Access to the source code is a precondition for this.
>
> Unless the GNU Project deems that a different choice furthers the advancement
> of free software, all software written by the GNU Project is distributed
> under /copyleft licenses/, designed to ensure that developers cannot strip off
> users' freedom from GNU software.
>
> Besides upholding the Four Essential Freedoms, the GNU Project pays attention
> and responds to new threats to users' freedom as they arise.
>
>
> * The GNU Project provides a consistent system
>
> The GNU Project develops an operating system, the /GNU System/, as well as
> a set of applications. Each software component developed by the GNU Project
> is referred to as a /GNU package/. GNU package developers work together to
> ensure consistency across packages. GNU packages should follow the design
> and development guidelines of the GNU Project.
>
>
> * The GNU Project collaborates with the broader free software community
>
> Free software has extended beyond the GNU Project, which works with
> companion free software projects that develop key components of the
> GNU System. The GNU Project aims to extend the reach of free software
> to new fields.
>
>
> * The GNU Project welcomes contributions from all and everyone
>
> The GNU Project wants to give everyone the opportunity of contributing to
> its efforts on any of the many tasks that require work. It welcomes all
> contributors, regardless of their gender, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
> level of experience, or any other personal characteristics. It commits to
> providing a harassment-free experience for all contributors.
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Carlos O'Donell, 2019/12/10
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?,
Ludovic Courtès <=
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Andy Wingo, 2019/12/12
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Mark Wielaard, 2019/12/17
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Ludovic Courtès, 2019/12/19
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Mark Wielaard, 2019/12/19
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Ludovic Courtès, 2019/12/27
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Mark Wielaard, 2019/12/23
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Ludovic Courtès, 2019/12/27
- Re: A GNU “social contract”?, Mark Wielaard, 2019/12/27