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Re: software distribution criteria -- The Debian case
From: |
Davi Leal |
Subject: |
Re: software distribution criteria -- The Debian case |
Date: |
Sun, 7 Oct 2007 13:04:25 +0200 |
User-agent: |
KMail/1.9.5 |
MJ Ray wrote:
> John Darrington wrote:
> > [...] It's OK to mention an antagonist
> > organisation in a discussion paper where you also state the reasons
> > why that organisation is considered unethical, especially if that
> > organisation already has a high profile. But it would be
> > counter-productive, even irresponsible, to give free publicity to such an
> > organisation.
>
> Making this less abstract: is mentioning non-free software OK if you
> also state that the software is non-free/unethical, especially if that
> software already has a high profile? Or is it necessary to state the
> reasons why it is non-free software each time it is mentioned?
>
> I ask this because I think we now have both nearly all the reasons
> (due to research done during the non-free removal votes and subsequent
> package evaluations) and the technical capability (due to debtags) to
> state the reasons why a piece of non-free software tracked by debian
> is non-free, every time it is mentioned by debian web sites and debian
> package management tools. Filling in the gaps and connecting those
> two data sets (reasons and package data) would not be difficult, but
> I've not really tried to promote doing that because I dislike spending
> time working on non-free software. If it would make FS supporters
> happier with debian if it stated the reasons, instead of just
> displaying the big red "non-free" label, I would work on it.
IMHO, you should not spend your time doing that, due to the solution to the
Debian issue could be just separate debian.org from non-free.org
Read the last RMS' email:
http://lists.gnu.org/archive/html/gnuherds-app-dev/2007-10/msg00048.html
> > Not if that publicity is designed to publicise the non-free nature
> > of it. Notice that the FSF and sometimes GNU announces and explains why
> > software is non-free-software, like in the "Java trap".
> >
> > In general, I agree. But FSF only mentions these things in the
> > context I've described above. It would be totally contrary if the FSF
> > said these things, and then linked to Java-trapped projects which it's
> > possible to use in conjunction with GNU Software.
>
> So is linking also a problem? Why? Not linking a project is not
> usually a significant barrier to finding it. For example, in
> Iceweasel, you just highlight the word, right-click and select "Search
> Web for..." IIRC and you'll find most software fairly easily.
Not linking a project is not usually a significant barrier to finding it,
however linking it is an active promotional action (free publicity) of such
non-free package.
P.S.: I lack the time to follow now this conversation due to I am busy adding
some source code to the project.
Davi
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, (continued)
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, MJ Ray, 2007/10/05
- Re: Debian vs gNewSense -- FS criteria, Davi Leal, 2007/10/05
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, John Darrington, 2007/10/05
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, MJ Ray, 2007/10/05
- Re: software distribution criteria, Davi Leal, 2007/10/05
- Re: software distribution criteria, MJ Ray, 2007/10/05
- Re: Debian vs gNewSense, Davi Leal, 2007/10/05
- Re: Debian vs gNewSense, Richard Stallman, 2007/10/06
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, John Darrington, 2007/10/06
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, MJ Ray, 2007/10/07
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The Debian case,
Davi Leal <=
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The Debian case, Richard Stallman, 2007/10/08
- Re: software distribution criteria, Davi Leal, 2007/10/08
- Re: software distribution criteria, Richard Stallman, 2007/10/09
- Re: criteria, Davi Leal, 2007/10/09
- Re: software distribution criteria -- The OpenBSD case, John Darrington, 2007/10/07
Re: Free Software criteria -- about "Software distributions", Davi Leal, 2007/10/01