> all that was removed was *code* that gets compiled. If the maintainer > cannot arbitrarily change any code he wants, then it is not clear that > the program is DFSG-free.
Amen. Making part of the code immutable is not what I call free software. What if I want to use parts of the code and I respect the copyright and license...does that mean I also have to take this part of the code and output the credits? What if environment doesn't provide a way to output the credits. What if I am implementing the reiser tools on an embedded system that will never show any such output? What about programs that execute the reiserfs tools (like bootup scripts)...are they not allowed to redirect or filter this output? If any of this is questionable, then I suspect reiserfs tools isn't DFSG compliant and belongs in non-free with all it's flakiness. -- Debian - http://www.debian.org/ Linux 1394 - http://www.linux1394.org/ Subversion - http://subversion.tigris.org/ Deqo - http://www.deqo.com/