On 11 Feb 2005 01:15:42 GMT MJ Ray wrote: > The FSF have a vague definition of what they consider > free *documentation* and the main difference with free > software is "I don't believe that it is essential for > people to have permission to modify all sorts of articles > and books." http://gnu.hands.com/philosophy/free-doc.html
Yes, and no reason at all is provided to explain *why* this permission should be considered as not essential. More precisely, no reason to explain *why* this permission should be considered less important than the permission to modify programs... :-( > Unfortunately, that even applies to articles which are > permanently attached to FSF's "free documentation" manuals. And this makes things to get even worse... :-( > > Making a DFDG will need at least one GR Without counting that we then would need one different set of guidelines for each of the following: music, images, animations, novels, poems, <insert_your_favorite_arbitrary_category>, ... > and it would need to > be weaker than the DFSG if it's going to accommodate the FSF > position, Yes, and I've not yet seen *any* convincing argument that documentation should get weaker freedom criteria than programs! Actually I have neither seen a good argument that documentation and programs should have *different* freedom criteria... As a consequence, we should IMHO stick to DFSG for all works. > which means the border needs to be tightly controlled > so as not to permit non-free software. There's not been anyone > yet who's come up with a reliable quick test to seperate > "software" and "documentation" (not surprising, as I think > they're overlapping sets), I agree that programs and documentation are overlapping sets and the boundary is rather blurry. The same applies to other categories of works... > so each case would want consensus > built and that's a scary amount of work, especially to support > some other group's totally arbitrary and inconsistent position. "Arbitrary and inconsistent" is a good description, sadly... -- Today is the tomorrow you worried about yesterday. ...................................................................... Francesco Poli GnuPG Key ID = DD6DFCF4 Key fingerprint = C979 F34B 27CE 5CD8 DC12 31B5 78F4 279B DD6D FCF4
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