On Mon, 28 Feb 2005 10:16:46 +0000 Matthew Garrett wrote: > If we actually upheld this standard at present, it would result in us > removing a large number of packages from Debian.
I think that these issues are sarge-ignore because of GR2004-004, but will be release-critical bugs post-Sarge. > However, even > ignoring that, I think your definition leads to some strangeness. It > suggests that a JPEG is DFSG-free in and of itself in some cases, but > that the existence of a lossless representation of that picture > renders the JPEG non-free unless it's distributed with that lossless > representation. If I delete the only copy of the lossless picture, is > the JPEG now source? > > If a JPEG can be considered "free enough" under some circumstances, > I'm confused as to why it's not always good enough. OK, think of a program. I give you a file written in C, that can be compiled by gcc into the binary executable. Am I giving you the source code? Yes, in most cases, I am. But what if the program is a parser generated by Bison? Now the C code is not source code anymore. The grammar description is the real source code. If C code can be considered "free enough" under some circumstances, why is it not always good enough? Because it's not always the "preferred form for modification", that's why! -- 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
pgpUbBRbOM4hb.pgp
Description: PGP signature