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> I didn't mean that we must stop to use the trademarks like `Linux'. But > free programs *must not depend* on that trademark. If I am not allowed > to distribute an unofficicial kernel and name it `Linux' that is OK. > But if free programs stop to work because my kernel is not named `Linux' > that is not OK. Most things look at what the kernel is called (via uname(2)) in order to determine the system. If you change it from 'Linux' to 'LinuxOS' (for example), you'll see lots of things stop working, not least config.guess and config.sub. A blanket policy for trademarks based on an isolated issue (fonts) would be silly IMHO. A policy of 'don't hardcode non-free (or trademarked) font names in your applications' is quite sane. A policy of 'don't hardcode non-free (or trademarked) names in your applications' isn't. - -- Mo McKinlay [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://ekto.org Read http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc1855.txt - ------------------------------------------------------------------------- GnuPG/PGP Key: pub 1024D/76A275F9 2000-07-22 -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.0.5 (GNU/Linux) Comment: For info see http://www.gnupg.org iEYEARECAAYFAjsBVUgACgkQRcGgB3aidfl9iwCgunVsjYBJJqwG6V1uOCCzAO4h k3EAn2Qd1yG0/9uwA7WHWXdrE4yrzMZL =AUas -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----