Scripsit "Sunnanvind" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Sure, I could picture a more description-based criteria of what's > allowed; like political statements and manifests, with a disclaimer that > if it's obnoxiously long and generally obnoxious it may be disallowed, > but that has problems too.
I have a hard time imagining why especially political statements and manifests should be OK for piggybacking onto technical documentation. Of course there's the argument that "political statements and manifest happens to be the invariant parts of the Emacs manual, and emacs is a really cool program which we'd really like to distribute a good manual for". That would even be true, even though I think RMS must suffer from some kind of confusion of priorities when he thinks that propaganda for freedom is more important than freedom itself. But in that case we might as well adopt a much tighter interpretation and then explicitly grandfather in, say, "any manual that has been distributed for unlimited unmodified reproduction before 1/1/2002, and updated versions of such manuals". -- Henning Makholm "Det er du nok fandens ene om at mene. For det ligger i Australien!"