> Date: Mon, 5 Aug 2002 23:09:17 +0100 > From: Andrew Suffield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > Since it is almost certainly not possible to trademark a filename > anyway, the solution seems fairly clear. We find a free font to > replace this one with, and we drop it in place as cmr10.mf, excising > the old computer modern font to the non-free archive. Suggestions for > a suitable replacement are welcome. > I am afraid you cannot do this: since TeX is trademarked, you cannot substitute a new font for it without violating trademark. Let me give you this example. Suppose you licensed a Coca-Cola factory from Coca-Cola. Now you noticed that the name Coca-cola is trademarked, but the name "Sugar" is not. You substitute sugar by honey in the original recipe and distribute the mixture as Coca-Cola(TM). Do you think that Coca-Cola would not mind? > > It is clear that these fonts have not been conclusively and decisively > proven to be DFSG-free. > Unfortunately the only way for you to move these fonts to non-free is to move *the whole distribution* of TeX there (or move some parts to contrib and others to non-free). Otherwise you cannot call your "freeTeX" "Tex". Again, this is the way TeX-the-system (as opposite to tex-the-executable) is licensed. There are parts you can change in certain well-defined ways. You can change the behavior of the system in these ways. There are parts you can NOT change. There is no way you can change certain things (like the output of tex &plain example.tex). You can do whatever you want as long it is not TeX -- but as soon as it is TeX, you have certain rules to obey. All implementations of TeX MUST give exactly same results. There is no way for you to allow this and simulatenously allow "small incompatible changes". If you cannot imageine freedom without this, TeX is not free for you. Or, recalling the famous paper, TeX is not a Bazaar. It is a great example of a Cathedral. It is designed in this way, and the author took legal means for it to stay in this way. If you equate freedom with Bazaar, you cannot say that TeX is free. -- Good luck -Boris If there were a school for, say, sheet metal workers, that after three years left its graduates as unprepared for their careers as does law school, it would be closed down in a minute, and no doubt by lawyers. -- Michael Levin, "The Socratic Method