On Wed, Mar 05, 2003 at 03:08:46PM -0500, David Turner wrote: > On Wed, 2003-03-05 at 11:52, Branden Robinson wrote: > > What do you folks think of my paradigm? Useful or not? > > I think it's brilliant.
I get nervous when people react so enthusiastically; it makes fear that I am unwittingly aiding them in the fulfillment of some ulterior purpose. :) > But I think it will not reduce disputes, only metadisputes (like the > parent thread). Oh certainly. I'm just expressing my conception of the framework within which these licensing discussions take place: "why are we debating these issues?" and "why is it important that we do so?" -- you're exactly right, it's a meta-issue. > Since you've standardized on common law, there's also stare decisis, and > debian-legal gets to make up tests like the Desert Island and Chinese > Dissident tests without complaints of legislating from the bench. Complaints about legislation from the bench typically come from legislators, anyway; in Debian, any Developer can be a legislator by proposing a General Resolution (or, short of that, a simple discussion thread on a mailing list). And as yet we have no "class" of "judicial personages", at least not explicitly. If you participate in this list and express yourself cogently, you exert influece. One doesn't even have to be a Debian Developer to do that. > I also think it's brilliant, because it means that I won't have to > metadispute when I suggest again that we look at DFSG 3 compliance via > the "least restrictive means" / "compelling Free Software interest" > analysis that I proposed during the AGPL thread. I'm not sure where this is headed (my memory with regards to the AGPL is short, and I think some discussion may have taken place while I was knocked offline due to a move and motherboard failure), but I should stress that what the FSF conceives of as a "compelling Free Software interest" and what Debian does may not always be in perfect harmony. But I'm sure you already understand that, so I'm glad you in particular find my proposed metaphor useful. I would ask that, *especially* if Debian formalizes my metaphor or builds upon it in any way, that the FSF not change its definition of Free Software without running it by us. :) Having <URL:http://www.fsf.org/philosophy/free-sw.html> change suddenly could come as a nasty surprise. -- G. Branden Robinson | The greatest productive force is Debian GNU/Linux | human selfishness. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | -- Robert Heinlein http://people.debian.org/~branden/ |
pgpr5yQRBoTUD.pgp
Description: PGP signature