Scripsit "John H. Robinson, IV" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > as a mostly passive observer at this point, the only data we are missing > is a clear working definition to separate out Software, Data, and > Documentation.
> once we do that to our own satisfaction, then we can get on with > defining the free-ness needs of each. I think most regular posters to d-l sees it the other way: As long as nobody have made any reasoned concrete proposal for how the standards applied to documentation should differ from the DFSG, it is a waste of time it to try to hammer out a definition of "documentation". There seems to be a fairly solid consensus on this list that the requirements of the DFSG are, in and of themselves, the reasonable requirements to make of the licensing of documentation - *even* on the times we have conducted the discusion on the (for some hypothetical) premise that there is no inherent reason for software and documentation to be measured with identical standards. If someone wants to change that consensus, that someone should strive directly to change the consensus about which demands it is reasonable to make for documentation. But it seems that the people who, every once and then, come here to demand that GDFL-licensed manuals should be included, are content to argue that the standards for documentation *could* be different. They do not say anything about which way they want to *change* the standards (expect possibly to make an artificual exception saying that everything that comes from the FSF is free by definition). -- Henning Makholm "De kan rejse hid og did i verden nok så flot Og er helt fortrolig med alverdens militær"