Sergey V. Spiridonov said: > Branden Robinson wrote: > >> After all, what utility would this distinction serve beyond providing >> one a means of routing around the DFSG's inconvenient restrictions? > > Program (code) is not of great value outside computer, except examples > which usually belong to the documentation.
This is not true: source code is intended for human consumption at least as much as for machines. > I will not buy a book with > printed source code of Linux kernel, even if it will be very cheap :) But you would buy a book like Linux Undercover, with printed man pages? Would you not buy a book with the source of PGP 2.6? Tens of thousands of people did so... > Documentation and some other kinds of data can be used without > computer. Documentation can be printed and sold as books. One does not > need a computer to read a printed documentation. One does not need a computer to read printed source code either -- I do my best debugging that way, on a desk scattered with papers. And one does need a computer to read most PDF or MS Word files, no matter whether they are printed or not: lpr foo.pdf is not a pretty sight. > There are kinds of files (documentation, images, sounds) which can be > used outside the cramped computer scope. Indeed, I believe you are referring to the class "Creative works", which includes computer programs. Go look at the DeCSS Gallery if you'd like a slightly stranger, but more artful argument on the same topic. > There is a whole various world outside the computer! > -- > Best regards, Sergey Spiridonov > > > > > > -- > To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] > with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact > [EMAIL PROTECTED] -- Brian Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/