MJ Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a tapoté : > On 2003-08-29 12:04:18 +0100 Mathieu Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Readers of this list (not only developers) have stated their strong > >> belief that the GFDL does not follow the DFSG. > > I'm a reader of this list and I'm pretty sure I never stated such > > belief. Am I the only one? > > I'm a reader of this list and I'm pretty sure I did. Add me to the OP > (whose name you trimmed) and you have plural, so the statement is > accurate. What is the use of such hair-splitting?
We does not express only the plural but the consensus. "We \We\ (w[=e]), pron.; pl. of I. [Poss. Our (our) or Ours (ourz); obj. Us ([u^]s). See I.] [As. w[=e]; akin to OS. w[=i], OFries. & LG. wi, D. wij, G. wir, Icel. v[=e]r, Sw. & Dan. vi, Goth. weis, Skr. vayam. [root]190.] The plural nominative case of the pronoun of the first person; the word with which a person in speaking or writing denotes a number or company of which he is one, as the subject of an action expressed by a verb." > You are not the only one, but it looks very probable that you are in > the minority. You cannot impose your view on the majority, so why > not look for constructive acts? Please, can you point out a message sent by myself where I try "to impose my view on the majority"? My mail is an answer to someone that said that everybody thinks the GFDL as non-free. Which is not accurate. Nothing else. I'm not sure whether removing a manual because the author choose a license that permit him to make a paragraph invariant (which does not mean he will make really add an invariant paragraph) is really a constructive act, if that's you're looking for. I'm even not sure whether it's a problem to have an invariant part in documentation. As my main area of work is History, I'm familiar with books -some kind of documentation- that I cannot change physically but I still can use fully (read, understand... and so execute and modify, by writing my own text, as there's no binary form involved here). The freedom is not a goal but a meaning. You need to be free to do what you want to. The freedom is not an end. But we hit back the debate "is a software a book or not". Regards, -- Mathieu Roy Homepage: http://yeupou.coleumes.org Not a native english speaker: http://stock.coleumes.org/doc.php?i=/misc-files/flawed-english