Mathieu Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > MJ Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> a tapoté : > >> Please stop cc'ing me. Read the code of conduct. > > Can't your mailer delete duplicate? I do not want to be guessing > whether the person I'm replying to subscribed to the list each time I > send a mail to the list.
Mark, it would be nice of you to at least use a Mail-Followup-To header if you feel strongly about this. It gives you a stronger practical position to complement your stronger moral position. >> On 2003-08-29 17:32:33 +0100 Mathieu Roy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> > But describing a software is not the most interesting thing. While >> > describing and analysing a book is the most interesting thing you >> > can do with a book (apart from reading it, obviously). >> >> I disagree. I think editing a book in all its many ways is the most >> interesting thing, not describing and analysing it. Do you learn more >> when you edit something, or when you read it? > > Definitely when I read it. If I read books, it's mainly because it's a > way to share knowledge. > You can edit a book only if you got some knowledge to share. Nonsense. Observe while I splice the Revelation of St. John into RFC 822. > And if you got some knowledge, you can wrote a book too. If you think > it's important to do a collaborative work, you can do a book with > someone. What's the problem? Those are all possibilities. But the question is not "what can I do without this work," but "is what I can derive from this work enough to make this work Free?" The answer, for the GFDL, is no. >> > You cut my message at the wrong place, where I explain why I say >> > it's pointless. >> >> Sorry. I did read the rest of it, but I have to cut it somewhere and >> that seemed like a good point. I don't agree that thinking about a >> book is modifying it any more than thinking about a program is >> modifying it. Maybe it is in a way, but it's not what we normally >> mean. > > Sure, normally we only speak of software because with the books it's > not really a big deal. > If someone explains you what is free software, do you need to be > granted to reuse his speech? You don't: if you understand him, you can > regive his speech at the infinite. His speech has not been fixed in a tangible form. > If we were about to make a license for everything, speeches would be > licensed too... But see copyright law for references to performances, perhaps with a side-trip to see the Grateful Dead. -Brian -- Brian T. Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.evenmere.org/~bts/