Richard Stallman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Another form of tangent is citing practical inconveniences, often > > shared with many other accepted free licenses, as if they were > > reasons to consider a license non-free. > > This is incorrect. Practical inconveniences are precisely the point > in deciding whether a restriction is insignificant or not. > > It takes more than just inconvenience to make a license non-free. In > effect, you are chosing to ignore the distinction. If so, it is > natural your conclusions will disagree greatly with the GNU Project's > conclusions.
"Other users consider proprietary manuals acceptable for the same reason so many people consider proprietary software acceptable: they judge in purely practical terms, not using freedom as a criterion. These people are entitled to their opinions, but since those opinions spring from values which do not include freedom, they are no guide for those of us who do value freedom. >From the above, I won't judge Invariant Sections on practical terms, but using freedom as a criterion. They are the very opposite of free. So I reject them (_both_ in terms of our principles, and in terms of multiple practical inconveniences). So you see, trying to convince me that the inconveniences are not so great is almost doomed to fail, since I also disagree with them in principle. Since you strongly believe in these same principles for software, please don't be disappointed with Debian developers for believing these principles as strongly when they apply to that software's documentation. Perhaps then you will understand us better and decide whether you wish for us to distribute free FSF software manuals. It's very unlikely that Debian will lower standards. Thanks for your time, -- Peter S. Galbraith, Debian Developer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://people.debian.org/~psg GPG key 1024/D2A913A1 - 97CE 866F F579 96EE 6E68 8170 35FF 799E