[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Thomas Bushnell, BSG) a tapoté : > It isn't unfair, precisely because I think it's a two way street. > This is the standard that applies to both sides. Are there questions > you think Debian hasn't answered? Has Debian announced that it will > ignore whatever you say because you have been cruel and dismissive > towards us? Nope, we're still here.
By reading Richard, I did not understood that he will ignore whatever *some-people* say because they have been cruel and aggressive. I understood that he will ignore whatever *some-people* say until they stop to be cruel and aggressive. Did I miss the point? Maybe. Anyway, this kind of debate (about how someone is good or bad) is usually endless and sterile. I think that Richard addressed already several of the recurrent questions from debian-legal. Can we move forward in this direction? Which question is left? How the invariant section may not be free-software according the DFSG but free-documentation according to the GNU project? Well, I'm not sure it's possible to find a way out of this problem. As Debian provides links, for apt-get, to non-free software, which are distributed by debian but 'not considered as part of debian', would it be acceptable for debian to provides links, for apt-get, to 'non-DFSG documentation', which would be distributed by GNU and 'not considered as part of Debian'? It would allow users (something that Debian cares about) that do not want 'non-free software' at all but accept 'free-documentation as defined by the GNU project' to be able to use apt-get easily, easier than if 'free-documentation as defined by the GNU project' was mixed with 'non-free software'. PS: I speak in my name only (it should be obvious, but I know this is not for everybody). -- Mathieu Roy Homepage: http://yeupou.coleumes.org Not a native english speaker: http://stock.coleumes.org/doc.php?i=/misc-files/flawed-english