On Sat, 13 Sep 2003, MJ Ray wrote: >On 2003-09-12 21:41:52 +0100 Fedor Zuev <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Really, I do not believe that you did not read FSD. All the >> more so you menyioned it below.
>Please, why do you even write this? I can only think that you are >trying to insult me. >I am aware what is meant by "free beer" but my question is this (and I >think I was clear before): >I do not see anything to link "Robinson, Nerode and other[s]" to the >views you claim are theirs. They seem to object to invariant sections in Debian because they are a restriction of freedom. They have not >mentioned cost as a direct factor. Calling them "free beer zealots" >because of that would be absurd, so you must be referring to something >else. What is that? I am sorry. As I already said, I just can't explain the subject more comprehensible than I already did. So, if you still can't learn the difference between "free as speech" and "free as beer", I have not any cure to help you. >> Therefore, you can talk about DFSG-compliance as >> representatives of Debian Project. Or you can talk about your >> perception of free software on your own. But, IMNSHO, it will be >> dishonest to talk as representatives of Debian Project, but founding >> only upon your personal perception of free software. >I try my hardest not to purport to be a representative of the project >and most of the time my signature reminds people of that. I am not >aware of having claimed to be representative of the project and again >I wonder how your writing is relevant to the subject here. Then why you talk about DFSG? >> Therefore, according to FSD, free license may disallow a >> distribution of modification, which clearly can't be improvement, or >> restrict some ways for [useful] modification, if there obviously >> more than one way to do it. >This conclusion does not follow, as far as I can tell. Please >explain your reasoning more clearly. _My_ reasoning? I am not have any reasoning about that. I just quote a FSD. Some more quotes below: "However, certain kinds of rules about the manner of distributing free software are acceptable, when they don't conflict with the central freedoms. " "Rules about how to package a modified version are acceptable, if they don't effectively block your freedom to release modified versions." >> According to most popular (however, >> IMHO, incoherent) interpretation of DFSG, it may not. For example >> GFDL will be free according the FSD. Do you still think that FSD is >> better definition of Free Software? :-) >If it were acceptable to apply FSD to FDL, I cannot see how it >would be regarded as free software. FSF say that such an attempt >to apply it is not sensible, rather than FDL is free software. There may be a number of reasons to not call "software" a printed EMACS manual in the bookstore. Or even the same manual written on the CD. I believe that [suspected] incompliance with FSF philosophy is not one of these reasons. Contrary to a "random accusations" (as you brilliantly say) of free beer zealots, FSF philosophy carefully crafted and well documented.