On Sat, 20 Sep 2003, Richard Stallman wrote: > The words of the social contract clearly equate software to programs.
Only Social Contract #5 even mentions programs, and that particular tenent of the social contract is one that will likely be removed (or at least an attempt made to remove) via GR in the near future. Regardless, our interpretation of the DFSG and the social contract have not changed much in at least the past 3 years or so. [Probably even longer than that, but I didn't follow Debian as closely then.] > But Debian contains essays, logos, and licenses that cannot be > modified. If you are aware of the existence of unmodifyable essays and logos in debian main, please file an RC bug against the package in question. As far as licenses, if it is a unmodifyable license that is not required for the distribution of a piece of software, then it too should not be distributed in main. > These are not programs; are they software? Again, for the purpose of inclusion in Debian, they are treated as software. Don Armstrong -- It has always been Debian's philosophy in the past to stick to what makes sense, regardless of what crack the rest of the universe is smoking. -- Andrew Suffield in [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.donarmstrong.com http://www.anylevel.com http://rzlab.ucr.edu
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