Matthew Garrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > Brian Thomas Sniffen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> I don't believe policy or the SC does expand on what "requires" >> means. This is the only self-consistent explanation I've seen which >> allows Debian to ship a usable OS. Have you another? > > The parsimonious explanation is that the issue wasn't thought about in > that much detail when the social contract was written. The archives tend > to support this. The obvious thing to do here is not to attempt to find > a way that we can interpret the SC that makes sense - the obvious thing > to do here is to decide what we want the SC to say and then change it so > that it matches that desire.
You're a DD and can say that. I'm not[1], and won't. That said, or not, I do think there's a significant practical difference between firmware which ships as software, say on a CD accompanying the device, and firmware which ships on the device: * The firmware on the CD is typically not redistributable by the end user. Future users can't get it without somebody along the line breaking a EULA. * The firmware blob on CD, if free, can be easily modified by end users. It's just software. Even given the preferred form for modification, it's much more difficult to re-flash a firmware chip on hardware not designed for regular firmware uploads. So even given the opportunity to rewrite this bit, I'd suggest declining. -Brian Footnotes: [1] Too lame to maintain a package, far too lame to pass the skills test with the man-page-writing and pages and pages of questions. Moderately in awe of those less lame. -- Brian Sniffen [EMAIL PROTECTED]