On Thu, Feb 27, 2003 at 01:21:38PM -0700, Bdale Garbee wrote: > When the Social Contract was originally drafted, the title "Our Priorities > are Our Users and Free Software" was meant to strike a balance between meeting > the needs of those who would use Debian and the idealism of the Free Software > movement that we emerged from. The most concrete example of this balance is > the existence of non-free.
That was a balance that was struck years ago, and I think most people feel that the non-free section is of considerably less importance now than it was in 1997, even if some of them don't feel that it's unimportant enough now that we can just drop it[1]. Moreover, I think clause 4 of the Social Contract will continue to have meaning even if the world changes and we live in some Utopia where all software is Free. I do not think that our distribution of non-free software is a mandatory -- or even a very important -- consequence of clause 4 (I suspect people felt this way even at the time it was drafted, else we wouldn't have needed clause 5 ["Programs That Don't Meet Our Free-Software Standards"]). I do realize though, that there are some people who argue that to drop non-free from our archives is a fundamental betrayal. With those arguments I must disagree, even if I no longer have as much hope as I once did that dropping non-free is a proposition that most developers are willing to accept. My impression from my the answers to my questionnaire[2] is that non-free is primarily a matter of convenience, not principle, and that most respondents feel that the non-free section can be dropped once it no longer provides enough convenience to be worthwhile as maintenance project for Debian. (Some, of course, feel that that point has already been reached.) > While Debian cares more about quality and freedom than about seeking market > share in the traditional, commercial sense... One of the many ways that > members of the Debian community are "rewarded" for their efforts, and receive > positive feedback that encourages them to continue to do things, is when the > work they do is appreciated and used by others. I agree that actually having users is a very useful component of quality assurance. :) [1] for our esteemed Project Secretary, I'm guessing that day will never come, unless angband is relicensed to be DFSG-free :) [2] by the way, I have started to publish the results at http://people.debian.org/~branden/dpl_questionnaire -- please be patient, as it takes time to "anonymize" the replies -- G. Branden Robinson | I have a truly elegant proof of the Debian GNU/Linux | above, but it is too long to fit [EMAIL PROTECTED] | into this .signature file. http://people.debian.org/~branden/ |
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