On Sun, Jan 11, 2004 at 08:40:17PM +0100, Osamu Aoki wrote: > I do understand the negative feeling of carrying archive called "non-free" in > Debian, the Free Software Organization. At the same time, I understand the > practical benefits of the continuation of archive contents now called > "non-free". > > In light of above understandings, let me seek "removal of non-free" with much > more amicable context in which the practical function of our archive as a > whole is maintained. This can be achieved by the creation of "semi-free" > with yet-to-be-determined(*) clear guideline. Right now, we only have > implicit guideline for "non-free".
one obvious problem with this is that it implies approval of almost-free licenses. while those of us who want to keep non-free want to do so for practical and convenience reasons (as well as honoring the promise made to our users), i think it's safe to say that none of us approve of non-free licenses, nor do we want to encourage them, or encourage the belief that they are good enough. calling it 'non-free' serves all the needs of practicality and honour, while at the same time expressing the truth that the license is not good enough. another problem is that keeping only the 'semi-free' stuff is a kick in the teeth to those who need the proprietary non-free stuff. it certainly doesn't serve their needs, unless you credit patronising notions like "it's for their own good" and "we know what's best for them" the solution is obvious, as it always has been. those who don't want non-free can choose not to have it in their /etc/apt/sources.list. easy. in fact, this is the default behaviour, so no action is required...users have to override the default in order to get non-free and contrib packages. craig -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]