On Fri, Mar 04, 2005 at 01:57:55AM -0800, Steve Langasek wrote: > Hi Branden, > > In your platform this year, you mention a grounding in legal issues as one > of the things that you have to offer the project as DPL.
Yes. > Over the past year, there has been a great deal of controversy (I dare > say moreso than in preceding years) over the role of the debian-legal > list in defining our concept of Free Software. I agree with that assessment. There is either a perception that the -legal mailing list has become a more "radical" place, or there are people repeating this opinion after they hear it from others without bothering to evaluate the traffic on -legal for themselves. > How would you respond to critics that would claim your prominence in > debian-legal marks you for an extremist, not a consensus-builder? I'd say that's a pretty loaded question. :) If mere "prominence" on debian-legal marks one as an extremist, then there are many people who qualify as "extremists", including Sven Luther, who posted, by my reckoning, 303 messages to -legal between January and September of last year. It's worth considering the question of whether prominence equals extremism. To that end, I dashed off a quick Python script (attached) and fed it my debian-legal folder, which in its present state contains all the mails I've been sent from that list (I subscribe to it) since 1 January 2004. Here are the top ten contributors to the list over the past 14 months or so. The number on the left is the number of posts made from the address on the right. 588 From: Brian Thomas Sniffen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 540 From: Raul Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 459 From: Glenn Maynard <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 425 From: MJ Ray <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 409 From: Josh Triplett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 370 From: Nathanael Nerode <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 363 From: Andrew Suffield <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 303 From: Sven Luther <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 294 From: Branden Robinson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 288 From: Matthew Garrett <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> I would also say that such critics haven't been paying very close attention lately. I've made a total of 14 posts to debian-legal in the past 6 months. For a list with a monthly volume that seldom drops below 200 messages, and with nearly 500 subscribers[1], that seems like a pretty modest presence to me. I did this largely as an experiment, given Matthew Garrett's accusations that debian-legal is "out of touch" with the concerns of developers. (Interestingly, Mr. Luther and I stopped contributing substantially to the mailing list at about the same time, which means he "out-prominenced" me, so to speak. Did he also "out-extreme" me?) People who accuse me of extremism should therefore ask themselves: is debian-legal a less extreme place now that my presence is nearly nonexistent? If not, why not? If so, then have I not solved the problem? "Extremism" in any case is just red-herring language, a charge without substance. It tells one nothing about a person's actual views, except presumably that one's views are not in alignment with the speaker. It offers little more to a reasoned discussion than calling someone "bad". The ubiquity of the term "extremist" in U.S. political discourse, a field almost uniformly ridiculed by the U.S.'s fellow developed nations, may suggest a link between its use and the absence of substantive debate. "Consensus-building" is the flip side of the coin. It's a generic feel-good term. One can build consensus in favor of all sorts of things, and you may mentally insert your own invocation of Godwin's Law here. What's important is what people concretely stand for and why. Claiming to stand on principle is easy. Actually grappling with the real-world consequences of one's decisions is another. As far as painting in broad strokes goes, I did so in my platform[2]: Our commitment to empowering people through software freedom, real choices, and mastery over rather than servitude to the computing experience continues to inspire me, and is why I have remained a developer. These are the goals I perceive the Debian Project as pursuing, and I share them. I'm in favor of things that give people more, not less, control over their computers, and consequently their lives. If you have some specifics you'd like to point to, whether to understand my reasoning or simply to draw out my "extremism", I welcome such inquiries. I don't think consensus-building is all that hard as long as common, relevant goals can be agreed upon. Until and unless people can identify such goals, however, it's my experience that "consensus-building" is code language for "horse trading". Am I a good horse-trader? Am I, for instance, willing to overlook the flaws in the Apple Public Source License 2.0 so that we have the howl library in main[3]? No, I am not, and it appears the consensus of my fellow developers is that we, as a project, should not either. Let me turn your question around a bit, then, and ask you: * Do you feel the decision to move howl to non-free reflects the consensus of Debian developers? * If so, how useful was the debian-legal mailing list to determining that this consensus existed? * If not, why was the action undertaken? * If debian-legal was not actually useful in discerning the consensus of the project's developers, what means was used instead? Consider this your opportunity to educate me. :) Thanks for your question. If I did not answer satisfactorily, please indicate so in a follow-up message. [1] http://lists.debian.org/stats/debian-legal.png [2] http://people.debian.org/~branden/dpl/campaign/2005/platform.xhtml [3] Message-ID: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://lists.debian.org/debian-legal/2005/01/msg00796.html -- G. Branden Robinson | The more you do, the more people Debian GNU/Linux | will dislike what you do. [EMAIL PROTECTED] | -- Gerfried Fuchs http://people.debian.org/~branden/ |
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