On 10 Mar 2004 11:25:51 -0800, Thomas Bushnell, BSG <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> said:
> Raul Miller <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: >> Necessary for what purpose? > We can work out the details of what is the standard of necessity. I > already gave some suggestions that I might accept: hardware drivers > for closed drivers, non-free documentation for free software, for > example. My standard of necessity is simple: if I feel it is necesary for me, then I say it is necessary. How do I decide? Since these are subjective issues, there is an element of gut feeling involved. For example, even though there are alternate editors/mua's/irc clients/news readers out there, emacs is important for me. I do not think that if, after years of emacs/vi wars, I have not let others determine for me what I require, nor have I seen fit to debate what my criteria of necessity is, that I am likely to do so now. Why is it relevant? Oh, to determine when the non free section contains important software? My take is this: if someone has taken the time and effort to package software despite it being non-free, and is standing up to take responsibility, and maintain it, and this person is a fellow Debian develope, who has a commitment to Debian and free software, then heck, the chances are that the software is needed. I trust my fellow developers; I don't think they would frivolously package _non-free_ software for the heck of it. >> > I agree with you that the non-free packages need to exist. What >> > I disagree about is that it must be Debian's job to provide them. >> >> I agree that we shouldn't make any kinds of guarantees that we >> provide them. > First, some people have been reading the social contract as if it > were a promise to provide non-free packages to users. We did make a promise (umm, a contract, even) to make non-free packages available, even though not a part of Debian, for the sake of their users, the implied promise is that the care that developers pay to packages, and the resultant quality, shall be provided to those packages as well. Indeed, the added value of the debian membership and infrastructure was implied in that promise. So I do believe. >> Right now, if there's some kind of copyright problem which doesn't >> prevent distribution, but which requires significant time to sort >> out, the package can be moved to non-free, until it's solved. > How exactly does the presence of non-free, as opposed to > non-free.org, help this? non-free.org is vapourware, and god know what standards of quality it shall have; Debian does have a certain reputation for quality that purely hypothetical organizations have difficulty in matching. manoj -- I/O, I/O, It's off to disk I go, A bit or byte to read or write, I/O, I/O, I/O... Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://www.debian.org/%7Esrivasta/> 1024R/C7261095 print CB D9 F4 12 68 07 E4 05 CC 2D 27 12 1D F5 E8 6E 1024D/BF24424C print 4966 F272 D093 B493 410B 924B 21BA DABB BF24 424C