I propose the following General Resolution. If you wish to second only one or two of the options, please indicate which ones clearly, so the Secretary can account them separately.
Option 1 (reaffirm the Social Contract) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. We affirm that our Priorities are our users and the free software community (Social Contract #4); 2. Given that we have known for two previous releases that we have non-free bits in various parts of Debian, and a lot of progress has been made, and we are almost to the point where we can provide a free version of the Debian operating system, we will delay the release of Lenny until such point that the work to free the operating system is complete. Option 2 (allow Lenny to release with propietary firmware) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. We affirm that our Priorities are our users and the free software community (Social Contract #4); 2. We acknowledge that there is a lot of progress in the kernel firmware issue; however, it is not yet finally sorted out; 3. We assure the community that there will be no regressions in the progress made for freedom in the kernel distributed by Debian relative to the Etch release in Lenny 4. We give priority to the timely release of Lenny over sorting every bit out; for this reason, we will treat removal of sourceless firmware as a best-effort process, and deliver firmware in udebs as long as it is necessary for installation (like all udebs), and firmware included in the kernel itself as part of Debian Lenny, as long as we are legally allowed to do so, and the firmware is distributed upstream under a license that complies with the DFSG. (Since this option overrides the SC, I believe it would require 3:1 majority) Option 3 (allow Lenny to release with any DFSG violations) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. We affirm that our Priorities are our users and the free software community (Social Contract #4); 2. We acknowledge that there is a lot of progress on DFSG compliance issues; however, they are not yet finally sorted out; 3. We assure the community that there will be no regressions in the progress made for freedom in the packages distributed by Debian relative to the Etch release in Lenny 4. We give priority to the timely release of Lenny over sorting every bit out; for this reason, we will treat fixing of DFSG violations as a best-effort process. (Since this option overrides the SC, I believe it would require 3:1 majority) -- Robert Millan The DRM opt-in fallacy: "Your data belongs to us. We will decide when (and how) you may access your data; but nobody's threatening your freedom: we still allow you to remove your data and not access it at all."
signature.asc
Description: Digital signature