On Fri, Jul 13, 2007 at 11:13:45AM +0100, MJ Ray wrote: > opportunity. Can you give an example of an illegitimate one, please?
I don't know if others can, but I can. Consider a talk on "open source" that argues that some classes of license -- e.g. GNU Copyleft -- are dangerous to the American Way and such like, while others -- e.g. the X Consortium or later BSD -- are business friendly and therefore Good and Right. Such a talk might well actually be promoted by certain large corporations who, themselves, make such an argument. They'd be delighted, of course, to get implicit underwriting by SPI or any other FOSS-community supporting groups. I believe this sort of sly appropriating of others' message for subversive aims is widely employed in the political world. And I think it would be illegitimate. (Whether it can be detected is another question entirely.) A -- Andrew Sullivan | [EMAIL PROTECTED] Everything that happens in the world happens at some place. --Jane Jacobs _______________________________________________ Spi-general mailing list Spi-general@lists.spi-inc.org http://lists.spi-inc.org/listinfo/spi-general