Michael Ole Olsen has written:
>Keep the profit at work, but I certainly wouldn't charge in my sparetime
>If you code on something you are hired to do, then its fine you charge,
because you can't say what you want to code on, your employeer >decides so

I partly agree but what would you do if you were self-employed and thus YOU
would decide what you work on? Would you not put a price on your products?
How would you survive? What if you were a CEO of a company with employees
who need to pay for their lodging, food, want to go out and have fun from
time to time, some of them having children? Would you not want to have
revenue? Then your company would soon bankrupt, your employees would be
angry with you and it is likely you would end up at court.

Or would you release your products as (seemingly) free and then pump ads to
your users like many do (google/youtube, facebook, Skype) - well I think
they are just afraid to state the simple truth to their users: "Yes, we
need money to operate." If they could do that, their users would not have
to see the ads (which have considerable size sometimes and some users
actually have to pay the data depending on their ISP).

Yes you are right that greed on the producer side is a bad thing and we
could have a lot of things working better if the community could have the
source codes and stuff. I believe this is the case of some firmware. But I
would also point out that greed is also on the consumer side. Everyone
wants to have software for free. People don't like to pay. Sure, some can't
pay and then it's wonderful they can get a free product. But some CAN pay
and still are reluctant to do it and they keep thinking that one should
just not pay for software - probably because it is made by the guys with
big bellies, driving Porsches, sleeping with the hot models and never
running out of money (well, not really I don't know what they think :-) ).
Especially when you think about games where the effort and know-how to make
them is just tremendous, I don't think that's right.

Cheers,
Jan

On Sat, Jul 4, 2015 at 9:55 PM, Andrey Rahmatullin <w...@debian.org> wrote:

> On Sat, Jul 04, 2015 at 07:48:26PM +0200, Michael Ole Olsen wrote:
> > non-free, only the developer wins, and those that have enough money to
> buy
> >
> > free software lets poor countries use pcs.
> You are making a grave mistake here (and below). Should I point it to you?
>
> --
> WBR, wRAR
>

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