On Sat, Sep 07, 2002 at 08:36:00PM +0200, Kai Henningsen wrote: > [EMAIL PROTECTED] (Brian Sniffen) wrote on 04.09.02 in <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
> > Bear in mind, Russ, nobody is questioning whether TeX (or LaTeX) are > > *good* software, or *useful* software, or even *open source* software. > > The question is whether they are free software. > Statements like this really piss me off. > Open source software *is* free software, by definition, without exception. > In fact, given that "open source" is the same as "DFSG free", > *by definition*, > then if anything is not DFSG free then it's not open source, either. By whose definition? Open Source is not defined in terms of the DFSG, nor are the DFSG defined in terms of Open Source. The two terms have two *independent* definitions, and determination of whether a piece of software is "DFSG free" or "Open Source" is made by two independent groups, in accordance with their respective guidelines. Though I can't cite any off-hand, ISTR that there have been real cases where an OSI-approved license was regarded as DFSG-noncompliant. Despite Bruce's involvement in the crafting of both terms, they are not synonyms. Steve Langasek postmodern programmer
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