forgive an honest question that may spark a philosophical debate: Since the Linux kernel and Fedora are both licensed under GPL.2, how would this violate an unrelated license? (which reading, it may or may not...)
***** Message: 4 Date: Wed, 7 Jul 2010 16:23:55 -0400 From: Martin Langhoff <martin.langh...@gmail.com> Subject: Re: Uruguay violates GPL by deleting root on OLPCs To: John Gilmore <g...@toad.com> Cc: OLPC Devel <devel@lists.laptop.org>, Sugar Devel <sugar-de...@lists.sugarlabs.org>, Bernie Innocenti <ber...@codewiz.org>, mog...@softwarefreedom.org Message-ID: <aanlktilduwmzykcr2b8t2fsyp4hsh_halfs11qrg-...@mail.gmail.com> Content-Type: text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1 On Wed, Jul 7, 2010 at 3:42 PM, John Gilmore <g...@toad.com> wrote: > The laptops refuse to boot a "developer's version of Linux". ?They > require a signed kernel and initrd. ?Some people call this DRM; > it's definitely "TiVoization" (check Wikipedia if you don't know the term). I think it is a very well understood concept around here. And it is also well understood that not all developers complain about TiVo. Major projects are holding to GPLv2. > As Eben explained, the GPLv3 doesn't require root, it just requires > that you be provided all the info you need to install modified > software of your choice, in the environment in which the binaries were > shipped. ?"su" is fine, if documented, and it is. And I think PATH="~/bin/:$PATH" is fine too :-) > PS: Get a clue, folks. ?This is bigger than OLPC. I understand and value that 'macro' fight, but OLPC, and OLPC deployments are not the enemy. You also need to know that OLPC is about a lot more than just software. We are a very big tent, and we work in some very hard places. Think of explaining this to teachers, or to the parents of children. I can only suggest getting closer to a large real life deployment (not just Uruguay) to get a sense of the challenges we face on the ground in the work we do... and to get a sense of what our who our users actually are. > locks down the hardware to disallow freedom, Let's leave hyperbole for another day. It is a very practical concern -- across the varied world of our deployments *theft* is a very real concern. My personal experience in a very cottoned middle-class environment in latam is that by age 15 everyone in my age group had had something stolen in one way or another -- mostly in relatively low-key muggings. I will be optimistic and hope that 1% of the kids needs root at some point. Most places I go to in latam is about the same -- with of course some exceptions in both directions. cheers, m -- martin.langh...@gmail.com mar...@laptop.org -- School Server Architect - ask interesting questions - don't get distracted with shiny stuff - working code first - http://wiki.laptop.org/go/User:Martinlanghoff
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