I don't really see what's hard about this concept... The definition of "Free Software" has existed since the GNU project and the FSF were created in 1985. We're not redefining ANYTHING, we're just the first project to ENFORCE it in what is distributed.
There is a huge distinction between software that is licensed under "A Free Software License" and what is truly "Free Software" by the definition established over 20 years ago. if you need any more proof, I urge you to look into the concepts of "Tivoization" and the Microsoft/Novell deal, these to things indicate very clearly that all threats to Free Software are not license centric... It IS possible to have non-Free software released under the GPL - It's exactly why the GPL is going into revision three... The wording of version 2 allowed GPL software to become non-Free. As for the Debian Free Software Guidelines.... They are a rewording of the Free Software Philosophy. From Bruce Perens, the author of the DFSG, himself "When I helped create 'Open Source' it was a way to lead business people into Free Software. It was not meant as a rejection of Stallman's philosophy, but as a gentle introduction to it for people who would come at it from an economic perspective." gNewSense does not, has not and will not redefine the defintion of Free Software. It has always been four-freedom centric. The freedoms existed BEFORE there was a GPL, before there was a "Free Software License". Threats to the four freedoms motivated RMS to do something - it's why there is "Free Software" to this day. On 4/19/07, Koh Choon Lin <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> For instance, there are binary blobs in the Linux kernel that is > licensed under the GPL, you can't reasonably modify these blobs, so it > violates freedoms 1 and 3 are violated, so gNewSense doesn't ship > them. Please note that I am not criticizing gNewSense below. I do encourage everyone to move to this platform instead of the newly release 7.04 of Ubuntu. In a way, gNewSense does not really look at the license of a software before it is accepted. I mean, Linux is already GPLed but it is not free enough for the project. Thus, I would advocate for a new "definition" of free software from gNewSense which might be needed in the near future, a la the Debian Free Software Guidelines. Koh Choon Lin
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