I personally think the main advantage is security.
if the code being run on your computer is hidden then how can you be sure what 
its doing?
also having full control is always nice.

But if you intend on running proprietary software like steam anyway then I 
guess there is not so much of an advantage other than being able to pick and 
choose which proprietary software specifically you would trust to be run.

Fedora includes non-free firmware subject to these restrictions 
(https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:Main#Binary_Firmware)
I do not think they include any other non-free software 
(https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Licensing:FAQ?rd=Licensing/FAQ#Does_Fedora_permit_anything_under_.22Non-Free.22_licensing.3F)

I am not sure how much control these firmware files have to be honest maybe 
someone could enlighten me but they say that non of the firmware files are 
"executable within the Fedora OS context (note: this means that the files 
cannot run on their own, not that they are just chmod -x)" so maybe this means 
they are run in a sandbox or something? I am not sure.

-- 
  tom lukeywood
  tomlukeyw...@fastmail.co.uk

On Sun, 16 Jun 2019, at 2:15 PM, Maarten wrote:
> Hello All,
> 
> I hope I'm in the right place, but I've been doing some reading about 
> Free GNU/Linux distributions and I've installed gnewsense in a vm to 
> check it out. I am wondering what the advantages are to running a Free 
> GNU/Linux distro as to running something like fedora(which I am using 
> now) as a desktop? And are there alternative drivers to replace nvidia 
> drivers(not nouveau) so I can still run games under Linux via wine or 
> steam?
> 
> Greetings,
> 
> Maarten
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> gNewSense-users mailing list
> gNewSense-users@nongnu.org
> https://lists.nongnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnewsense-users
>

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