No No NO. You miss the point. GNU is fighting for their view of freedom. Not *real* freedom.
The GNU Project campaigns to give software users these four essential freedoms: Freedom 0: the freedom to run the program as you wish. Freedom 1: the freedom to study the source code and change it so it does what you wish. Freedom 2: the freedom to distribute exact copies to others when you wish. Freedom 3: the freedom to distribute copies of your modified versions to others when you wish. That's what I think is real freedom in regard to using a program. Whether or not you agree, at least you know what my views are.