Hi Mark, all,

I had time to read over the services wording, and I can't find serious
fault with it, but IANAL. I'm sure you are asking one, so here's my only
suggested change:

Firefox also *offers optional* web site information services, such as
blah blah....

Instead of:

Firefox also *uses* web site information services....


http://launchpadlibrarian.net/17877776/about_rights_expanded.png

The reason for the suggested change is so people are aware that Firefox
works perfectly well without the service, so they won't be afraid to
turn it off if they don't want that kind of protection.  If it were me,
I'd explain what a "web site information service" is. It's an
antiphishing service, no? Why not say so?

  I'm not clear why they use the plural "services" instead of "service"
throughout. If there are several, what else is there? Or if there is
only the one, are they preparing for future services? I hope not, since
you don't want people to say I agree to unknown things.

6 worries me a bit, from Mozilla's standpoint.  If they update, will
they get an "I agree" at that time? I hope so.

Trademarks:

For the record, I would be very happy if every project understood the
purpose of trademark law better. The purpose is to protect the public,
so you don't buy a Brand X pretend Gucci bag instead of the real thing
and get ripped off.

That's the purpose. It prevents litigation against the wrong party, and
it prevents unjust damage to reputations.  And it's the law, whether you
make it work for you or not. You don't have to register a trademark to
have one, and you can lose one if you don't act to protect it.  After
that, your name is in the winds, usable by anyone.  Why wouldn't you
make the law work for you instead of against you?  A really large
project has to, I think, because others will try to rip off the
reputation of any successful project.  It is what it is.

Whether the actual requirements  here to protect the marks are needed or
not as set forth, I can't say, because it would require a lawyer, not
just me, and more knowledge of the specifics than I have. But to take
affirmative steps to protect your project is just good sense, in my
view, and I not only understand Mozilla's worries, I support  in that
generalized sense their desire to protect themselves. The law compels
them.

And, of course I'm a huge fan of yours too, Mark. Really. Seriously.

On grannie, though, I think you  may want to think from a different
standpoint.  I acknowledge your amazing skill and energy at mobilizing
and spreading acceptance of GNU/Linux on the desktop. And part of that
skill is your ability to figure out what makes it accessible to grannie
too.

So it's natural you think about her and what she needs.  I surely don't
want to undermine those special abilities you've demonstrated.  I admire
them.

The only caution I feel is this:  the first goal is to provide a free
and open source system.  After that comes usability, ease of use,
convenience, protection of users, etc.

Why? I think it's because that's why we are all here, working without a
dime, in many cases, just because we see the value of a computer that we
can trust.

I know when I sit down at a computer, and I have more than one operating
system, I feel very differently when I'm in Mandriva or Kubuntu than I
do on my Mac. The Mac is simple and easy and it just works, and I enjoy
that. But I always know when I use it that I'm not altogether in
control. I can't turn off Bonjour, at least not in a way Apple will tell
me about, or Spotlight, etc. So I'm never actually alone.

When you don't know for sure what a computer is doing that you don't
know about, it feels very different. When I'm in Kubuntu, in contrast, I
can breathe, because I know I can make it do what I want.  I can change
it, I can look at it, I can choose to configure it any way I choose.

Why that matters, that kind of privacy,  goes to the heart of what it means to 
be a human being.  Privacy is necessary for people to really be themselves.  
You don't do certain things when people are watching you.  Janna Malamud Smith 
wrote about that in her book, Private Matters: In Defense of the Personal Life.
http://cyber.law.harvard.edu/privacy99/lesson1/malamud/mal_index.html

She writes about what happens to people when it's absent.  Solitude,
which is one state of privacy, is so precious, some of those who were in
prison camps in WWII mentioned how they craved it and how much they
missed it.

Solitude and a feeling of not being watched or tracked is precious to
me, and I feel it only in FOSS.  Anything that subtracts from that
wonderful experience is a move in the wrong direction.

Up to a point, some compromises can be worked through, but there is a tipping 
point beyond which all the volunteers disappear, and when you think about it, 
they are what FOSS is.  And they won't be chumps, and they are interested only 
in a system that they trust. Market share
is not what the community is after first and foremost. 

So that's the first thing to care about in all circumstances, I think,
keeping that freedom. After that, you can think about all the other
things, like protecting grannie and convenience. But it's vital not to
bleed over the line just for convenience and other secondary things.

You didn't here, and in the end, I think the result is looking like
something we can all be proud of.

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