Craig Sanders <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: > there's nothing in the GFDL that prevents you from doing that. the > capabilities of your medium are beyond the ability of the GFDL (or any > license) to control.
This is hardly true. The GFDL says you must transmit the original Japanese text in the case in question, and so if you cannot do so in a given medium, then you cannot use that medium to transmit the text. > no, it's lying arseholes like you who aren't listening. like every other > argument against the GFDL and every other alleged "proof" that the GFDL > is non-free, this is a mere CONVENIENCE ISSUE, not a FREEDOM ISSUE. the > DFSG does not require convenience, it only requires freedom. Ah, once Craig insisted to me that he would never ever read my email messages. Either that was a lie, or heeys'changed his mind. Regardless, more's the pity. I hope that Craig, if he reads this, will not read any more of them. Thomas -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]