On Wed, Oct 13, 2010 at 06:50, Marc Paré <m...@marcpare.com> wrote: > Let the user then assume that responsibility/liability. > This is where, I consider the "easy urpmi" served its purpose well. It > installed repos where the available software that most users would need was > made available, but this again was by user choice.
I don't really see how this would "fix" the issue; by using a third-party repository (plf or through easy urpmi) you just move the concerns to another provider: - if the user is liable anyway, having a single or several providers doesn't matter; - if the user is not liable anyway, having several providers only moves the liability from one provider to the other one. This particular point, about _patented_ software is a tricky one indeed. Dealing with local/international laws is tricky. Especially when both change over time. However, first point is not to mix different issues here: - supported software and not-supported (and what means "supported") - free vs. non-free/proprietary software (as in FSF/OSI definitions) - gratis vs. paid software - for non-free software, distribution/usage cases may be tricky (skype, opera for instance) - software implementation/distribution that violates/have to comply specific laws (encryption, DRMs) - for patented software/methods, implementation/distribution/usage cases are tricky as well (a patent may or may not block you from using the method, depends on who holds the patent and for what purpose). - maybe more with more details; Anssi pretty much defined categories in his first message here. We definitely can't say bluntly "let's ignore all laws because we can't enforce them all". We must define our policies for what goes in Mageia repositories, what stays out, what goes out (and why). These policies must align with (and be part of) Mageia values and direction. Cheers, Romain