-------- Original Message --------
From: Neil Jansen <[email protected]>
Apparently from: [email protected]
To: Eco-Conscious Computing <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [Arm-netbook] mali gpu reverse engineering lkcl may ignore
Date: Mon, 22 May 2017 17:28:21 -0400
 

If you reinterpret what I write then tell on what grounds. I think lkcl's 
reasons for not reverse engineering a mali are right. Weighing them up against 
the importance of getting a libre software gpu, I reach the conclusion that the 
reverse engineering should be done.

There have been some remarks about the probability of a successful crowd 
funding. I mentioned the numbers 50000 people, each paying 5euro. Notice on 
this email list, people want to pay 5eu, if they get the software in question. 
It is safe to say more than 10 million people have gnulinux on their computer? 
A major part of them know about the importance of libre software and a part of 
them would want to act on it.
I agree about the responses on the practicability of a crowd funding. I am not 
sure a crowd funding can be done successfully. I would like to know why? Why 
cannot such campaigns be coordinated centralized? We should have a known 
entity, which would approve libre software related crowd fundings. People would 
know them to not be scams. Why does an entity like the free software foundation 
not take on this task? I should ask them. About these fragmented crowd 
fundings, you yourself have to make a validation, which is difficult. When lkcl 
initiated his pc card crowd funding, I did not know him. I still mostly do not. 
On trisquel's forum people referenced thinkpenguin. Thinkpenguin endorsed lkcl. 
That is why I supported lkcl.
Is the free software foundation not involved because they fear scandals or not 
have enough resources? The matter about libre software consumer electronics, I 
consider highly important.

There have been remarks about the retaliation towards people who want to do 
reverse engineering. How to deal with it. One option would be to let one entity 
collect the funding, manage public relations and another hidden team do the 
reverse engineering. Everything still legal on taxes. 
Legalities seems to be an important issue. Are these legal concerns an american 
matter? I do not know everything which may happen but if the public part of the 
crowd funding is located in eu, I think a campaign should be fine.

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