Thanks for sending this - what a wonderfully eloquent and dignified
response...



 ::: John  O'Donovan 
 ::: Chief Architect, BBC FM&T Journalism 
 ::: BBC Broadcast Centre 
 ::: 201 Wood Lane, London W12 7TS 
 ::: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
 ::: http://www.bbc.co.uk <http://www.bbc.co.uk/>  

 

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Brian Butterworth
Sent: 16 October 2008 07:19
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [backstage] BBC DRM iplayer mobiles etc


I note that Stephen Fry has posted this, which seems to cover it quite
well..


'I have opened myself to charges of the most monstrous hypocrisy by
championing open source and free software while simultaneously using
proprietary systems here and there, hither and yon. I hold my hand up to
the sin of being inconsistent - hypocrisy is going a bit far I think. 


I am no purist or fanatic when it comes to computing, software and the
internet, or when it comes to anything, come to that: I like the idea of
open source and free software, but I can't honestly find it in my heart
to boycott any individual, company or consortium that patents its
routines, algorithms, codes or protocols and chooses to make money from
of its research, innovation and ingenuity. As in all things I'm a
muddled, hand-wringing liberal who believes in a mixed economy. 


I don't think freedom is indivisible. I can contemplate regulation and
entrepreneurialism, cooperatives and corporations, open source and
proprietary systems all coexisting. In the end I like structures that
are human-shaped, not idea-shaped and humans are great heaps of
inconsistency, ambiguity and complexity. All I'm saying is that if you
expect this to be a kind of Open Source madrassah you will be
disappointed.'


Which you can take also as an ad for
http://www.stephenfry.com/blog/?p=61


2008/10/15 Dave Crossland <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


        2008/10/15 Phil Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>:
        
        >
        > Yes, the fact that this will run on all the Linux PCs in
        > both my houseand office is a shockingly pro-Microsoft
        > move and must be stopped!
        
        
        The fact that this will run only with proprietary software is
        continuing the BBC's discriminatory policy against software
freedom,
        and it must be stopped.
        
        Dave
        Personal opinion only.
        
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-- 

Brian Butterworth

http://www.ukfree.tv - independent digital television and switchover
advice, since 2002

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