Quoting Simon Josefsson (2026-03-01 15:40:08)
> Jonas Smedegaard <[email protected]> writes:
> 
> > Quoting Simon Josefsson (2026-03-01 14:08:57)
> >> Gunnar Wolf <[email protected]> writes:
> >> 
> >> > Simon Josefsson dijo [Sat, Feb 21, 2026 at 08:13:07PM +0100]:
> >> >>> I guess it all boils down to Debian people not wanting you to badmouth 
> >> >>> the
> >> >>> Debian project using Debian resources for it.
> >> >>
> >> >>Please help me improve motivation for Debian Libre so it doesn't come
> >> >>off as badmouthing.  That's not the intention, and to me, the choice of
> >> >>basing Debian Libre on Debian speaks a lot about the good things in
> >> >>Debian.  It would be more work to base a libre OS on macOS or Windows.
> >> >>
> >> >>What Debian resources are you thinking about?
> >> >
> >> > If you are proposing a Debian Pure Blend called “Debian Libre”, it would 
> >> > be
> >> > using ① Debian's trademark and ② Debian's infrastructure. It would 
> >> > badmouth
> >> > the project by implying that full-Debian, that what our project does that
> >> > is _not_ accepted by “Debian Libre” is, well... Not free.
> >> 
> >> I don't follow this.  A Debian Libre blend would be curated for a narrow
> >> audience that care about a particular topic.  It doesn't reject or
> >> invalidate anything else in Debian.
> >
> > If I make a Pure Blend for the narrow audience of danish-speaking
> > people, and then call that blend "Debian for greatest people", I not
> > only say something positive about danish people, but also implicitly
> > something negative about spanish and australian people.
> >
> > Do you see the point now?
> 
> Somewhat (thanks!), but wouldn't such an argument also argue for
> canceling the entire concept of Debian Blends?  Assuming then "Debian
> Med" pisses of non-Med people.  Or "Debian Junior" pisses of
> non-Juniors.

The point I was trying to make is that if I label danish as greatest,
then I implicitly make it awkward for non-danes to claim that they are
also-greatest.

Translating to your case: You make it awkward for others to identify
other uses of Debian as also-pure. 

I fail to see a similar need labeling non-medical Debian use as
also-medical, or for non-junior Debian users to label themselves as
also-junior.


> What I fail to see is how the messaging about Debian Libre suggests it
> is for "greater people", for your analogy to work.

You want to label Debian-without-non-free-firmware as the pure one.

But Debian-without-english-locale is also pure.

And Debian-without-Qt and Debian-without-GTK are also pure.

"Pure" is a broad term. "Junior" or "med" or "danish" or "GNOME" is not.

> I am also not confident that people's objections here are only about
> how Debian Libre is communicated, but if it is also about technical
> choices.

I am not "people".

I think it is a real issue, that in discussions we easily lump together
multiple arguments that we might see as correlated but our opponents
may disagree are correlated.

I was trying hard to stick to a single argument here.  Please do not
yourself lump other unrelated arguments in here.

 - Jonas

-- 
 * Jonas Smedegaard - idealist & Internet-arkitekt
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