Olive, Sorry the previous point was confused. I think the PP was maybe trying to explain that FSF does not claim FDL is a free software licence (and also why they do not think all modification is important) but iDunno.
> It tell that freedom to modify is not important for political text > (which is not documentation). I understand this argument; what freedom > would be provided by doing this? The freedom to adapt the work for the purpose of one's own politics. I also work on local politics (preserving trees, improving sustainable transport, helping distinctive local businesses, that sort of thing) and the campaigns where we have political texts to re-use and adapt are much more effective. It would be good to have FSF's help in defending free software from political threats like bad DRM law, by being able to adapt arguments to our local areas. Hackers are seldom easily political. One of the benefits of free software is non-descrimination. We never need to describe things as "this is free for educational use" or "this is free for non-political use". I can put tools to the uses I need. Political text is another tool and we should be able to re-use and adapt it. > It would simply abuse the reader by > letting him think that what he read reflect the opinion of somebody else > while it is not true. For example; I understand the fact that I cannot > say something like \"Debian is about proprietary software and affiliated > with Microsoft\" since making such claim is simply lying. Nothing put in a copyright licence could stop you making that false claim if you didn't base it on a work covered by that licence. That is a Frequently Used Argument. Please read and understand "It's not about misrepresentation" by Nathaneal Nerode on http://home.twcny.rr.com/nerode/neroden/fdl.html > Debian has in my opnion a tendancy to make confusions. It's true that > documentation is not software (although it is related) and it's even > more true that political texts are not documentation. The DFSG speak > about \"software\" and in the description about \"program\"; anyone with a > good dictionary will know that a \"political text\" is not a software. No, anyone with a good dictionary will know that software is a neologism that contrasts with hardware and has meant stored programs and related stored data since the earliest uses. A political text can be software, although it's not necessarily so, and political text (such as a project history or charter) can be documentation: that is, it can document a program. Consider this quote from Eben Moglen: "We can't depend for the long run on distinguishing one bitstream from another in order to figure out which rules apply." (From "Free Software and the Death of Copyright") Why doesn't FSF apply the same freeness standard to all its bitstreams? -- MJR/slef My Opinion Only: see http://people.debian.org/~mjr/ Please follow http://www.uk.debian.org/MailingLists/#codeofconduct -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]