On Sat, Jan 24, 2004 at 04:42:05AM +0000, Andrew Suffield wrote:
> On Fri, Jan 23, 2004 at 12:38:01PM +1000, Anthony Towns wrote:
> > At the moment the substantive options that have been discussed are:
> >     [   ] Drop non-free
> >     [   ] Limit non-free to partially-DFSG-free software
> >     <   > Keep non-free as is (unproposed)
> Before anybody gets a bright idea, that last one doesn't need
> proposing, as it is the default option on the ballot; "Further
> discussion" is precisely this scenario.

No, that's not the case. Debian resolving to keep non-free as is is not
the same as Debian deciding to discuss the matter further.

In particular, that option is required to allow people to vote:

        [ 1 ] Keep non-free
        [ 2 ] Drop non-free
        [ 3 ] Further discussion

should they prefer to keep non-free, but believe that dropping it is an
acceptable outcome if that's what most of Debian prefers. That's how I
expect to vote.

I'd be very surprised if there weren't a quarter of Debian who would
rather keep non-free than drop it (considering that's around the
proportion who maintain non-free packages), so without the separate
option, this proposal seems impossible to pass.

Note that:

        100 votes Further discussion > Drop non-free
        290 votes Drop non-free > Further Discussion

will cause Further discussion to win; while:

         50 votes Keep non-free > Further discussion > Drop non-free
         50 votes Keep non-free > Drop non-free > Further discussion
        290 votes Drop non-free > Keep non-free > Further discussion

will cause Drop non-free to win.

Cheers,
aj

-- 
Anthony Towns <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <http://azure.humbug.org.au/~aj/>
I don't speak for anyone save myself. GPG signed mail preferred.

             Linux.conf.au 2004 -- Because we could.
           http://conf.linux.org.au/ -- Jan 12-17, 2004

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