Hey Phil,

Thanks for writing this, I think you're explaining this well. Except...!

On Tue, Aug 23, 2022 at 12:51:10PM +0200, Philip Hands wrote:
>
>I would suggest that "abandoning the free software ideals of the Debian
>project" is significantly mis-characterising what's going on here.
>
>Debian has always been pretty pragmatic about enabling the use of
>non-free software by our users, even while maintaining the strict
>separation of non-free from main.
>
>That is after-all what's kept the FSF mildly upset with us all these
>years.  I don't suppose that including non-free-firmware on our ISOs
>will help with that, but it also doesn't really make things any worse.
>
>By not having the non-free-firmware on our media, we really do lose new
>users, all the time.
>
>In particular, people that don't have any choice regarding their
>hardware often fail to install anything useful with our 100% pure ISOs.
>
>Those people are likely to have obtained some old hardware either as a
>gift or very cheaply, and do not have a budget for an RFY wifi stick.
>
>Debian with the non-free drivers often runs really well on such
>hardware, giving people that would otherwise be digitally excluded a
>viable option.

We're talking about non-free **firmware, not non-free
**drivers**. Sorry to play the pedant card here (and I know you know
the difference!), but this is a common mistake and a lot of users
really get the two confused. </rant>

>Encouraging such people to waste their efforts downloading an ISO that
>we know is quite likely to fail for them, while hiding the image we know
>they really need strikes me as a form of abuse.
>
>A lot of people will abandon the attempt after a single failure.
>
>Every one of these lost users is a potential Debian contributor. Driving
>them away is an act of self-harm, and does more damage to Free Software
>than could possibly be done by admitting the truth that for many
>(newbies in particular) the tainted ISOs are what people really want.
>
>There will be plenty of time to explain that their they should choose a
>better wifi card if they get the chance once they have managed their
>first install, but if we continue to set up obstacles at the start then
>they won't even be around to listen.

*nod* Exactly.

-- 
Steve McIntyre, Cambridge, UK.                                st...@einval.com
"We're the technical experts.  We were hired so that management could
 ignore our recommendations and tell us how to do our jobs."  -- Mike Andrews

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