<quote who="Crosbie Fitch" date="Tue, Oct 02, 2007 at 11:52:19PM +0100">
> So 'Students for Free Culture' comes across as if it was "Couch
> Potatoes for Free Culture".

No, it doesn't. Not to 100% of the unscientific sample I just ran it by.

> At worst "Students can't afford much, so we should get the world's
> culture free of charge. Thanks."
> 
> The best light it can be put in is "Typically militant students having
> the luxury of being able to agitate against cultural oppression of the
> masses"

I think it's highly describe and and inoffensive.

If your problem is that you don't want Free Culture to be an
organization to target students, that's fine. But you're arguing for a
change in what the organization has always been -- even if it's not how
you've always imagined it.

Regards,
Mako


-- 
Benjamin Mako Hill
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://mako.cc/

Creativity can be a social contribution, but only in so
far as society is free to use the results. --RMS
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