Paul Tagliamonte said: > We can provide unofficial support for such things *outside* the project > (as it currently is), but draw the line more clearly.
Can you please clarify that? When I go to debian.org I find information that explicitly says Debian officially supports nonfree things [1]. I can also find information and instructions -- again on debian.org -- about how to install and use these nonfree things, which seems to confirm that support. Furthermore I can even communicate with the official Debian staff about those things, and even file bugs against them to have things fixed in it. I read the words but I'm not clear how this goes to "provide unofficial support for such things *outside* the project (as it currently is)." I take unofficial support outside the project to be something similar to how Fedora does it: There are non-free things available but those repositories are on a different website, run and managed by third parties, and the official Fedora website doesn't steer people to them to or try to communicate that these are officially supported in any way. I wonder: If Debian were to increase the level of separation in this way would it be enough to satisfy everyone? Maybe it could even be as simple as putting non-free and contrib (along with supporting documentation about non-free things) on a different virtual host? Considering that Debian is in freeze for Wheezy (I think) this might be something to consider for Wheezy+1? Keep in mind that a good compromise leaves no one happy. [1] http://www.debian.org/social_contract
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