The thread started talking very specific - do we dump the non-OSI and tell those who want that to find another distro or windows or do we maintain the philosophy of Gentoo where either side can make an install that suits their needs/philosophy.
This started with someone saying "We need to go cater to those who want only OSI" and from there many said "we need to go only OSI and remove non OSI stuff from portage" and those who wanted commericial/non-free could hope a third party provided that or go to another distro. This provoked replies stating that Gentoo's philosophy was choice and being able to do a job and OSI only took away that choice and crippled the ability to do the job. Eventually the thread morphed into it's current form of consideration of how to handle licensing in portage. The thread started talking very specific - do we dump the non-OSI and tell those who want that to find another distro or windows or do we maintain the philosophy of Gentoo where either side can make an install that suits their needs/philosophy. > On Sunday 23 November 2003 13:18, you wrote: > > On Sat, 22 Nov 2003 18:43:36 -0500 > > > > "Brett I. Holcomb" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > That's what most of the responces have pointed out - Gentoo's currrent > > > > > > philosophy is to give us all choice to run what we need or desire. > > > Unfortunately some people felt we should not have that choice and > > > wanted to dump any package that did not meet their approval as free, > > > open, whatever out of portage and anyone who wants those packages had > > > to go find them himself. Not real tolerant. Gentoo's setup is fine > > > for all and tolerates each side - why change it? > > > > Hum, I didn't catch that from this thread. My impression was the desire > > to know more implicitly what licences the software used was _using_. > > OTOH, there still isn't patch to portage waiting in the wings, so like > > most flamewars^w debates, we arn't talking about spacifics yet (just pie > > in the sky.) :) -- [EMAIL PROTECTED] mailing list
