Arch linux is steadily becoming Systemd/Linux rather than GNU/Linux as systemd 
gradually, inevitably, rewrites all the various little utilities in it's image.

Why does it do this? Why so you can use them (and increasingly other free 
software projects which now do things the "systemd way") through Serialized 
Inter Process Communications, which is the very reason for systemd's existance. 
What does this allow: essentially "linking" GPL'd code by proprietary code 
because now it's just opening a socket, not actually linking in the compiling 
sence.

Please don't support Systemd/Linux.
The GNU/Linux we all used to know and used to have before the hostile takeover 
of every single big distro by RedHat sock-puppets was much, much, better.

GNU/Linux is dying, being killed. You'll need to use the AGPL for everything 
now soon if you want what you used to have under the GPL. 

June 10 2016 3:00 AM, "Richard Stallman" <[email protected]> wrote:
> [[[ To any NSA and FBI agents reading my email: please consider ]]]
> [[[ whether defending the US Constitution against all enemies, ]]]
> [[[ foreign or domestic, requires you to follow Snowden's example. ]]]
> 
>>> What about "Arch (the GNU/Linux distribution)"?
> 
> It avoids endorsing the error, so it is ok.
> 
> -- 
> Dr Richard Stallman
> President, Free Software Foundation (gnu.org, fsf.org)
> Internet Hall-of-Famer (internethalloffame.org)
> Skype: No way! See stallman.org/skype.html.


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