I appreciate the concerns raised about the nonfree boot firmware on machines sold by the same company leading development of PureOS. That is a concern for RYF (and is a concern generally, of course, we want all machines to be all free).
It is not a concern for FSDG endorsement, except insofar as materials that are part of PureOS official infrastructure (including its home page, bug tracker, etc) might be recommending or suggesting use of the nonfree software. I haven't myself looked yet to see to what extent this might be the case, but I think any such problem is easily solvable. Merely being produced by the same company does not automatically make such a connection. If Canonical, for example, wanted to produce something based on Ubuntu that met the FSDG criteria, we would certainly consider that. With regard to browsers, the extension repository is an issue because it opens inside the browser and prominently recommends nonfree extensions. Users need to be able to decide once -- by installing an endorsed distro -- that they don't want programs in their distro offering them nonfree software to install. This is different from it being *possible* to install nonfree software, which is of course the case on any general purpose computer. -john -- John Sullivan | Executive Director, Free Software Foundation GPG Key: A462 6CBA FF37 6039 D2D7 5544 97BA 9CE7 61A0 963B http://status.fsf.org/johns | http://fsf.org/blogs/RSS Do you use free software? Donate to join the FSF and support freedom at <http://my.fsf.org/join>.
