In gnu.misc.discuss amicus_curious <[email protected]> wrote: We are keeping you busy today, aren't we? ;-)
> My point is not that the data might be useful if it were available, and > it is, but that the totality of those taking advantage of knowing is > zero or close to it. In proportion to the number who could, yes. Just like the proportion of googlers who actually click on the ads, or the proportion Usenet postings on a big server, or of sad cases who actually respond to email spam, is vanishingly small. That's not a good argument for not posting source code. In absolute numbers, probably quite a lot - a few tens, or a few hundreds - of people read the source. Who knows? > In any case just disclosing the version of BusyBox incorporated into > the device is sufficient. They do not have to publish the entire code > tree to achieve that. They do. Without them publishing the source, how would you even know which programs it contains, never mind the versions? And how could you be sure that version 1.1.16 in the router was actually identical to 1.1.16 on the BusyBox site? Try looking at the source for SuSE or RedHat Linux sometime. These distributors routinely change the source for the packages they install. -- Alan Mackenzie (Nuremberg, Germany). _______________________________________________ gnu-misc-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/gnu-misc-discuss
