This thread is started on the GNU security-discuss because it involves an availability loss whereby one GNU project denies availability to another GNU project.
Works for Me. ~ $ wget http://gnuradio.org/releases/gnuradio/gnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gz --2017-02-28 16:04:32-- http://gnuradio.org/releases/gnuradio/gnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gz Resolving gnuradio.org... 104.28.7.113, 104.28.6.113, 2400:cb00:2048:1::681c:771, ... Connecting to gnuradio.org|104.28.7.113|:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 200 OK Length: 4272430 (4.1M) [application/x-gzip] Saving to: âgnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gzâ gnuradio-3.7.10.1.t 100%[===================>] 4.07M 4.29MB/s in 0.9s 2017-02-28 16:04:33 (4.29 MB/s) - âgnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gzâ saved [4272430/4272430] You are also (on purpose) misinterpreting freedom 0, what it means is that you _can_ use the program for any purpose -- not that it will actually work. Feel free to make use of freedom 1 to modify wget so that it works. ++the free software breech++ Readers of the free.software newsgroup should be aware that a GNU tool (gnuradio) has violated two clauses in the GNU Free Documentation License ("GFDL"): 1) Failing to distribute documentation with the software. There is no requirement in the GFDL or the GPL that requires someone distribute documentation with the software. 2) Use of non-simple HTML. There is no requirement in the GFDL or the GPL that requires someone to use non-simple HTML. And yes, I realise that this is a really bad trolling attempt. ;-)
