Hello all. I believe that preventing people from modifying or using, for any purpose, a published work is ethically wrong. No one deserves and can possibly justify, on ethical grounds, such a power over other people's life. Therefore, something like CC-*-ND, GNU Verbatim, GFDL's invariant sections and CC-*-NC should not exist.
I also strongly believe that releasing a work under a free but non-copylefted license is morally wrong. Because when you have the ability and opportunity to prevent an injustice from happening it is your moral duty to do so. So, licenses like C0 or BSD should not exist. Finally, under the light of the previous standpoints, I believe that mandatory attribution is ethically illegitimate. People should only attribute a derivative work if they feel they should do so. Thus, CC-*-BY, for instance, should not exist. "Michał 'rysiek' Woźniak" <[email protected]> writes: > The solution is a reasoned debate with the FSF and GNU communities to try and > convince them why -ND/GNU Verbatim is not a good idea. ;) I think that convincing RMS is half way to get there. -- ,= ,-_-. =. Bruno Félix Rezende Ribeiro (oitofelix) [0x28D618AF] ((_/)o o(\_)) There is no system but GNU; `-'(. .)`-' Linux-libre is just one of its kernels; \_/ All software should be free as in freedom;
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