Are you referring to what is now being proposed ( 
https://libreplanet.org/wiki/Save_WiFi/Individual_Comments ) and what will 
happen, although individually countries can decide how it's being implemented, 
in summer of 2016 in Europe (Directive 2014/53/EU , Article 3.3)?

--anonymiss

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-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Re: [libreplanet-discuss] C.H.I.P. $9 computer respects your freedom, 
when you don't need GPU/Video/etc., perhaps
Local Time: December 2 2015 12:16 am
UTC Time: December 1 2015 11:16 pm
From: [email protected]
To: [email protected]

In the US anyway, there is some talk of the FCC requiring radio devices to not 
release their code because of "security reasons." Heard this on a podcast a 
while back, not sure what the current state of things are.

Aaron E-J http://otherrealm.org http://theotherrealm.org (Blog)

On 2015-12-01 5:20 PM, Michael Lamb wrote:
This is common, and is even worse for the other single-board computer
??? ... I think that CHIP is not worse than that.
I'm sorry, my phrasing was unclear. I meant: CHIP is flawed, and being flawed 
is common. For example, the more-popular Raspberry Pi is worse than CHIP, 
because it can't even boot without binary blobs. You and I both agree with the 
statements on the FSF page.
I think that the FSF page is relevant for CHIP (as of today). CHIP would not be 
acceptable (from the viewpoint of freedom-respecting computer) when you want to 
use its GPU and video encoder/decoder with full features.
I agree. I hoped that the social media person's statements contrary to the FSF 
page meant that the design had changed and the CHIP is now freedom-respecting. 
But from the replies here and the lack of reply from them, I doubt this is the 
case.
When we don't use GPU and video, a board with Allwinner SoC could be a good 
computer. So, it depends if it's serious flaw or not.
I expect it will remain "seriously flawed" due to the WiFi/GPU/VPU blobs. But 
maybe a "seriously flawed" but still-usable computer for only $9 is still a 
good thing for many people. I hope that low price will make it effortless to 
introduce children and students to general-purpose computing with free 
software. Especially children, whom parents might discourage from using the 
expensive family computer (or installing free software on it) for fear they 
might "break" it.

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