-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA256 > So we can learn any programming language without risk in time to see > it becoming more (close, proprietary, restricted ...) than another > one?
Let's be a bit more specific here. There are several potential sources of nonfreedom in a language: - - The language's standard (or specification) may be nonfree. - - The language's compiler or interpreter may be nonfree. - - The language's toolchain may contain nonfree things. There are languages which are not affected by any of these things (Guile, for example), there are languages which fail in some places, but not others (for example, Dlang), and there are languages which fail in all three (although this is exceedingly rare these days). I would say that as free software supporters, the last two are the most concerning - a nonfree spec or standard isn't something we tend to worry about as much (since the *C* standard is technically nonfree, but I don't see anyone in our community calling for us to stop using it). - -- Koz Ross <[email protected]> www.retro-freedom.nz If you aren't using GPG, you should be! https://emailselfdefense.fsf.org/en. *** Please don't send me Word or PowerPoint attachments. See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/no-word-attachments.html for why. *** Proud member of the Open Wireless Movement. Find out more at https://openwireless.org/ *** Proud member of Peers, at http://peers.community/ . We grow freedom. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2 iQEcBAEBCAAGBQJWsmHtAAoJEJARVr/lAw1AvXMH+QGor39wxywd1XhSoCPXy0Ng kH/WCaA4wTxUswXbFNCRQyGzz+yRhxN6GwE26iYp65gW3hxeW/9i2L1zxpo4tt/X o/7f/d7nHPzf8zn4hFayE853ARdvZK+MFVGw68JJYqjnGUiXhDiYccZbnAlOGtLX NzK/DHGUB8JHx8FK/DL4zcBEz5D9Gi3gezkUGjfDdbZ/1omkzo6HrF6za8FJE1CE YAl5ZBNeZ9oQzBSDY2qfT9t1izySVq1qKh1cstMYm9aecqQlYhdBlFcwvn+Lni4g xezkQ/9CLPVqIy/7+2k24Luyd4eJ+vbvf0hp+hzoM3KSTFcdxA8dDuVl//7vZWo= =xWII -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
