* Thomas Lord <[email protected]> [2022-02-01 07:05]: > > > > I have tried, but I have not seen in the above paragraph how anybody > > prevented you to use the MIDI controller for other purposes. > > > > Example: I have a small MIDI keyboard controller called > the "Arturia Minilab mkII". > > I can use its most basic capabilities with linux music > production software like jack, or pipewire, and > various libre synthesizers, drum machines, effects > stacks, and Digital Audio Workstation (DAW) software > like Ardour or QTractor (and many more). > > But... the device has non-volatile memory to configure its settings > and to switch on-the-fly among configurations that I can not use > without running proprietary software (therefore, I can't use them > period).
So it is issue of proprietary software, not hardware. In that case keep fostering free software. As would you resolve the problem that you can put inside free software, you could eventually program it in such a way that you get functions you want. However, comparison of proprietary software in the context of freedom zero to use it how you wish is not logical and in the context. I suggest you read this page: Freedom Zero https://girtby.net/archives/2008/01/30/freedom-zero/ and I do not emphasize what the page says, neither if I agree or not, but only to examples of freedom zero. As there you will find example with Mac OS X: > Mac OS X does not satisfy freedom 0 because according to the license > you are not permitted to run it on non-Apple hardware. Most > annoyingly this includes virtual hardware, although this restriction > has apparently been relaxed in Mac OS X Server Maybe such software cannot run or function on non-Apple hardware, but license is the legal document preventing the freedom to attempt running software how user wish and want. Now please compare: 1) When you receive such software you receive license preventing your freedom to run it how you wish. 2) When you received MIDI hardware I bet you did not receive any kind of license preventing you to use MIDI hardware how you wish, for example, telling you that you are not allowed to use it as explosive detonator. It matters little if MIDI hardware can function as explosive detonator but nobody legally prevent you doing it. Manufacturers or sellers may have guarantee conditions that they will not repair your hardware if it was used improperly. But that also does not prevent you using it improperly. It only prevents you getting the guaranteed repair. > And the device has very cool seeming LED backlights under > various pads (force-sensitive ("velocity sensative" in midi-speak) > buttons). If I submit to the proprietary software I can configure > different colors and different triggers to turn the lights on > and off -- but there is no libre software to do this. It is matter of proprietary versus free software in the device. It is not matter of hardware. You can legally use (comparable to "run") that hardware for whatever purpose you wish and want. There is no comparable conflict with Freedom Zero as in software because nobody is preventing you legally to use ("run") it how you wish and want. "Using" or "running for any purpose" does not imply "functioning". So do not mistake those terms. Let me quote more from that website where they say the following statement came from FSF: > The freedom to run the program means the freedom for any kind of > person or organization to use it on any kind of computer system, for > any kind of overall job and purpose, without being required to > communicate about it with the developer or any other specific > entity. In this freedom, it is the user’s purpose that matters, not > the developer’s purpose; you as a user are free to run a program for > your purposes, and if you distribute it to someone else, she is then > free to run it for her purposes, but you are not entitled to impose > your purposes on her. That means there is no discrimination. I don't think that any MIDI hardware in the world ever has been sold with the "license" preventing you to use MIDI hardware free for your purposes. Thus it is not comparable, not in the context, to speak of hardware and freedom zero as there is no actual objective problem with hardware. Don't mistake "function" with "purpose". Another example: ================ Here is the real example of absence of freedom zero: https://github.com/gnusupport/AVideo/blob/master/LICENSE Where it says: "The Software shall be used for Good, not Evil." Purpose of using the software for porn distribution is considered by their authors "evil". But for majority of people watching porn and enjoying it, it is considered "good". It is vague constraint where author retains control over the user and users' purposes. It is absence of Freedom Zero. When you purchase MIDI hardware you do not get similar license as it is not necessary, it is hardware. You can do with hardware in general what you wish and use it for whatever purpose you wish and want. The problem of absence of Freedom Zero does not exist in the domain of hardware sales. > Thus, I am blocked from using the full capabilities of the hardware > by the company hoarding the device-specific protocols that can > operate those features and doing that to try to trap me into using > proprietary software. It is not relevant to Freedom Zero. > Cell phones are very similar. You can not replace the operating > system on any popular model with free software. It is not relevant to Freedom Zero. Jean Take action in Free Software Foundation campaigns: https://www.fsf.org/campaigns In support of Richard M. Stallman https://stallmansupport.org/ _______________________________________________ libreplanet-discuss mailing list [email protected] https://lists.libreplanet.org/mailman/listinfo/libreplanet-discuss
