Le 2010-10-13 14:44, Sinner from the Prairy a écrit :
Wolfgang Bornath wrote:
It's easy to communicate, it's easy to implement fitting even those
"dumb" users some people are talking about. Yesterday I installed the
new Ubuntu 10.10, a window opened near the end of the installation
process telling me that my hardware may need/use a non-free driver
which is available online. The text explains about the non-free status
in simple words and then I was asked if I wanted to activate this
non-free driver.
The same can be done with all that codec stuff. A window opens,
telling the user that he will need some special software to listen to
MP3s, watch his commercial DVDs, etc. The text explains in simple
words the legal implications which may or may not apply to his
country. After that he can decide with a simple mouse click on yes or
no or "ask later" (if he has no working internet connection at that
time. If he clicks on "activate", the needed software will be
downloaded and installed. If he clicks on "ask later" he will be asked
as soon as the script detects a working internet connection.
If he has selected "No" and still tries to open a commecrial DVD (or
whatever) the window ill appear again reminding him why he can't play
the DVD (or whatever).
Face it: we do not have any other choice but leave it at the user's
decision. All we can do is make it simple if he chooses to bite the
bullet.
Wolfgang,
Well done. Even I understood that.
Mageia, as a foundation, will be separated form legal proceedings by passing
the burden of the decision to the end user, as a flexible way of
acknowledging that laws are not the same everywhere, and the end-user will
(should) be better informed than an automated script of what is allowed and
not. And if the end user decides to "break the law", it is the end user's
responsibility.
Salut,
Sinner
At issue here, in the discussion, was the method of delivery. Wolfgang
wrote of the Ubuntu method which seems also fine to me. Having repos
where contentious software packages were kept (just like PLF) was
another method. Others suggested that Mageia repos should just offer up
everything regardless of legal implications. Have I missed any other
methods?
Marc