Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-26 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/26/10 7:09 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:

 The GNOME speaker guidelines were at least partly a reaction to my
 Saint IGNUcius comedy routine.  So if I don't have a beef with these
 guidelines, why should anyone else?

Good question. It seems some folks are intent on defending you, whether
you're looking for defense or not.

I've had a bunch of 'em email my managers, our clients, and uninvolved
members of my family, over my disagreements on this issue. You may recall
that I wrote you privately about this about three months ago, and you saw no
problem with it at the time, but perhaps you've reconsidered that.

Asking them to knock it off seems reasonable to me, certainly.

 I am proud of my Saint IGNUcius routine.

I am, in all honesty, sorry to hear that. I feel that's a shame, myself.

 Thousands of people have laughed at it.

Keen student of world history that you are, you're surely aware that tens of
thousands, if not hundreds of thousands, laughed (and cheered and applauded)
at each and every beheading conducted during the Reign of Terror.

I guess by this metric, if a speaker wants to throw in a guillotining or
two, well, why not? As long as people laugh, right?

 The routine makes fun of people, especially Emacs
 users, but does not insult or attack anyone, not even Emacs users.

As I've shown, opinions varied. Celeste Lyn Paul felt insulted. Chani
Armitage felt more at risk of being attacked. I felt offended. Thanks for
making it clear that our various feelings in this matter were in fact
groundless, and should not be considered as being material to, or indicative
of, anything.

See, from where I was sitting, the routine _seemed_ to be making fun of
women in particular as some sort of technical ignorami, helplessly waiting
around for some big, strong _male_ hacker to explain to them the wonders of
EMACS. Surely, virginity is a small, even insignificant, thing to trade
for some awesome knowledge and power. It's easy to see why such a message
would achieve a level of popularity with your typical FLOSS community
conference audience.

By the same token, I personally _believed_ (mistakenly, apparently) that I
could well imagine why a woman in attendance, outnumbered by men at perhaps
a ratio of 40-to-1, might be made just a _wee_ bit uncomfortable by that
notion.

Evidently, however, that's a lot harder for yourself, and others, to
envisage, thus conclusively demonstrating my (and Celeste's, and Chani's,
and Matt's, and Matthew's, and Andre's, and Sandy's, and...) error in this
matter.

 It
 doesn't advocate doing anything to people by force -- not even
 teaching them Emacs (which is how one loses Emacs virginity).

Well, see? That's why I keep asking for a handout. I've never heard of
relieving a woman's virginity through teaching her how to use a
40-year-old text editor. I'm also unclear how a unilateral Holy Duty to
impose something, anything, on some nonconsenting other doesn't amount to
doing something by force. As I've said, I was taught to always say, May
I? first. There was no mention of anything like that at GCDS. Just your
Holy Duty.

 I don't think there's anything bad about it.

I'd intuited that, yes. Again, a shame, in my view.

 But it does refer to sex and religion.

Well, at least we're on the same page there.


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One _Final_ Comment (Seriously)

2010-06-26 Thread Lefty ( )
I'm actually pretty bored by the completely futile rehashing of the same
ground on this matter, over and over, to no resolution. Clearly, RMS will
never feel anything other than proud about his ridicule of religion and
women. Clearly, Patryk and like-minded others, will never change their minds
about the humor of this. Further discussion really _is_ pointless.

At GUADEC 2008, in Istanbul, I got into a conversation with Behdad about my
impressions of the conference and the city. He liked what I said, and asked
me to repeat it, on stage, at the closing of the conference.

I spoke about how, in my various travels, I'd never made it to Istanbul
before, and how thoroughly different it was from anyplace I'd been
previously. I talked about how terrific our hosts had been. Mostly, I talked
about how the GNOME community seemed to be a sort of little United
Nations, bringing people from vastly different cultures, with very
different outlooks, together in love of some common goals. I talked about
what a wonderful and amazing thing I thought that was.

I would not have been able, in any honesty, to make the same statements last
year. I could not, I think, make them this year.

The community I see today is not the community I saw then. If anything, the
situation for women (and minorities in general) seems to have worsened;
there's more discord over silly issues, more hatred, more intransigence,
less willingness to live-and-let-live, and vastly greater polarization.
There's sprung up a whole contingent of
apparently-otherwise-non-participating monomaniacal free software
advocates harassing and defaming others over differences of opinion on
_software_.

I cannot express just how much that saddens me. However, communities get
what they ask for. This is what we've asked for, people.

== 30 ==



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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-26 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/26/10 5:45 PM, Stormy Peters sto...@gnome.org wrote:

 On Sat, Jun 26, 2010 at 6:42 PM, Stone Mirror le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 Again, very well said, and I couldn't agree more. Thank you, Alan.
 
 It honestly baffles me that some people seem to have such difficulty grasping
 what seems so transparently obvious to me.
 
 *Stop* making it personal. Stop thanking individuals. Stop insulting
 others' intelligence.
 
 (Saying you agree is one thing. Thanking them like they did you a
 favor is another.)

Stormy, at this point, I frankly haven't got the slightest idea what you're
talking about. I didn't make _anything_ personal, other than my thanks to
Alan. Please stop.




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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 2:21 AM, Patryk Zawadzki pat...@pld-linux.org wrote:
 
 It would be better if GNOME defined a precise set of rules (ie. don't
 mention religion). As for the hazy areas, common sense is a better
 judge than a set of written rules. If someone does something grossly
 inappropriate just don't invite them to further events.

The difficulty with precise sets of rules, is that anything that someone
didn't manage to explicitly think up in advance is fair game as long as it
doesn't _precisely_ run afoul of one of those rules.

And when someone _does_ manage to find something which actually offends
everyone in the audience, but which wasn't envisioned beforehand, there's no
basis for complaint at all: it's not against the rules.


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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 1:57 PM, Brian Cameron brian.came...@oracle.com wrote:
 
 {a completely sensible response}

Thanks, Brian.



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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 3:06 PM, Sergey Panov si...@sipan.org wrote:
 
 Exactly! For instance,
 I am offended almost every time Lefty or Philip
Van Hoof say something ...
 almost anything nowdays. 

-

Perhaps you should find some other mailing list to read if you're finding
this one that distressing. It's interesting that you'd drag a third party,
who's had nothing to say on this, into the discussion.

Dave Neary recently gave me a good definition of trolling: making
inflammatory remarks without actually adding anything to the discussion.
Thought I'd just toss that out there.


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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 8:30 AM, Patryk Zawadzki pat...@pld-linux.org wrote:
 
 I bet
 at least one person in the audience is offended when they see the
 presenter using a Mac. Or sporting a Windows t-shirt. Or using an
 iPod. Or mentioning that Apple did something better than GNOME.
 Security, seize and escort the speaker out of the building. :)

By the way: I would certainly recommend that anyone who's offended by a
presenter using a Mac, wearing a Windows t-shirt, or both at the same time,
to take their concerns directly and immediately to the Board of Directors.

I would suggest that the Board of Directors tell them to Get a grip.

Is it _that_ difficult to distinguish between the sort of offense that
someone like Celeste Lyn Paul, a KDE board member, expressed when she wrote
( http://identi.ca/notice/6304540)...

Do men really think RMSs virgin joke at #gcds was not sexist? Very
disappointed in FLOSS comm chatter about this.

...on the one hand, and the offense that someone who feels a speaker is
not being pure enough, or something, by using a non-free-software-
movement-approved piece of hardware, or wearing a t-shirt bearing the logo
of a non-free-software-movement-approved company, on the other? Do you see
no distinction between the two, Patryk?

(I am, admittedly, making the assumption that the reason your at least one
person is taking offense is because the free software movement has a deep
dislike, at the very least, for both Apple and Microsoft. Correct me if
they're taking offense on color choices, style/industrial design or some
other score.)

As I recall, there was no shortage at all of MacBooks in the _audience_ at
GCDS, and that's been pretty typical. There were plenty at FOSDEM as well.

Do you think someone would be reasonable for your at least one person to
take offense at the members of the community who happen to like Macs? What
do you think he-or-she should do about this?


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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 3:39 PM, David Schlesinger le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 
 ( http://identi.ca/notice/6304540)...
 
 Do men really think RMSs virgin joke at #gcds was not sexist? Very
 disappointed in FLOSS comm chatter about this.

By the way: Celeste wrote this while sitting in the auditorium at GCDS,
listening to Stallman express his notion of what constitutes gentle humor.



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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 3:50 PM, Brian Cameron brian.came...@oracle.com wrote:
 
 If it isn't clear already, the Speaker Guidelines are not intended to be
 used in frivolous ways.

It's certainly seems clear enough to me. It appeared, though, to be unclear
to Patryk.

 If people think that this needs to be spelled
 out more clearly in the guidelines, then please propose improved text.

Actually, I'd suggest thinking some more first.

 I can't imagine that anybody would take a complaint about someone giving
 a talk and using a MacBook seriously, unless the situation were somehow
 extraordinary (e.g. if a speaker had a GNU/Linux Killer sticker on
 their MacBook, that might warrant some concern and discussion).

I agree, and I can't really imagine such a situation, either, especially
having seen how many MacBooks there actually are at GCDS and FOSDEM.

However, Patryk says he knows one, if not more, people who are simply
offended, apparently, by the mere _presence_ of MacBooks (and/or Microsoft
t-shirts). I expect they must have bleeding ulcers by this point, so the
issue has at least the potential of containing its own resolution, but...

 There is no need to discuss Apple or Microsoft or any other specific
 company.  If you have concerns about how the guidelines might be applied
 about topics concerning free source vs. open source vs. proprietary
 technologies, then let's please talk about this without naming specific
 companies.

I don't personally think we need to talk about it at all, any more than we
needed to talk about it with regard to the Planet. If it wasn't clear, I
believe that equating an offense at MacBooks with the offense that
Celeste describes is...interesting, to say the least. I might even say that
I found _that_ rather offensive if doing so weren't so self-referential.


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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 4:15 PM, David Schlesinger le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 On 6/25/10 3:50 PM, Brian Cameron brian.came...@oracle.com wrote:
 
 I can't imagine that anybody would take a complaint about someone giving
 a talk and using a MacBook seriously, unless the situation were somehow
 extraordinary (e.g. if a speaker had a GNU/Linux Killer sticker on
 their MacBook, that might warrant some concern and discussion).
 
 I agree...

I need to clarify: we are in agreement in both apparently finding a
situation such as you and Patryk describe improbable.

A sticker such as you describe would personally bother me no more than a
Microsoft t-shirt would. People are entitled to their opinions on such
matters, and I don't care to restrain their expression of those opinions,
personally. Free speech and all that.

I'd be much more concerned about a Looking for EMCS virgins! sticker,
myself.



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Re: GNOME Speaker Guidelines

2010-06-25 Thread Lefty ( )
On 6/25/10 4:25 PM, Joanmarie Diggs joanmarie.di...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree with this:
 
 I also don't think the ending is appropriate: These guidelines do not
 constitute censorship since you have many other forums and
 opportunities to say whatever you wish.

I pretty much agree with _you_. However, experience has shown that the very
first thing some people who want to avoid staying within guidelines will do
is cry censorship.

It's incorrect, it's silly, it's inane, and for a variety of reasons, the
chief of which are cited in that section: you can go _someplace else_ and
say whatever you want, if you feel you must, and the guidelines won't allow
it. (I shudder, somewhat, to think what that might amount to, looking at the
guidelines again. The Beloved Prophet, GNUhammed? I _hope_ not.)

I'd be happy to see it moved to an annotated version or comments or
something, but I fear that without it, we'll be continually explaining to
people that freedom of the press doesn't actually mean that _you're_ free
to use _my_ press as you see fit.



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Re: Question for Bastian Nocera

2010-06-18 Thread Lefty ()
(By the same token, if this particular bit of self-congratulatory  
revisionism is suddenly fair game, I'd obviously be interested in  
knowing that as well.)


--
Sent from my iPod
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FW: Candidacy: Seif Lotfy

2010-06-01 Thread Lefty ( )
Sorry, reply rather than reply all...

-- Forwarded Message
 From: David Schlesinger le...@shugendo.org
 Date: Tue, 01 Jun 2010 08:39:59 -0700
 To: Iain i...@gnome.org
 Conversation: Candidacy: Seif Lotfy
 Subject: Re: Candidacy: Seif Lotfy
 
 On 6/1/10 7:38 AM, Iain i...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 It seems to me that your underlying belief is that there is too much
 (large) corporate influence in GNOME. Would you say that you might
 have some conflict of interest here given that your project
 (Zeitgeist) was ignored/shunned by the GNOME Shell developers?
 
 Iain, this seems unreasonable to me. Is anyone who decides to run for the
 board who's ever had a disagreement with some group of GNOME developers or
 other going to be subject to the suggestion that they have a conflict of
 interest?
 
 If that's the case, I doubt we can really find a single qualified candidate.
 
 Everyone's got their interests and views, and (hopefully) the candidates are
 candid about what their views are. I think these suggestions of conflicts of
 interest are, honestly, a little out of line.
 

-- End of Forwarded Message


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/4/10 10:32 PM, Liam R E Quin l...@holoweb.net wrote:
 
 Well, given this wide coverage, which I've somehow completely missed, there
 shouldn't be much challenge to your producing an actual citation
 
 I was a little looser than I should have been in my wording.

Oh, indeed?

 For media
 coverage of warrentless wiretapping (which includes monitoring of
 internet usage) see e.g. [1] and [2].

This has nothing to do with Facebook, particularly. I'm not happy with these
particular laws, but the answer is to try to get the laws changed, not
huddle in one's closet for fear of Facebook, nor to avoid anything that runs
on a server.

 In addition, a subpoena from the
 FBI is different from a search warrant - it does not need to be signed
 by a judge[2]; supposedly reasonable suspicion is required, but no
 supporting evidence seems to be required, merely a claim. Similarly,
 financial transactions (I think in the US over $1,000) are reported
 automatically to the NSA.

I believe that this is all pretty standard stuff in the US, for better or
worse, and again doesn't apply especially to Facebook in any way. If this is
your reason for staying off Facebook, you shouldn't be on the Internet at
all. (And you might want to consider building a Faraday cage around your
house to ensure that no one from the NSA can capture your keystrokes.)

The gateway on financial transactions is $10,000, the same threshold at
which you have to declare the currency you're carrying going through US
Customs. To the best of my knowledge, every country, including EU members,
Japan, etc., institutes such a threshold to curtail money-laundering
activities. Again, nothing to do with Facebook.

If this sort of thing worries you, then perhaps staying off the internet
entirely would be the best thing.

 Facebook does have a stated 90-day data retention policy for IP logs,
 and I found a policy document relating to subpoenas [3] although it's
 not clear to me that it's authentic.

If it's not on Facebook's site, I don't see that it's authenticity can be
established, and I wouldn't rely on it.

That said, this document would seem to support what I've been saying, rather
than the claims that you and Mr. Stallman have been making: a warrant or
subpoena or the equivalent is indeed required to get user information out of
Facebook according to this document. I'm not sure what you intended by
referring to this, but it surely doesn't support the claims made here.

 There are (I discovered today) rumours that facebook was started by
 the CIA, because of indirect links from the original venture capital
 people [4], but that was not on my mind when I wrote (or meant to write)
 that information is indeed handed over without warrants.

And here we are, back to where we started. Facebook is a front for the
CIA. The support for this claim, for those who care to read the story, is
excruciatingly sketchy.

By the sort of reasoning found in the articles cited (someone involved with
the funding of Facebook once worked with someone who once worked for the
CIA's venture capital arm), I suppose we could draw the conclusion that the
FSF is a CIA front as well, and probably shares all your information with
them.

Specifically: 1) IBM has historically had close ties to the CIA, the NSA and
governmental agencies of the less-attractive sort, going back to pre-World
War 2 days, when they sold punch cards tabulators to the German authorities
which went on to see significant use in record-keeping at Dachau and other
concentration camps. 2) IBM is a top-line corporate patron of the FSF, and
provides significant funding to that organization.

QED.

If you'd care to go this route, perhaps we should encourage GNOME to avoid
using the Internet entirely since the NSA reads everything you write.
Frankly, this stuff strikes me as being on the same level as the US
government blew up the World Trade Center so they could _blame_ it on
AL-Qaeda.

I note, in passing, that the FSF has no apparent privacy policy at all,
outside of a very sketchy one applied solely to donations.

 Facebook's privacy statement is specific that they do not require a
 warrant [5]:
 
 We may disclose information pursuant to subpoenas, court orders, or
 other requests (including criminal and civil matters) if we have a good
 faith belief that the response is required by law [...] We may also
 share information when we have a good faith belief it is necessary to
 prevent fraud or other illegal activity, to prevent imminent bodily
 harm, or to protect ourselves and you from people violating our
 Statement of Rights and Responsibilities. This may include sharing
 information with other companies, lawyers, courts or other government
 entities

The initial clause indeed says that they require a warrant or the
equivalent.

The second clause refers, in my reading, to cases in which a Facebook user
attempted to use Facebook to defraud other users, at which point I'd think
Facebook would‹quite legitimately‹alert the 

Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/5/10 8:18 AM, Ciaran O'Riordan cia...@member.fsf.org wrote:

 Lefty (石鏡 ) le...@shugendo.org writes:

 the answer is [] not [] :avoid anything that runs on a server.



 No one's suggested that.

Let's not be in a rush to invite users to use servers -- even our own
-- instead of their own computers.  That is the _wrong direction to go_.
(Emphasis added.)

Some services are SaaS and some are not.  The ones that aren't, don't pose
this problem, and it is ok to implement them using servers.  But even
in that case, _it's better to avoid the server_ if possible. (Emphasis
added.)

 This desktop good/web bad thinking is terribly broad-brushed.



Nobody's suggested that either.

See the above quotes. Also:

If everything gets done inside or through your browser, it would make
toolkits such as GTK and desktop environments such as GNOME obsolete,
except as platforms for a browser.

It is a bad idea to replace a program you can explicitly install on
your own machine -- and which you can therefore also decide not to
install -- with a program that either gets installed implicitly or
remains on a server outside your control.

For extra credit:

...any time we consider developing software to work with a certain web
site, we should ask ourselves whether we want to single out that web site
for the special endorsement and promotion that is _implicit in releasing
such software_. (Emphasis added)



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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/5/10 8:44 AM, David Schlesinger le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 
 If everything gets done inside or through your browser, it would make
 toolkits such as GTK and desktop environments such as GNOME obsolete,
 except as platforms for a browser.

Just so we're completely clear here, I'd suggest that

If everything gets done inside or through EMACS, it would make toolkits
such as GTK and desktop environments such as GNOME obsolete, except as
platforms for EMACS.

is neither less true, nor less unreasonable, than the statement I've quoted.

I'd gently point out that the EMACS project has been generally attempting to
do pretty much precisely this for going on four decades now. That doesn't
provide any more support for the position that using EMACS is detrimental to
GNOME than the original statement does for the position that using a browser
is detrimental to GNOME.


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/5/10 9:19 AM, Jonathon Jongsma jonat...@quotidian.org wrote:

 With all of the recent comments about how horrible foundation-list has
become,
 and how people are unsubscribing because of endless and
pointless
 argumentation, you *still* can't get yourself to refrain from
adding more and
 more heat to the thread???  Can you please stop now?
Please?

Jonathon, if you find discussion of points that have been raised so
disturbing--and that's all I'm doing here--I'm not sure what to tell you.

Perhaps it would have been better if someone from the Board had responded to
the initial message from Mr. Stallman with regard to Facebook, saying

1) Attempting to rework or redefine GNOME 3 plans at this point, now that
they're pretty well set, is not reasonable on this list, especially since
there were no such criticisms raised while the process of defining GNOME 3
was actually going on.

2) Spreading what amounts to unfounded rumors regarding third-parties, even
if they happen to produce proprietary software, is not acceptable on this
list.

Much of the subsequent discussion could have been completely avoided. I
certainly wouldn't have had anything to say at that point.

For my part, I don't think that demanding that discussion be stopped,
especially when directed to a single person out of many on the thread, is
particularly productive. Or respectful, for that matter, but I've come to
understand that respect is a pretty elastic commodity around here.


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/5/10 9:55 AM, Stormy Peters stormy.pet...@gmail.com wrote:
 On Fri, Mar 5, 2010 at 10:49 AM, Lefty (石鏡 ) le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 
 Perhaps it would have been better if someone from the Board had responded to
 the initial message from Mr. Stallman with regard to Facebook, saying
 
 1) Attempting to rework or redefine GNOME 3 plans at this point, now that
 they're pretty well set, is not reasonable on this list, especially since
 there were no such criticisms raised while the process of defining GNOME 3
 was actually going on.
 
 2) Spreading what amounts to unfounded rumors regarding third-parties, even
 if they happen to produce proprietary software, is not acceptable on this
 list.
 
 Why didn't you just say that at the beginning of this thread?

Because I shouldn't have to. More to the point, why didn't _you_?


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-05 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/5/10 10:18 AM, Miguel de Icaza mig...@novell.com wrote:
 
 I could help Richard and we could work together, but he has decided
 that I am a traitor of the movement.

Thanks for posting this, Miguel. It would seem to confirm that I'm not
incorrect in finding this baffling.

As someone who's reportedly been publicly described (at the last Software
Freedom Day in Boston) by Mr. Stallman as an enemy of the free software
movement, I can at least feel as though I'm in good company here.

If I'm an enemy of anything, it's closed-ness, and insularity, and
rumor-mongering, and restraint of free expression. However, we seem to
prefer all of those here.

That being the case, it's not my intent to belabor this list further, only
because doing so is clearly a waste of time and electrons. This will
doubtless come as a vast relief to the multitudes who are subject to
motion-sickness due to boat-rocking, and gratify the numerous folks who have
asked me in private email whether I can't simply ignore these sorts of
things, like everyone else does.

So, have fun and make GNOME rock, whether by removing support for anything
particularly having to do with Facebook and the like, warning users if they
try to use such harmful sites, and by providing better command-line
integration with the GUI; or by simply ignoring such suggestions.

I'll attempt to restrain my enthusiasm from this point on; if the former set
of initiatives represent the directions we're taking, it shouldn't be very
difficult.

Me, I'm going back to getting storytlr working the way I want it to. It's a
heavily server- and web-based project, tying into many social media sites,
including Facebook, Flickr, YouTube and Twitter, and very arguably promotes
the use of such sites. Clearly not of any interest here.


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-04 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/4/10 5:46 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:
 
 If everything gets done inside or through your browser, it would make
 toolkits such as GTK and desktop environments such as GNOME obsolete,
 except as platforms for a browser.

And if everything gets done on your desktop, it would make browsers and the
web obsolete. Except it wouldn't. I don't believe your statement is any more
accurate than mine, actually.

 Web technology based application is a very broad term.  It can
 include applications that are installed into a browser (they can be
 nonfree; see http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/javascript-trap.html), and
 it can include servers.  But if the server substitutes for a program
 you could run on your own machine, that makes it Software as a
 Service, which is equivalent to proprietary software.

So, an open source program running on a server‹if it substitutes for a
program you could run on your own machine‹is (by virtue of running on a
server, I suppose) Software as a Service and hence, proprietary?

I'm not following that reasoning. Surely the open-ness or closed-ness of an
application depends on the terms under which it's made available, not where
it runs.
 
 It is a bad idea to replace a program you can explicitly install on
 your own machine -- and which you can therefore also decide not to
 install -- with a program that either gets installed implicitly or
 remains on a server outside your control.  Perhaps highlighting that
 will show people why they should continue to install and run local
 applications, which would then use GNOME.

This is, again, unfortunately short-sighted and not really in touch with the
way people use computers. There are plenty of good reasons to have an
application on the web and there are plenty of good ones to have an
application on the desktop, but it depends on the application. This desktop
good/web bad thinking is terribly broad-brushed.

If one's application lives on a web site, one can just as readily decide to
visit or not to visit that web site. In contrast with a local app, a
web-based app generally makes no changes to your system, and doesn't require
the addition or deletion of anything.

But, just so I'm sure I'm clear here, Mr. Stallman, it's my understanding
that you don't even actually _use_ the web, in any realistic sense, relying
instead on some congerie of email and a back-end rendering server to view
static images of individual web pages.

Would it be correct to imagine that you haven't used anything like a dynamic
web page, or a Web 2.0-style AJAX or Ruby application?

If that is indeed the case, as I've been led to understand, it's unclear to
me why one might take cues on how GNOME should or shouldn't interact from
the web from someone with no actual, practical experience there, any more
than I'd expect guidance on how to write an iPhone application from someone
who's never so much as picked up an iPhone.


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-04 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/4/10 7:22 AM, Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier j...@zonker.net wrote:
 
 Somewhere in there should be a self-sustaining model to raise money
 for the hosting and GNOME, and provide Free as in Freedom services for
 users in the bargain...

It's a nice idea, but I don't see any self-sustaining model that's
appreciably different than buy a cloud server from Amazon, hire someone(s)
to administer and support it on behalf of a million different users with a
million different applications, and then charge those users a premium over
what they'd pay Amazon individually to make up the administration and
support costs and, ideally, leave a little money left over for GNOME.

I'm not sure that's realistic; I am, however, pretty well-convinced that
there's little likelihood of saving anyone any money there. For what it's
worth, I pay under $200 a year for what amounts to unlimited bandwidth
hosting for multiple domains on a virtual server with up to 20GB of space.
(A co-located, dedicated server will typically run anywhere from $200 to
$1000 a month, and up, exclusive of administrative costs, etc.)

I'm likewise not sure that simply having an interested group get together
and purchase their _own_ virtual server for their own uses is any more or
less free than another alternative...


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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-04 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/4/10 9:07 AM, Gian Mario Tagliaretti gia...@gnome.org wrote:
 On Thu, Mar 4, 2010 at 4:11 PM, Lefty (石鏡 ) le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 
 But, just so I'm sure I'm clear here, Mr. Stallman, it's my understanding
 that you don't even actually _use_ the web, in any realistic sense, relying
 instead on some congerie of email and a back-end rendering server to view
 static images of individual web pages.
 
 can you stop being an ass just for the sake of being an ass?

Okay, just for the record, that would be an unmotivated public personal
attack here. In case anyone's keeping score. Please note that I haven't
called anyone names, just requested a clarification of what I understand to
be the facts here.

My understanding is that Mr. Stallman doesn't use a web browser, instead
mailing individual URLs to a server, which renders a static page image and
mails that back.

I would take the position that this sort of interaction with the web is
unrepresentative of the way that people in general, even just GNOME people
in general, actually use it (is this surprising?), and that someone whose
sole interaction with the web is through this sort of mediation might well
not get what it's actually about.

Is this actually a controversial suggestion? I'm surprised, frankly. If you
were to give me advice on how to conduct a telephone conversation, when
you'd personally never used anything other than a telegraph and Morse code,
semaphore flags, or smoke signals, I'd probably feel much the same way.

 You can disagree with what RMS says of course, is the attitude that
 makes people tired, in the sentence here above you are not criticizing
 a point of you that you might not like, you are just being a smart ass
 thinking wow I'm fighting Mr. Stallman what a hero.

I'd suggest that you attempt to avoid making assumptions about my
attitude, something which email communicates very poorly. (For your part,
you might even be capable of disagreeing with me without recourse to
pointless insults, but this particular message sadly provides no evidence
one way or the other.)

For the record, my attitude is largely one of dismay and disbelief. I'll
try to remember to point out these things, to avoid misunderstandings.

So no, I'm expressing a serious concern over a conversation which has
touched on the general subjects of social media and web-based services
in which we've seen claims that the CIA controls Facebook and probably
shares all its users' information with them, just for starts, as well as the
notion that software running on a web server is somehow inherently less
free than software running on a desktop. I'm frankly having difficulty
making sense of that, which is what led to my question.

 Stop this non-sense on this list please?

In all fairness, I didn't start the nonsense, I'm simply attempting to make
some sense of it.

It is, after all, a discussion list. If people don't want things actually to
be discussed here―and let me again point out that, of the two of, one is
actually discussing things, and one is simply indulging in personal attacks
and name-calling; I'll let you work out who's who―they probably shouldn't
post them in the first place.



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Re: Reboot: Strategic goals for GNOME

2010-03-04 Thread Lefty ( )
On 3/4/10 6:08 PM, Liam R E Quin l...@holoweb.net wrote:
 On Thu, 2010-03-04 at 17:45 -0800, Lefty (石鏡 ) wrote:
 
 In any case, I'm under the impression that a search warrant or similar order
 is generally required in the US to get information regardless of whether
 it's from a hosted service or from your personal computer; certainly the
 police can't simply call up Facebook and ask for information on random
 people and expect to get it.

 They can and they do, as has been widely covered by the media.

Well, given this wide coverage, which I've somehow completely missed, there
shouldn't be much challenge to your producing an actual citation to support
the existence of this kind of activity (specifically Facebook handing over
information on users to law enforcement without a subpoena or a warrant).

I only ask because it seems in complete contradiction to their stated
privacy policy.

 The vast majority of people who use computers--and I'm not referring to
 people who download source and build their own versions of things--are quite
 happy to, for example, have Wordpress or Livejournal maintain their blogs
 for them, and there's absolutely no reason for them to attempt to host it
 themselves.
 
 They are also happy to use Microsoft Word, and other proprietary
 software. But that does not mean we should abandon GNOME.
 Instead, we need to make it easier for people to follow the more
 open path.

Nobody's suggested that anyone abandon GNOME.

In the case of Microsoft Word, there are credible and workable open source
alternatives readily available. In the case of a Wordpress blog that one
doesn't have to host and administer on one's own (along with the overhead of
maintaining a domain registration, a web server, security issues, etc.), or
a Livejournal, or a Flickr site, or Facebook, there's no alternative that we
can offer, other than Don't do that!, it would seem. Correct me if you
feel I'm mistaken here.

I don't see Don't do that! Do whatever you can manage from your personal
computer as best you can as being a terribly compelling message, myself.
Rather than making it easier for people for follow the more open path, you
encourage them to find other means to do the things they _want_ to do. 


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Re: GNOME: lack of strategic roadmap

2010-02-28 Thread Lefty ( )
Okay, I had hoped this might simply die out, but instead, it's becoming
increasingly absurd as well as increasingly personal in tone. First, Philip
didn't ask anyone to stop saying things, he expressed some dismay at what
was being said, and not without reason.

Beyond the suggestion‹which Philip has noted‹that GNOME programmers were
generally in need of ethical guidance from the FSF on matters involving
freedom, this thread included the suggestion that GNOME behavior should be
predicated on unfounded and unsupported rumor (i.e. that Facebook is
probably sharing all of your information with the CIA).

I'm surprised that a suggestion that a specific site be singled out by GNOME
for extra-special treatment, including warning messages, based on what
amounts to unsourced gossip, is being treated with even a moment's serious
consideration.

This Facebook rumor seems to be not much different from last year's equally
unsupported claim that Apple maintained a secret back-door in OS X, for
which an apology was extracted from the FSF, presumably on the instigation
of Apple's Legal department‹and I note, without much amusement, that the
sole citation offered in support of this latest claim regarding Facebook
leads to a non-existent web page.

I do not believe that the GNOME Foundation should sign up to be in a
position to have to apologize to Facebook, nor do I think it should be an
official position of the GNOME Foundation that using Facebook is a harmful
practice.

If the GNOME community is hoping for better engagement with Facebook and the
like, want to encourage their meaningful participation in our efforts, and
hope to cultivate some appreciation on their part of community concerns,
surely claiming that they're in the business of routinely breaking Federal
law‹without compelling supporting evidence‹isn't the way to be going about
it.

For my part, I don't believe that spreading defamatory gossip in the name of
freedom is especially ethical. Perhaps I've misunderstood Mr. Stallman's
intention in making such an apparently irresponsible claim here.


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Re: GNOME: lack of strategic roadmap

2010-02-22 Thread Lefty ( )
On 2/22/10 11:27 AM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 * It seems we have lost the mobile battle. Can we do something about it
 or simply retreat?. I like the idea of creating more components and some
 of this components can be added to the GNOME mobile platform.
 
 Have we lost the mobile battle?

We seem to have forfeited a sizeable chunk of it to date, unfortunately.

 It certainly appears that GTK+ has lost
 the mobile battle, but all of the hard work that GNOME hackers have put
 into the middleware platform and components like Gstreamer, Dbus,
 Telepathy and Pulseaudio are now cornerstone parts of both the free
 desktop and the mobile platform.

Well, we've certainly managed to place GNOME at an enormous disadvantage
with respect to an alternative, quasi-open-source platform, like Android,
largely through a couple of years' worth of inattention and, more
importantly, an ongoing failure to engage with the commercial mobile
ecosystem in any positive and meaningful way. Hopefully, some efforts might
be made to correct that in the coming year; whether or not that actually
happens, or will be effective if it does, is very much up in the air in my
mind.

The viewpoint held in some quarters which is directly hostile to such
engagement has been a negative factor for us in the past and continues to be
one. Google, for all that its Android efforts have been competitive to
GNOME's interests in the mobile space, has done a much better job here.


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Re: GNOME: lack of strategic roadmap

2010-02-22 Thread Lefty ( )
I hesitate to reopen this discussion, frankly. Look at the archives for
December and January.


On 2/22/10 1:12 PM, Alberto Ruiz ar...@gnome.org wrote:

 2010/2/22 Lefty (石鏡 ) le...@shugendo.org:
 Well, we've certainly managed to place GNOME at an enormous disadvantage
 with respect to an alternative, quasi-open-source platform, like Android,
 largely through a couple of years' worth of inattention and, more
 importantly, an ongoing failure to engage with the commercial mobile
 ecosystem in any positive and meaningful way. Hopefully, some efforts might
 be made to correct that in the coming year; whether or not that actually
 happens, or will be effective if it does, is very much up in the air in my
 mind.
 
 Do you have any examples of the GNOME community being negative or
 hostile towards the commercial mobile ecosystem?
 
 The viewpoint held in some quarters which is directly hostile to such
 engagement has been a negative factor for us in the past and continues to be
 one. Google, for all that its Android efforts have been competitive to
 GNOME's interests in the mobile space, has done a much better job here.
 
 
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Re: Survey: GUADEC and Akadamy co-location in 2011

2010-02-01 Thread Lefty ( )
On 2/1/10 8:11 AM, Vincent Untz vu...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 ...I'll just publish what I
 have and the raw results, so people could take a look and produce more
 interesting stats.

Sounds like the open source way. =)



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Re: GNU hackers meeting GUADEC 2011 colocation?

2010-01-26 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/26/10 4:56 PM, Andrew Cowie and...@operationaldynamics.com wrote:

 On Tue, 2010-01-26 at 21:43 +0100, Andy Wingo wrote:

 (/me thinks of Vilanova)
 
 Which was a bloody awesome GUADEC, in no small measure because of the
 Ice Cream shop, and fluendo's Beach Party.

They're _all_ awesome, but yes. That.

 Oh? Internet access. Did we need that?

The first day or so at Birmingham, we all got onto the Internet using one
attendee's Nokia S60 phone, which he turned into a WiFi access point

I'm not sure which is more frightening: that we did it, or that we _could_.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-18 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/18/10 2:32 PM, Dominic Lachowicz domlachow...@gmail.com wrote:

 Can someone please fix that?



Perhaps it would be sufficient to link to the FSF's list of
GPL-compatible
licenses and recommended documentation licenses? That
would clear up any
possible confusion.


I gathered from what J5 said that this was a determination which was the
responsibility of the release team. It's unclear to me, at least, that
there's anything which needs fixing here. Nor am I aware of any particular
confusion on anyone's part which needs to be cleared up.

Are we aware of anyone's actually being confused by this...?


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-17 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/17/10 6:52 AM, Ciaran O'Riordan cia...@member.fsf.org wrote:

 GNOME has a policy (written or not) that prohibits importing non-free
software
 into its repositories.

I'm not personally aware of a written policy to this effect. If there's an
unwritten policy, I'd encourage the Board to write it down in clear and
explicit terms and get it agreed to by the membership, since there's not
necessarily any actual common understanding of what such a policy says or
means, if that's the case.

 Open
source doesn't imply any reason or policy for rejecting
 proprietary
software...

I'm afraid I really have to disagree here: open source software is
software which is made available under a license which satisfies the Open
Source Definition which can be found at

http://www.opensource.org/docs/definition.php

Clause 1 of that definition states, in part, that The license shall not
restrict any party from selling or giving away the software as a component
of an aggregate software distribution containing programs from several
different sources. The license shall not require a royalty or other fee for
such sale.

Clause 2 states that The program must include source code, and must allow
distribution in source code as well as compiled form.

Clause 3 states, in part, that The license must allow modifications and
derived works, and must allow them to be distributed under the same terms as
the license of the original software.

I could go on, but I think this demonstrates that there's no actual basis
for your claim, Ciaran, unless you're using the term proprietary in some
unusual sense. If you can give me a concrete example of software which is
proprietary, in the usual sense of the term, while still being available
under a valid open source license, I'd be very interested in hearing about
it.

 ...GNOME is
a project that doesn't develop non-free software...

In your preferred terminology. I'd say is doesn't develop non-open-source
software in mine. We'd both be correct. I would never suggest that your
view was invalid, should be unrepresented, or that you weren't entirely
entitled to hold it. I'm only asking the same.

As I've said--and I think there's general agreement--there's no consensus on
which term is correct among the membership. Plenty of GNOME members use
the term open source, myself included. Why should their choice of
terminology be denigrated in a statement that purports to represent them as
well as you?

I'm a member, you're a member, Philip's a member, and RMS is a member. We
have differing views here, and the statement should treat all parties
fairly.

I'm not asking that the term free software not be used, in spite of _my_
not using it, nor do I believe is Philip. I'm simply asking that, since the
terminology _is_ debatable--and there has been no shortage of debates about
it, none of them terribly productive, and certainly none of them decisive--a
statement which represents us all not settle the matter by fiat.

 A quick comment on the survey.  I think the main flaw is that it tests
 for
word-for-word agreement with one person (RMS).

A somewhat less-quick response: I had intended the survey to test the
positions of the free software movement as expressed by the FSF on the one
hand, versus the actual attitudes of the community at large on the other. I
have to believe that RMS' statements on proprietary software can be taken as
being representative of, and authoritative with respect to, that
organization.

If that's not the case, I'd appreciate some concrete details of where I've
missed the actual views of the FSF, and how they differ from what I
understand them to be.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-17 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/17/10 12:48 PM, Shaun McCance sha...@gnome.org wrote:

 To the best of my knowledge, that policy has never been written down.
 That is because there is and always has been a very, very, very clear
 and common understanding that this is the policy. It takes almost
 willful ignorance of our history, culture and policy to suggest
 otherwise.

 Perhaps less official because it's just on the wiki, but:
 
 http://live.gnome.org/ProjectPrerequisites
 
   The project must be free/open source software.

Ah. That's fine. Free/open source software. I have no issue with this, and
it would, in fact, seem to support what I've been saying.

 But yes, Luis, I wholly agree with you.  I can't imagine why
 anybody would ever think it's OK to host non-free software
 on gnome.org.

Did anyone say that they thought it was OK to host non-free software on
gnome.org? I'm pretty sure I never suggested anything like that. Please let
me know where I might have inadvertently created such an impression, if
indeed I did.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-17 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/17/10 12:37 PM, Luis Villa l...@tieguy.org wrote:
 
 To the best of my knowledge, that policy has never been written down.
 That is because there is and always has been a very, very, very clear
 and common understanding that this is the policy. It takes almost
 willful ignorance of our history, culture and policy to suggest
 otherwise.

I don't believe that I actually _did_ suggest otherwise, Luis. If I somehow
created an impression that I believe that non-free/non-open source
software would be acceptable as a GNOME project, that was certainly not my
intention. Can you point out where I might have done so, if you feel that I
did?

As the page that Shaun points out agrees--and thank you for that reference,
Shaun--a component must be free/open source software to be eligible.

If we're willing to use the term open source in our policy, why should
there any controversy about using it in a statement which describes what we
are? I'd certainly have referenced that page earlier, had I been aware of
it.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-17 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/17/10 5:20 PM, Luis Villa l...@tieguy.org wrote:
 
 The FSF is welcome to give their advice; and should be treated with
 respect when they do give it, the same as anyone else. This is
 particularly true in this area, where we know we are walking a
 difficult line between freedom and conciliation with proprietary
 software, and we have a lot of influences pushing us in the direction
 of proprietary software and not all that many pushing us in the other
 direction.

If anyone feels that I've been less than respectful in this particular
discussion, please let me know; I'll certainly apologize if that seems to be
the case. Again, that hasn't been my intention.

I don't disagree with what you say, Luis.

However, I don't see the term open source as pushing us in the direction
of proprietary software in any way: the Open Source Definition wouldn't
support that. It's a neutral term, in my view, and in the view of others.

We use the terms open and open source elsewhere, and it hasn't created
particular controversy, or visibly pushed us in the direction of
proprietary software, as far as I can tell. Why is it controversial here in
particular?


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-17 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/17/10 9:30 PM, Jonathon Jongsma jonat...@quotidian.org wrote:

As far as I an tell, there has been essentially no controversy
whatsoever about
any of this until you and Philip seemingly started
trying to drum one up.  What
exactly are you even trying to change?  Is
there an official GNOME position
statement that you object to?
Something on a gnome.org website somewhere?  What
exactly are we
actually talking about here?


I'm sorry, Jonathon, I thought that was clear. Stormy proposed the following
statement on behalf of GNOME in her message of this past Friday on this
thread:

 The GNOME Foundation believes in free software and promotes free software but
 that does not mean that GNOME is anti-proprietary software. We believe,
 promote, use and write free software.
 
 We are excited when companies and individuals use GNOME technologies because
 we believe it brings us closer to our mission and vision of a free desktop (or
 mobile interface) accessible to everyone. Sometimes those companies are
 proprietary software companies and while we hope that they move closer to free
 software in the future (and that we are helping them do so with the use of
 GNOME), we are delighted that they have chosen to use GNOME and will help them
 and their customers.

I've suggested that the first sentence should instead read something like
The GNOME Foundation believes in and promotes free/open source software...

Hope this clarifies things.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-16 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/16/10 1:10 PM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:
 
 See http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/open-source-misses-the-point.html
 for an explanation of the difference in philosophy between free
 software and open source.

I'm pretty sure most people on the list have read the essay and understand
your view. Any who might not have certainly should.
 
 GNOME is a GNU package, and was founded specifically to fight for
 users' freedom.  It is on the free software side.  However, people are
 welcome to contribute to GNOME regardless of their views on this or
 any subject.

You use one term exclusively, and see a distinction between the two; I use
another, and see a somewhat different distinction, perhaps; some, as Dave,
see them as synonymous, and might use either one. We're all members, and we
hold a variety of viewpoints.

Since there's evidently no settled view of the matter, and no likelihood of
there being one soon, it seems to me that a statement which represents the
Foundation (which is, as Stormy has pointed out, no more than its members)
should not affirm only one of the two viewpoints to the exclusion of the
other.



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Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
Thanks to Bruno and the rest of the Membership team. It pleases me for some
reason to be on the same list of new members as my friend, Jim Vasile.

On a different matter, I am currently conducting a brief ( 5 minute) survey
on attitudes and viewpoints on FLOSS and proprietary software and I invite
all to participate in it. We have on the order to 400 respondents so far,
but I¹d like to get as broad a level of coverage as possible.

The survey can be found at http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/F8DG25Q

A summary of the responses received so far can be found at
http://bit.ly/74WQBI

Thanks in advance for your participation. I¹ll be making a formal report of
the results in a few weeks.

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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/15/09 4:09 PM, Zeeshan Ali (Khattak) zee...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 On Tue, Dec 15, 2009 at 11:49 PM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 Hi,
 
 Lefty wrote:
 Given the proposition that proprietary software is illegitimate, and
 the statement above, do you believe that the GNOME Foundation and
 community should distance itself from companies which produce proprietary
 software?
 
 Specifically, should the Advisory Board be dissolved, and should the
 Foundation refuse further financial support from the companies that
 are currently on the Ad Board?
 
 I for one am interested in Richard's position on this. Mine is clear: I have
 no problem at all working with companies who want to improve GNOME or the
 GNOME platform, even if they develop proprietary software. And the money they
 give to GNOME gets used to improve GNOME, so as long as there are no strings
 attached, I don't care particularly why they give it.
 
 On the other hand, I feel under no obligation to promote their non-free
 software offerings, or guilt in encouraging free equivalents of their
 proprietary components  products.
 
   I fee like you took thoughts out of my mind but unlike me were able
 to express them very nicely. :)

I'm actually still hoping to get a response on this...



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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 5:38 AM, Xavier Bestel xavier.bes...@free.fr wrote:
 
 Giving one definition of a word, then asking if someone else's sentence
 containing that word is true is at best partial.

Xavier, without defining the term beforehand, I'd be open instead to
accusations that I wasn't being fair somehow by not defining what I meant
clearly.

 Feel free to disrespect me.

Well, if people are inclined to find fault beforehand, they'll usually
discover that they've found it at the end of things.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 8:34 AM, Stormy Peters stormy.pet...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 The GNOME Foundation believes in free software and promotes free software but
 that does not mean that GNOME is anti-proprietary software. We believe,
 promote, use and write free software.
 
 We are excited when companies and individuals use GNOME technologies because
 we believe it brings us closer to our mission and vision of a free desktop (or
 mobile interface) accessible to everyone. Sometimes those companies are
 proprietary software companies and while we hope that they move closer to free
 software in the future (and that we are helping them do so with the use of
 GNOME), we are delighted that they have chosen to use GNOME and will help them
 and their customers.
 
That certainly strikes me as a lot more sensible than an unqualified,
blanket statement that proprietary software is ³illegitimate², etc.

I very much do not want to see GNOME sending out, standing behind, or
otherwise subscribing to statements that would effectively create a group of
³second class citizens² within the community, or create a context where
people felt they somehow less valued (or valid) members of the community
based on their own use of proprietary software (and again, 2 out of 3
respondents to the survey used proprietary software on their own time.)

I likewise very much do not want to see an impression created the GNOME is
hostile to organizations that earn some portion of their revenues from the
sale or use of proprietary software, or that it views them as somehow
criminal or ³unethical² or whatever.

As Voltaire advised: ³Never let the best become the enemy of the good.²

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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 8:49 AM, Philip Van Hoof pvanh...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 I fully agree with this statement if you replace free software with open
 source.

I have some sympathy with this view. Open source is my preference as well
and (based on the survey data) seems to have broader uptake among the
respondents.

That said, I can personally live with free (in spite of it not being the
terminology I personally use) if that's the consensus among the members
here.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 9:45 AM, Philip Van Hoof pvanh...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 I think it's a great idea to (at least) use both.

I'd favor this as well. What it gains in possible awkwardness (which doesn't
bother me, I used to say free and open source software all the time) it
also gains in clarity, I think.

 Free software isn't a synonym for open source, and by only using 'free
 software' you aren't including all the OSI definitions which GNOME also
 endorses.

This is actually an excellent, and an important, point.

 What about the companies and people, like me, who don't feel attached to
 free software ideology and yet develop for and with GNOME technologies?

Also an important point.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 10:01 AM, David Schlesinger le...@shugendo.org wrote:
 
 Free software isn't a synonym for open source, and by only using 'free
 software' you aren't including all the OSI definitions which GNOME also
 endorses.
 
 This is actually an excellent, and an important, point.

Having poked around a little bit, I think this needs to be stated more
strongly. We certainly have software in GNOME that's being made available
under the Apache license. (The keyring is an example a little Google'ing
turned up...)

With respect to the v2 GPL‹and we still don't accept v3 GPL software as
GNOME components, last I heard‹software under the Apache license can't be
reasonably described as free software, since it is incompatible with what
is uncontrovertibly a free software license, i.e. the v2 GPL. It is,
regardless, unequivocally open source software.

Given this, we cannot legitimately simply use the term free software to
describe what's included under the GNOME umbrella. Doing so would exclude
any software which is licensed under terms which the FSF says are
incompatible with the GPL.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 10:10 AM, Stormy Peters stormy.pet...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 I have no objections to free and open source other than it's awkwardness. (I
 too have used it quite a bit.)
 
As I point out in my previous message, I¹d say we have to use it, awkward or
not.

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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 9:57 AM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 Please stop trolling.

Dave, I think this is unhelpful. If you must, maybe you should do it
privately, rather than publicly.

 How about I do a poll whether people think PCs should run Windows or
 another desktop environment? If we respect the results we should stop
 developing GNOME.

This survey is not specifically related to GNOME, as I've said. I mentioned
it here mainly in order to ensure getting the broadest participation. I am
conducting it mainly for my own interest, in order to see how well expressed
beliefs reflect actual realities.

If you're suggesting that _this_ survey is somehow biased, as your example
question would appear to, I'd appreciate more specific information.

 Isn't leading by survey one of the issues you had with the Bush  Blair
 administrations?

I'm most certainly not proposing that the Board necessarily do or not do
anything based on the results. I do, however, think they're worthy of
consideration. Note that I have not suggested that anyone respect the
results. I do think that people should consider them, but that's entirely up
to them.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 11:10 AM, Owen Taylor otay...@redhat.com wrote:
 
 We certainly all know that RMS believes that. Some other GNOME community
 members may as well, though probably not a large number. It, is however,
 your choice to focus on it, and I don't understand what you are trying
 to achieve by doing that.
 
  - Are you trying to argue down RMS? I've certainly never seen that
work in 15 years.

No, that would be futile, I suspect. I _am_ trying to discern how well RMS'
views reflect the views of the free software/open source
software/FLOSS/FOSS community at large, an effort I believe to be
completely legitimate.

  - Are you trying to create a split between the Free Software Foundation
and GNOME? How would that be helpful to GNOME?

No, I don't have the power to do that, nor is it up to me.

  - Are you trying to get some change made in how the GNOME project
does business? What?

No, as I said, I'm trying to see how the community views these issues.
 
 By posting something on foundation-list, I feel that you are pretty
 explicitly saying it is related to GNOME.

I can't help how you feel, Owen. I _can_ assure that its only relation to
GNOME is that members of GNOME are most certainly members of the target
audience I'm seeking.

I would point out, again, that given the construction of the survey, there's
no way to pull out response from Foundation members as opposed to the public
at large. Given that there's no possible cross-tabulation on that factor,
it's flatly impossible to draw conclusions regarding GNOME on the basis of
these particular survey results. That was, as I mentioned, fairly
deliberate.

That said, if some future survey were to demonstrate that the views
expressed by the FSF represented the views of only a minority of the members
of the Foundation or the GNOME community at large, then that would represent
data to which the Foundation and the Board should give serious
consideration, in my view. I am NOT claiming that this is the case, by any
means, see the preceding paragraph.

Now, I've similarly posted announcements of this survey on Twitter,
identi.ca, Facebook, the FOSDEM general mailing list, the FSF-Europe's Legal
 Licensing Network mailing list, and I forwarded the information on the
survey to Simon Bridge, one of the moderators of the FSF Community Response
Team list.

I am, similarly, not trying to create splits between FOSDEM, FSF-Europe, or
the FSF Community Response Team and the FSF, nor am I trying to change how
any of them do business. I am simply seeking a broad cross-section of
respondents.

I think you may be reading quite a bit more into this than I'd intended. Do
you have an objection to the questions in the survey simply being _asked_,
Owen...?

If anyone wants to put notice of this survey out anywhere where it'll get
uptake from members of the free software/open source software/FLOSS/FOSS
community, I'd appreciate their doing so.


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My Apologies to Owen

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
I inadvertently replied publicly to what had been a private message from
Owen, and for that, I apologize.

It was accidental, and I apologized to Owen offline as soon as he pointed my
error out to me. As I was getting ready to send it off, I noticed that Owen
was the sole recipient, assumed I'd hit Reply rather than Reply all, and
added foundation-list to the cc, rather than going back and taking a look at
the original message.

My bad. Sorry, Owen.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 1:05 PM, Alan Cox a...@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk wrote:

 2. not legitimate; not sanctioned by law or custom.
 
 I don't see what the fuss is about.

I don't know that there _is_ a fuss. That's one of the things I hope to
determine via the survey.
 
 Not sanctioned by custom precisely describes Richard Stallman's belief
 that Free Software as a concept does not include considering proprietary
 software as acceptable in most cases.

I understand that. What I'm interested in, however, is the degree to which
that belief is reflected in the community. It's an open question, in my
mind, whether this view is, in fact, customary in the broader community.
Early results would seem to suggest otherwise.

If, in fact‹as the survey results apparently show‹among the virtually 100%
of respondents who use free/etc. software on their own time, about
two-thirds also use proprietary software on their own time (i.e. by their
own choice), this would seem to suggest that the actual custom may be
rather different than what it's being represented to be.

 The EU uses Free, Libre and Open Source Software  when it wants to talk
 about the general space and ensure that the usual misinterpretations of
 'free' do not occur and that nobody is offended, mislabeled or wastes all
 their meeting time with stupid arguments.

I provided FLOSS as a choice, as well as FOSS and Other, with a
comments box. I don't want anyone to feel as though they're unrepresented.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 1:22 PM, Owen Taylor otay...@redhat.com wrote:

 I think you may be reading quite a bit more into this than I'd intended. Do
 you have an objection to the questions in the survey simply being _asked_,
 Owen...?
 
 It's very hard not to take the survey as a continuation of the recent
 discussions on this list, which I felt at the time to be highly
 unproductive. It was long and acrimonious discussion largely about
 changes to planet.gnome.org policy that hadn't actually been proposed.

That may be, but I can only encourage try not to take it in that fashion.

 I don't think I'm at all alone in taking the survey that way. The
 purpose of the survey seems to be to collect data to support (or
 possibly refute) your position.

I have an _opinion_, but since the other matter was, in fact, fairly
well-settled by the editors, I'm not staking out any position here.

Assertions were made which I don't personally happen to believe are actually
the case. My goal with this survey is to test my hypothesis. If people feel
that reporting the results would be unhelpful here, I certainly won't report
them. I find them quite interesting, myself.

 I also feel that the survey is quite flawed, and after going through
 most of it decided not to submit my answers because by submitting it I
 would be misrepresenting my opinion on proprietary software.

I'd be interested in knowing how a less flawed survey to get some concrete
data on these issues would be constructed. I got feedback in comments that
an Other was needed on the illegitimate/immoral/antisocial
questions, so I added one.

 Imagine that somebody wrote an article based on the results of your
 survey. The results would show that:
 
  Many FOSS developers don't consider proprietary software
immoral, or illegitimate.
 
  Many FOSS developers sometimes use proprietary software.

All I've pointed out so far is that, apparently, many FOSS _users_ also
use proprietary software, by choice. I've done no cross-tabulations on
developers, and I won't for a while yet.

Now, if in fact, the survey _were_ to show that, say, many FOSS developers
actually _don't_ consider proprietary software to be immoral and use it by
choice, that's significant, I'd say. Facts are facts. If they're
_inconvenient_ facts, I can't really help that, but to proffer fictions
instead is simply deceitful.

You would seem to be suggesting here that I should not conduct the survey
for fear someone might report the results. I may be misunderstanding you.

 And in fact I'd up in both of those categories. And somebody reading the
 article would get the impression that FOSS developers don't think
 there is a moral dimension to Free Software. Yet I strongly believe:
 
  - That picking Free Software over proprietary software is the right
thing to do even when there is a cost to me such as less
functionality.
 
  - That a world where a task can't be done with Free Software is a
worse world.

Then you can choose Other and say precisely that.

 And that wouldn't be represented at all.

See immediately above. Problem solved. Go; be represented, please.

 In that way, it felt a bit like
 the sort of surveys you see taken by political action groups with an
 agenda. That may well not have been your intent - but I think we have to
 be aware that survey construction is hard, and the very construction of
 a survey and reporting of survey results is not a neutral activity; it's
 a form of public relations.

Again, I'm open to suggestions as to how it could be improved; none have
been forthcoming here. If the suggestion is, Don't _do_ that!, then I'm
afraid I'm disinclined to acquiesce to your request.

 And none of us can escape the fact that by being a GNOME member, by
 speaking on GNOME forums like foundation-list and planet.gnome.org, and
 by being part of GNOME bodies, whether the sysadmin team, or the
 advisory board, we speak as part of GNOME.

I speak as part of GNOME, perhaps, but I don't speak _for_ GNOME. The
distinction is critically important. Speaking _for_ GNOME is a job for
Stormy and the Board, and those to whom they might choose to delegate that
responsibility. My opinions don't reflect the views of anyone other than
myself.

The notion that one should have to change or hide one's own opinions because
one is speaking as part of GNOME seems to me to run directly counter to
the goal of GNOME to encompass a diversity of views, approaches and
opinions.

 That doesn't mean self-censorship, but it does mean that we have to
 watch what sort of conversation we are part of, and whether they are
 productive, or entertaining at the cost of being damaging to GNOME's
 image.

I have to disagree, Owen. If the conversation does not run afoul of the Code
of Conduct, then that's all that's required as far as I'm concerned.
Anything beyond that _is_ self-censorship.

If you feel someone‹and that includes me‹is damaging GNOME's image, you
should take it up with the Board and either get the situation 

Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 1:58 PM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 So proposing that GNOME as a project adopt one or the other amounts to a
 troll, in that it will create an endless discussion with no result.

Well, I'll be sure not to propose that, then.

Again, my impression has been that there are unquestioned and unexamined
beliefs about the attitudes and views of the FLOSS community at large; I
happen not to think that those beliefs are true. I'm attempting to test that
hypothesis, and I went to some pains to try to do so even-handedly.
 
 If you're suggesting that _this_ survey is somehow biased, as your example
 question would appear to, I'd appreciate more specific information.
 
 Not at all. I even voted in it. I'm merely pointing out the absurdity of
 Phillip's suggestion that the only way to respect a survey is to
 implement whatever results from it.

Okay, that was unclear to me. I personally haven't asked anyone to implement
anything. I've limited myself to saying (I believe, correct me if I'm wrong)
that I found the results interesting and worth thinking about.

As I said to Owen, there's no way to single out GNOME respondents from any
other respondents in this particular survey. Thus, I'd personally hesitate
to say that any particular results were indicative of anything have to do
specifically with GNOME: without a relevant cross-tabulation, the data won't
support that.

If we _want_ to survey GNOME members, we certainly can. But let's be clear
that this isn't what I'm doing here, not to the exclusion of KDE members,
NetBSD advocates, Microsoft employees or Bronx zookeepers (should any
members of the latter two groups choose to participate: they're more than
welcome to).

 I'm most certainly not proposing that the Board necessarily do or not do
 anything based on the results. I do, however, think they're worthy of
 consideration. Note that I have not suggested that anyone respect the
 results. I do think that people should consider them, but that's entirely up
 to them.
 
 Absolutely - the results are a useful data point. If nothing gets done
 with the results, because our leaders adopt a stance on behalf of the
 project, I hope that the people who voted don't feel disrespected.

I certainly hope not, especially since the survey was never intended by me
to lead to any specific action on the part of anyone in particular. I
certainly haven't represented it as having that intention.


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 1:58 PM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 Having gone through 10 years of Open Source vs Free Software
 debates, I know that (like emacs vs vim, bsd vs linux, gnome vs kde, bsd
 vs gpl, reply-to for mailing lists, code indentation styles, and other
 religious debates) that nothing will come of it.

One further comment on this: I stand by my view that Stormy's mission
statement should not use the terminology free software to the exclusion of
the term open source software. In fact, in light of what you've said, I
believe I feel even a little more strongly about it:

Since it _is_ a debate, as we agree, there must be a minimum of two sides
to it. To simply use free software in that statement would constitute an
endorsement of one of the two opinions to the detriment of the other(s).

(I'd note in passing that, from the point of view of an open source
developer, free software is a subset of open source software; to a
free software developer, they're mutually exclusive sets.)


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Re: Thanks, and a Brief Survey

2010-01-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 1/15/10 3:17 PM, Stormy Peters stormy.pet...@gmail.com wrote:
 
 I disagree quite strongly.
 
Fair enough, let me be clearer: my stated views do not necessarily represent
the views of the GNOME Foundation or the GNOME community. GNOME comprises a
variety of viewpoints, of which mine is one; there are plenty of others.
This is one of its strengths.
 
I have a bit of a concern, however, that on the strength of this statement,
one might find oneself confronted with the suggestion that one is ³damaging
GNOME² somehow by simply expressing a point of view: in fact, such a
suggestion has been made in this thread at one point. Again, this‹to
me‹seems to demand a sort of self-censorship. Who¹s to make the judgment of
what constitutes a ³good job representing GNOME²?

Am I doing a ³good job representing GNOME²? (This is intended as a
completely rhetorical question, lest anyone misunderstand me here; I am not
requesting a ³performance review², and I¹ll look askance at anyone who tries
to deliver one on this list.) Some may feel so, but I¹d bet any amount of
money that you¹d get some distinct disagreement to that suggestion if you
asked around.

Not that this bothers me, especially.

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Re: Private Foundation-List Petition for referendum

2009-12-16 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/15/09 1:25 PM, Miguel de Icaza mig...@novell.com wrote:
 
 Perhaps what we do need is for the board to have a stronger
 connection to mass media and be ready to articulate public responses
 properly framing discussions and correcting any incorrect reporting.

Actually, this is something I'd suggested in the Marketing BoF at the last
GUADEC: GNOME needs people who (ideally) have been media trained, have
appropriate contacts, and are willing and able to talk to press
representatives when needed. I volunteered to be one, I don't know whether
that are others, but we haven't followed up on it so far...


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Re: Private Foundation-List Petition for referendum

2009-12-16 Thread Lefty ( )
Typically, you work with a public relations firm. Media training is mostly a
bunch of pointers (Never say, 'No comment'; Never cite specific numbers,
unless you are confident you can back them up) and a bunch of structured
practice in question-and-answer situations, confrontational and non-.

We should probably collect a list of those who are willing (and able).


On 12/16/09 3:51 AM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:

 Hi,
 
 Lefty (石鏡 ) wrote:
 On 12/15/09 1:25 PM, Miguel de Icaza mig...@novell.com wrote:
 Perhaps what we do need is for the board to have a stronger
 connection to mass media and be ready to articulate public responses
 properly framing discussions and correcting any incorrect reporting.
 
 Actually, this is something I'd suggested in the Marketing BoF at the last
 GUADEC: GNOME needs people who (ideally) have been media trained, have
 appropriate contacts, and are willing and able to talk to press
 representatives when needed. I volunteered to be one, I don't know whether
 that are others, but we haven't followed up on it so far...
 
 I've done this in the past, and would be happy to again. Can't speak for
 anyone else.
 
 How do you get media training, by the way? :)
 
 Cheers,
 Dave.


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-15 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/13/09 8:22 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:
 
 ...I would not encourage anyone to use
 non-free software even to get money to give to a worthy cause.

I apologize to all, but given this, there's a question that _really_ has to
be asked:

Given the proposition that proprietary software is illegitimate, and the
statement above, do you believe that the GNOME Foundation and community
should distance itself from companies which produce proprietary software?

Specifically, should the Advisory Board be dissolved, and should the
Foundation refuse further financial support from the companies that are
currently on the Ad Board?


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Re: Private Foundation-List Petition for referendum

2009-12-14 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/14/09 7:14 PM, Joe 'Zonker' Brockmeier j...@zonker.net wrote:
 2009/12/14 Stormy Peters stormy.pet...@gmail.com:
 Are there people on this list that are not GNOME Foundation members? If so,
 can you speak up? It would be good for everyone to know why you subscribe to
 foundation-list and the value you see in it.

Actually, I'm in the same situation as Zonker, mostly through bad
prioritization on my part (i.e., I've been meaning to do it). Application's
in now.

As a member of the Ad Board for a fair while, having both sponsored and
presented at GUADEC more than once, participating in things like the GNOME
Mobile effort, marketing, etc., I've got a definite interest in what goes on
within the Foundation...


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Re: Private Foundation-List Petition for referendum

2009-12-14 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/14/09 11:35 PM, Sergey Panov si...@sipan.org wrote:
 
 Nothing personal, but I never trusted those corporate Open Source
 Advocates ... . 

No offense taken, I'm sure... I fear you distrust a fair proportion of the
Foundation's Advisory Board.

 Besides,  Lefty does not work for ACCESS Inc. anymore
 -- he is a director of the Open Source Technologies
 http://www.blogger.com/profile/08971976622291862537.

I do, indeed, work for ACCESS. My _title_ is Director of Open Source
Technologies.

 I did not know the threshold was dropped that low.

It's that pesky open and welcoming thing, I'm afraid.


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Re: foundation-list Digest, Vol 68, Issue 13

2009-12-13 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/13/09 7:24 AM, Ciaran O'Riordan cia...@member.fsf.org wrote:

 That's a rule (a policy), which is mild and doesn't involve jumping straight
 to blocking a whole blog.  And it was suggested in heated opposition to this
 comment:

No, Ciaran: you've removed the entire surrounding context, and recast the
sense of the statement to suit your rhetorical needs. I am _not_ calling for
a new rule, a new policy, or anything of the sort, and in fact, I'm
adamantly against any such thing as I've clearly stated.

A more accurate summation of my position is: There is not a problem here,
and no one has managed to demonstrate that there is one. Accordingly, this
suggestion of Mr. Stallman's should be ignored and no action whatsoever
should be taken on it. If the situation described ever _does_ become a
demonstrable issue, deal with it then, but let's not do _anything_ about it
now.

This is obviously not Mr. Stallman's position. Don't attempt to minimize the
distance between our respective views when you have to do violence to one of
them in order to accomplish this.

Philip raises an excellent point as well: _I_ don't subscribe to the notion
that proprietary software is, by necessity, illegitimate, antisocial,
immoral or _any_ of those things. Like Philip, I believe it's a choice,
and a choice that an author is entirely entitled to make. I do not want to
see changes to Planet that require people to sign up to positions they
don't hold, or that make it appear that they necessarily espouse such
positions.

Bottom line: Mr. Stallman's proposal is divisive, unnecessary and literally
uncalled-for. If the issue continues to be pressed, maybe Philip is correct
and the best thing to do _is_ to put it to a vote.


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-13 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/13/09 8:22 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:
 
 Unable to come up with and too dumb are your own additions,
 which clearly were not present in the events themselves.

Clearly, a lot of misunderstanding was present in the events themselves.
To what do you attribute this wide-spread misunderstanding, if not
stupidity, ignorance or a general lack of adequate erudition on the part of
the audience?


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-13 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/13/09 8:22 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:

 That's where the cash for things like my FSF-E
 Fellowship, EFF membership, Creative Commons membership, etc., come from,
 see?
 
 These are worthy causes, but I would not encourage anyone to use
 non-free software even to get money to give to a worthy cause.

I knew you'd feel that way, which is why I send my money to FSF-Europe,
rather than the FSF.

 However, the issue here isn't about what you use or what I use, it's
 about what GNOME should say to the world about proprietary software.

One more time: Planet GNOME  The GNOME Foundation  GNOME

 I don't know how often proprietary software is mentioned favorably
 there.  If the problem happens at intervals of years, maybe very
 little response is needed.  Maybe the GNOME Board should respond by
 posting a response when non-free software gets favorably mentioned.

Non-free software can't even be favorably mentioned?

A discussion of the relative merits of GIMP and Photoshop is inadmissible if
it admits, however grudgingly, that Photoshop has some advantages or
features that GIMP does not...? We're disallowed from saying that Xcode on
OS X is, in fact, an excellent development environment...? No one can
comment in a positive way on a new cell phone or digital camera, without the
Board of Directors of the GNOME Foundation coming down on them?

Wow. You and I have extremely different ideas about freedom, Mr. Stallman.

 I don't know how often proprietary software is mentioned favorably
 there.

I see.

Do you actually ever _read_ Planet GNOME, Mr. Stallman...? Perhaps you
should call for a ban of the use of the term open source there, or of
Linux unless it's in specific reference to the kernel, as a minimal
requirement to support free software. Those happen a _lot_ more often.


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Re: foundation-list Digest, Vol 68, Issue 13

2009-12-13 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/13/09 8:49 AM, Ciaran O'Riordan cia...@member.fsf.org wrote:
 
 Yes.  You said that no one's yet demonstrated a problem, and you gave a
 solution for if the problem was demonstrated.  You're solution was 100%
 compatible with Richard's solution.

Except that we now seem to have had the (non-existent) problem redefined for
us: rather than the previous _promotion_ (which I take to mean
marketing) of proprietary software (as I've said, I'd prefer not to see
promotion in that sense of _any_ software on the Planet, it's neither a
marketing nor an advocacy organ), now it's simply _favorable mention_ of
proprietary software--apparently exclusive of any context whatsoever--that
requires comment (denunciation?) from the Foundation Board.

Not at all the sort of bridge I was looking for. I hope the Board has
better things to do than to police the purity of Planet GNOME at the FSF's
behest to spare us from seeing non-negative mention of non-free software
being made with impunity.


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-13 Thread Lefty ( )
In the interests of a broader collection of data, I've shelled out of my own
pocket to set up a professional-level SurveyMonkey account (the use of which
I will happily share with the Foundation, at least until the annual
subscription runs out, if it wishes to conduct surveys of its own).

I've set up a survey to collect some data on how people view the suggestions
that have been made regarding the governance of Planet GNOME, and I
encourage anyone who's interested to participate. The survey can be found at

http://www.surveymonkey.com/s/Z7WHPDF

So far, we've gotten over 170 responses, and public opinion doesn't seem to
be generally running in favor of Mr. Stallman's proposal, at a rate of
roughly four against to one in favor, in the best of circumstances. The
survey attempts to probe a little more deeply, but if the results are
indicative of anything, Mr. Stallman's views here represent a minority
opinion.

As a specific example, to the question, Do you agree that viewing
proprietary software as 'illegitimate', 'immoral', 'antisocial' and/or
'unethical' should be a pre-condition for syndication on Planet GNOME?, so
far 151 respondents have answered No, only 19 have answered Yes. That's
about an 8-to-1 ratio.

I'll publish more detailed results before the week is out.

On consideration, I now believe there's no need to call for a vote of the
Foundation membership.

Since the problem doesn't seem to exist, there's no need to do anything with
Planet. Similarly, I see no need to expend any further energy on the GNOME's
community's part on dealing with this. If the GNU Project finds the current
level of expression on Planet GNOME intolerably unsupportive of the free
software movement, for whatever reasons, they can certainly take whatever
steps they feel are necessary.


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-11 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/11/09 7:12 AM, Richard Stallman r...@gnu.org wrote:

 Stormy, we seem to be miscommunicating.  I said that people should not
 promote non-free software on Planet GNOME.  You seem to be arguing
 against something different.

I believe Stormy was quite clear and on point: It sounded to me as though
she were arguing against the sort of prior restraint that you seem to be
attempting to impose here.

 GNOME is not connected with the anti-hunting movement; there's no
 reason it should have any position on the question.

GNOME is not connected with the anti-VMWare movement, nor (that I'm aware
of) any anti-proprietary software movement.

 But GNOME is part
 of the GNU Project, and it ought to support the free software
 movement.

It does support free software, and does an effective job of it.

 The most minimal support for the free software movement is
 to refrain from going directly against it; that is, to avoid
 presenting proprietary software as legitimate.

This is simple nonsense. Software is software, and people write about what
they do. 

I use free software, and I also use things like Final Cut Pro, for which
there's no equivalent. You seem to feel I should be barred from writing
anything about film-editing, since it involves proprietary software.

My use of Final Cut is completely legitimate. There's no equivalent piece of
free software, and even if there were, surely my tools are my choice, are
they not? Your attempts to control what gets posted are completely out of
line.

 I think Planet GNOME should have a rule to this effect.  There are
 many ways to implement such a rule, of which block the whole blog is
 about the toughest one we might consider.  I'd suggest rather to try a
 mild approach; I'm sure that can do the job.

This suggestion, which verges on a demand for censorship in the name of
freedom, is completely appalling. I have no interest in seeing Planet GNOME
turned into a outpost of Bad Vista, thanks.

If muzzling people is a condition of being part of the GNU project, then
maybe we should rethink _that_ aspect of things. Maybe the FSF should start
its own planet and set its own rules there rather than attempting to impose
its various litmus tests on the contributors to Planet GNOME.

I haven't got even the slightest interest in seeing this job get done,
and I'd be opposed to anyone's trying it.


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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-11 Thread Lefty ( )
Philip van Hoof writes
 
 I propose to have a vote on GNOME's membership to the GNU project.

I'd second this.



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Re: Code of Conduct and Foundation membership

2009-12-11 Thread Lefty ( )
On 12/11/09 8:40 AM, Dave Neary dne...@gnome.org wrote:
 
 Don't we have more concrete issues to address?

We _were_ attempting to finalize a Code of Conduct which could be provided
to speakers, in the hope of avoiding future instances of the sort of
harmless fun we experienced during Mr. Stallman's keynote at the Gran
Canaria Desktop Summit, as I recall.

It seems that Mr. Stallman would prefer to discuss ways and means to
throttle contributors to Planet GNOME of whose postings he happens not to
approve, however.

I understand your interest in pouring oil on troubled waters here, Dave,
but neither Philip nor I are the ones who raised this issue.



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