Alfred M. Szmidt said: > Works for Me. > > ~ $ wget http://gnuradio.org/releases/gnuradio/gnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gz
If you use wget in the manner required by CloudFlare, Inc. and GNU Radio Foundation, Inc., indeed there is no issue. But some of whome embrace freedom 0 don't want to be forced to use the tools in a restricted capacity. A privacy-proponent might want to use wget over Tor, as follows: ===8<------------------------------ $ freedom_hostile_app=http://gnuradio.org/releases/gnuradio/gnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gz $ http_proxy=127.0.0.1:8118 wget "$freedom_hostile_app" --2017-01-21 14:25:16-- http://gnuradio.org/releases/gnuradio/gnuradio-3.7.10.1.tar.gz Resolving gnuradio.org (gnuradio.org)... 104.28.6.113 Connecting to gnuradio.org (gnuradio.org)|104.28.6.113|:80... connected. HTTP request sent, awaiting response... 403 Forbidden 2017-01-21 14:25:17 ERROR 403: Forbidden. ===8<------------------------------ > You are also (on purpose) misinterpreting freedom 0, what it means > is that you _can_ use the program for any purpose -- not that it > will actually work. Your bluntness is rather hilarious. So expecting freedom 0 to manifest in some practical and usable way is out of the question? I know you (understandably) didn't follow the whole discussion on the directory-discussion list, so it must be made clear here that a philosophical principle is very much subject to the interpretation of every individual. Dr. Stallman's drafting of freedom 0 delivers not law, but an idea for which everyone is free to interpret, manipulate, and purpose as they please. Despite the above reservation for the right to interpret the principle, I've actually not taken liberties here. It is because you're trying to look at freedom 0 through the lens of a legal framework that you claim it to only give legal protection without a practical component. Yes that exists, but it's not the license-embedded variation of freedom 0 that I'm referring to. Quite simply it's the principle that appears here: http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/free-sw.html Freedom 0 also makes an appearance in legally binding texts, which are of course more constrained than the top-level guiding principle by the very limited nature of creating a legal implementation. It's not any legal implementation of that principle that I claim to have been violated. It's simply the top-level principle itself that has been violated by GNU Radio Foundation, Inc. There is nothing in the free-sw.html document that implies or imposes the limitation you claim. The interesting bit of text to examine (for die-hard fundamentalists w/literal interpretations) is this: "The freedom to run the program as you wish means that you are not forbidden or stopped from doing so." If the freedom 0 principle were to work as you claim, there would have to be a period after the word "forbidden" with the rest of the sentence scrapped. In the case at hand, it is the "or stopped" phrase that's really significant. GNU Radio Foundation, Inc. is *stopping* users from using wget over Tor, regardless of any kind of legal instrumentation that the word "forbidden" implies (although one may indeed interpret the "403 Forbidden" error above as a prohibition as well, it's not needed to make my point). Hence what I said earlier about not having to take any liberties in interpretation. > ++the free software breech++ > > Readers of the free.software newsgroup should be aware that a GNU tool > (gnuradio) has violated two clauses in the GNU Free Documentation > License ("GFDL"): > > 1) Failing to distribute documentation with the software. > > There is no requirement in the GFDL or the GPL that requires someone > distribute documentation with the software. > > 2) Use of non-simple HTML. > > There is no requirement in the GFDL or the GPL that requires someone > to use non-simple HTML. Since you didn't find either of the requirements, I suspect you've not read it (or perhaps a different version). From this GFDL: https://static.fsf.org/nosvn/directory/fdl-1.3-standalone.html this is the quote supporting point 1: "a free program should come with manuals providing the same freedoms that the software does." and this is the quote supporting point 2: "Examples of suitable formats for Transparent copies include plain ASCII without markup, Texinfo input format, LaTeX input format, SGML or XML using a publicly available DTD, and standard-conforming simple HTML, PostScript or PDF designed for human modification." BTW, I apologize for the dupe messages that posted here. Mixmaster reliability is very shakey since node operators are fighting over whether to support non-standard 4k keys, or standard but weak 1k keys. This somehow results in remailer users getting bogus error messages from the mixmaster client. -- Please note this was sent anonymously, so the "From:" address will be unusable. List archives will be monitored.
