Eric Raymond Joins Freespire
Posted Sep 28, 2006 21:28 UTC (Thu) by
tmk (guest, #40799)
In reply to:
Eric Raymond Joins Freespire by drag
Parent article:
Eric Raymond Joins Freespire
""By the way, what is the argument against proprietary codecs again?""
They are anti-social. Can't redistribute them.
No, you can't. Unless you register as a legal,
certified distributor. That's how it works, sorry.
Can't modify them.
You can do some CS in University, and then try to get a job with said proprietary software developer. If you really have some groundbreaking new idea it's a win-win situation right?
Won't generally work on anything other then x86 computers.
Except for PPC Macintoshes. And under Solaris on SPARC. And that's about it. Commodity petrol also won't work in stealth-bombers.
Also they are used by companies in a attempt to control what you can and can not do with your own computer.
The key is:
Free market. You are not forced to use proprietary code. If there is a large-enough market (and there apparently is), content will be released in "open" formats too. Give it a little time.
Increasingly propriatory codecs are tied to obnoxious DRM scemes.
So "obnoxious" now means something that "makes it harder to break copyright law". Are car alarms or door locks obnoxious too? What about ssh passwords?
Distributions that attempt to included them in Free software distros are risking a lot since it is illegal. You can distribute them with Linux systems just fine IF you get a license agreement with the patent holders that control the codecs, but you wouldn't ever be able to legally do things like offer anonymous downloads off of a FTP server.
So it turns out it's not illegal in the end? And why not anonymous FTP? You can accept the license before use, no need for a license to download
But hey.. We can get Internet Explorer to run on Linux systems also. Maybe we should all push to include that in Linux? It makes sense since some websites may only work well on IE! I am sure that Microsoft won't mind as long as we all buy copies of Windows, because then that would be a legal license for us to use it... right? (no...)
Guess what, people use IE on Linux (with the help of WINE!). Mostly they are web developers who find it easier than having two computers or rebooting every time they want to test a design. IE is free; and MS doesn't mind. I don't think you need a Windows license to use IE. Hell, I hope I don't.
It's not a question whether IE is better than Firefox or Konqueror or not.
It's a question whether the next 40 million potential Linux users convert to free software with the comfort that they can still occasionally access the few remaining sites that only work in IE and listen to their favourite radio station in RealAudio until it switches to Vorbis. (It will switch to Vorbis because that saves them the license fees, etc...)
Remember Linus' Goal:
"World Domination. Fast."
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