FSF GFDL and "non free"
Posted Jul 6, 2004 20:38 UTC (Tue) by
copsewood (subscriber, #199)
In reply to:
FSF GFDL and "non free" by dvdeug
Parent article:
Debian postpones social contract changes
The fact that a piece of software comes with a free software license does not prevent it from being obnoxious or being used for obnoxious purposes. Neither is any Debian maintainer obliged to package anything simply because it comes with a free license. The same applies to documentation whether it contains invariant sections or not. I agree that a documentation section which was both invariant and genuinely obnoxious would prevent otherwise useful parts of the document being reused with this kind of license. If the document is well written then invariant sections are more likely to be used for reasonable purposes. The appropriate use of invariant sections should in any case be constrained to prevent the whole document from becoming obsolete, e.g. I consider an example of appropriate use would be to prevent misrepresentation of overtly historical contents describing original authorship and process. Another example might be if the author wishes to use the platform provided by their document to make a short charitable appeal.
The decision as to whether or not to package the document should then be made based on whether the document, as updated in accordance with its license, is still useful. It would be entirely reasonable for a package maintainer to decide not to include it because the usefulness does not make the historical baggage carried in invariant sections worth carrying. But please be clear that if the baggage is not obnoxious then this is an issue of practicality, as opposed to ethics.
I have done, and am likely to continue to write opinions under my own name which can be freely copied accurately and in full, or quoted based on existing and universal fair-use rights, or not reused at all because I don't like having my opinions distorted or misrepresented. For example I would consider your copying a distorted and doctored version of this posting (e.g. to make me look evil) as being in breach of my moral as well as my legal rights. However, I have no objection to you copying it accurately and completely for any purpose. I need make no such restriction on software which I author and distribute under the GPL because the same problem does not arise here. You might argue that being able to misrepresent without breaching legal copyright is a kind of freedom, but I think this takes away from the more important freedom of authors to be correctly heard. If the Debian community does not understand this distinction, then I am saddened that by effectively reducing the freedom of Debian documentation authors in this way, it makes the results of the collective efforts of the Debian community less valuable to everyone else.
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