FSF GFDL and "non free"
Posted Jul 9, 2004 11:19 UTC (Fri) by
copsewood (subscriber, #199)
In reply to:
FSF GFDL and "non free" by dvdeug
Parent article:
Debian postpones social contract changes
If there is obnoxious licensing on a program, you are welcome not include it. Should we toss aside the DFSG completely?
No, but a more complete understanding of freedom and practicality issues will lead to better interpretation and possibly formulation of these guidelines. I happen to believe the FSF, in creating its documentation license allowing invariant sections, has a better understanding of the wider issues than those who would interpret the DFSG narrowly to always exclude such materials.
I think the issue of obnoxiousness is orthogonal to this. Consider for example, misuse of any software/documentation taking away the freedom of victims of racist abuse not to be targetted by hate crimes. If any Debian package mainainer did not have the common sense to exclude affected materials, this could perhaps be handled by updating the DFSG to exclude such attacks on people's freedom, or by updating the community membership agreements to enable action against any kind of attack on freedom by a community member on a case by case basis. Many community organisations have articles of association allowing exclusion for activities likely to bring the community into disrepute. Any free community has the right to disassociate itself from such a member.
This approach seems to allow a more free process, because it arises from the assumption that a member should be trusted by others within a community to operate within guidelines as opposed to excessively detailed constraints . If a maintainer acts in bad faith, the community can exclude that individual. The alternative is to have a rapidly growing body of detailed bureacratic rules and regulations and a time consuming and legalistic process for interpreting and enforcing these.
Furthermore, it resticts further usage. Your ten page essay
slight exaggeration
can't be reasonably attached to a one-page reference sheet,
or comments in a program.
You can always quote based on fair use, or consult with the author if a good reason for a license relaxation would allow for kinds of positive reuse not forseen by the author. OK, sometimes impractical - such is life.
In any case, the DFSG already permits you to require prominent notification of modifications.
Given that this is so, extension of this principle of allowing original authors to require maintenance of development history, or other reasonable use of invariant documentation sections need not be opposed on grounds of principle.
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