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RMS on SCO, Distributions, DRM

Letter writes "Open for Business has an interview with GNU founder and free software zealot Richard M. Stallman (RMS) discussing the SCO situation, the single RMS-approved free Linux distribution and DRM in the Linux kernel. RMS also describes non-free software as a 'predatory social system that keeps people in a state of domination and division.'"

43 of 711 comments (clear)

  1. Debian not recommended by dzym · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That sounds like an awful stab in the back for Debian for the level of devotion and dedication the project has always shown for Free Software ideals.

    1. Re:Debian not recommended by grolschie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Non-free programs are not officially considered "part of Debian", but Debian does distribute them. The Debian web site describes non-free programs, and their ftp server distributes them. That's why we don't have links to their site on www.gnu.org.

      Debian are very pedantic about free and non-free. Probably just the right balance in their attitude, as they still allow non-free to be download easily. RMS is just ridiculously over-the-top, and should wake up and smell th coffee.

    2. Re:Debian not recommended by grolschie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      ....oh yeah, even after Debian is called "Debian GNU/Linux" like RMS demands. Talk about RMS being anal!

    3. Re:Debian not recommended by Frater+219 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Additionally, recently Debian has decided that the GNU Free Documentation License isn't free enough for them, and that therefore many GNU manuals have to go to non-free. If this isn't a huge holier-than-thou contest, I don't know.

      From what I can tell, RMS sees these things in terms of abstract principles, whereas Debian sees them as guarantees that it can offer its users and society at large. Hence RMS comes off sounding "religious" to some, while Debian hies to a document it calls its "Social Contract".

      Because it's in the business of offering assurance to its users that they will be able to redistribute and modify the packaged software, Debian has to be exceedingly careful of license conflicts and the like. They took a good deal of heat for excluding KDE until Qt's license ceased to conflict with the GPL. (It's a myth, by the way, that Debian demanded Qt be GPLed. In fact, the problem was that while KDE components were GPLed and Qt's license was also Free, Qt's license and the GPL on KDE could not be simultaneously satisfied.)

      The difficulry arises with the GNU FDL because people can add sections called "Invariant Sections" to covered documents. These are portions excluded from the freedom of the license -- portions which future maintainers may not modify. Debian guarantees that the materials you get from its mainline distribution are things you may modify, so obviously Debian can't include FDL Invariant Sections in its mainline distribution.

      It isn't a matter of fanaticism, advocacy, or holiness. It's a matter of plain and simple contradiction: Debian can't give something away as freely modifiable software if its license says it isn't -- and an FDL Invariant Section is no more freely modifiable than is Microsoft Word.

      If someone says, "I'm making a CD of software that's all BSD-licensed," then obviously they aren't going to include gcc in it. Calling them fanatical or "holier-than-thou" for simply keeping their word, makes you seem to be fanatically advocating hypocrisy and deceit.

    4. Re:Debian not recommended by Arker · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Where did he say it was not recommended? Come on people, quit trying to manufacture flame wars. He said he ran Debian on his laptop, for christs sake.

      He recommends the Extremadura distribution because it has no unfree software at all. He didn't say don't use Debian, he said it was the best commonly used distribution, but as 'Mr Free Software' of course he has to prefer the only distribution with absolutely no unfree software in it, now that it exists.

      --
      =-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-
      Friends don't let friends enable ecmascript.
    5. Re:Debian not recommended by kiltedtaco · · Score: 5, Insightful

      He's not angry about the 'mass-media' spotlight exactly, it's more he's angry that everyone is forgetting why the GNU project was started in the first place. I don't think he really likes the fact that few people understand "free speech, not beer fully, that the GNU project was started for social reasons, not financial resions. I very much agree with him.

      The thing is, he's not building his own empire, he's demolishing the comercial software empire, the means of doing which you seem to see as an 'empire.'

    6. Re:Debian not recommended by AstroDrabb · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think you are missing the point that RMS is trying to make. The freedom he is talking about has NOTHING to do with money. Only freedom over the software. I have not read anything from RMS that said he thinks making money off of software wrong. It is only the stripping of freedoms that is wrong. I am all for a balanced software industry where some products have zero cost and others do not. However, I think all software needs to be free as in speech and let the end user do with it as they will. The current practice of many software companies, especiall MS it to strip away all the rights for what you can do with that software by keeping the source closed, using proprietary/closed protocols and document formats. And even worse, to actaully restrict what activities that you can do with that software like how MS says you are not allowed to use MS Front Page to make a web site that is negative about MS. That is a little over-the-top IMO. So remember, Free Software has NOTHIG to do with cost and everything to do with freedom. If every piece of Free Software cost money, no on in the FSF would complain.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    7. Re:Debian not recommended by AstroDrabb · · Score: 4, Insightful

      What are you taling about? Guns don't kill people. Have you ever heard of a gun killing someone? No. It is the person using the gun. Also, RMS talked of how Ximian was a successful Open Source company. Maybe you cannot understand what Free Software is all about, however that does not mean others cannot. Again, for those that catch on a little slower: Free Software has NOTHING to do with price. You can charge for it or give it away free of charge. The Free in Free Software stands for the freedom granted to you in respect to that software.

      --
      If Tyranny and Oppression come to this land,
      it will be in the guise of fighting a foreign enemy. -James Madison
    8. Re:Debian not recommended by Malcontent · · Score: 5, Insightful

      " It's not about money it's about power"

      I guess if your definition of power is that lame then OK. To me power is George Bush launching wave upon wave of airplanes dropping bombs on afghanistan and iraq. Power is Bill gates buying the govt of the US., Power is Dick Cheney making sure only Haliburton gets billion dollar contracts in Iraq.

      Maybe RSM has more power then you but that's not much of an achievement is it? The fact is that he has no real power especially compared with his enemies. Compare the power of RMS with Bill gates or the Canopy group. His enemies have infinately more power then him.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    9. Re:Debian not recommended by WNight · · Score: 3, Insightful

      RMS isn't against commercial software, he's only against proprietary software.

      Look at his responses to the MandrakeSoft and TrollTech questions. He's not just okay with, but happy with, their selling of software. As long as they don't sell software that locks people into a proprietary solution, there's no harm in it. If you want to spend your money on software, you're welcome to it. He just wants a world where you can never be required to do so, just to interoperate with someone else.

      He may hold himself to different standards, such as never buying even open sourced commercial software, but that's a far cry from hating and trying to abolish it.

      As far as other rewards go, I'd love to be able to legally play DVDs in Linux. The law doesn't stop me from doing it for myself, but it does make it potentially illegal for me to sell Linux systems pre-configured to play DVDs. In RMS's ideal world that would never happen, which makes me thing it's not a bad ideal.

  2. su with wheel group by drdink · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Sorry, but I find it very difficult to take anything this man says seriously after once reading his views on the `su` command supporting a wheel group:
    This program does not support a "wheel group" that restricts who can su to super-user accounts, because that can help fascist system administrators hold unwarranted power over other users.
    Maybe this is why ftp.gnu.org got rooted? Is RMS supporting those who find weaknesses in systems and break them? Even his own system? Crazy.
    --
    Beware, Nugget is watching... See?
    1. Re:su with wheel group by drdink · · Score: 4, Insightful

      While I agree that the root password should be kept secret (common sense), I see no reason why one should throw off the chance to put up yet another fence. Along with denying root logins via SSH/telnet/etc, the wheel group prevents users from bruteforcing the root password. It is just an extra security measure.

      --
      Beware, Nugget is watching... See?
  3. At least RMS is consistent by freeio · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the RMS perspective, this makes perfect sense. One of his charms, if you will, is that he does not deviate from his ideals, even when it offends a large group. Free is free, and anythoing that compromises that is less than perfect.

    Like any other outspoken issue-perfectionist, this grates on those who are less tough about that issue. But make no bones about it, he would be less respected in the end if he compromised.

    So be it.

    --
    Soli Deo Gloria
    1. Re:At least RMS is consistent by EvilTwinSkippy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      History is littered with the forgotten corpses of men who compromised on their principles. We only remember the truely unflexible souls who insisted on changing the world around them. Unstable people like Socrates, Martin Luther, Ghandi fought like hell for their beliefs. We remember them preciesly because they did not waver against the winds of change.

      One man's nutcase is history's next great thinker.

      --
      "Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
      --Dr.W.Edwards Deming
  4. "Zealot" by squiggleslash · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Interesting points:
    • RMS comes out in support of trademarks and a company's right to protect its trademark (in this case Mandrake)
    • On the issue of mutual defense clauses in licenses, RMS thinks they're a good idea in theory but suggests people considering adopting them be careful not to alienate users
    Some "zealot."

    RMS has always struck me as being a fairly opinioned person who wants to stick to his principles. I see that as good in someone. I don't always agree with everything he says, but it's absurd how much abuse he takes for saying what he thinks. Suggesting that The OS That Includes A Linux Kernel And The GNU UserLand be named after both shouldn't, in my view, no matter how obnoxious some find it, result in the Z label.

    --
    You are not alone. This is not normal. None of this is normal.
  5. RMS promotes his views too strongly. by GoatPigSheep · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After reading this article, which I found quite interesting, I did come to a rather shocking conclusion. Although RMS is obviously a very talented and intelligent individual, he seems hellbent on enforcing his ethics and morals on others.

    He refuses to have anything to do with anyone who even has the slightest relationship with a non-free program. In effect he and his cohorts are effective enforcing their beliefs on others or cutting them completely off from their organization.

    How can you promote "free software" when you don't promote the "freedom to choose". Personally I think a person or company should be allowed to use free as well as non-free software together without reprimand from RMS and his organization.

    It's better to use some free software then no free software, and RMS is effectively limiting his friends and support by enforcing his views on them. Maybe he needs to learn to respect that some people might want to go down a middle ground, and the results of doing that can be great neverless. For example, OS X, a brilliant combination of free as well as proprietary software.

    --
    GoatPigSheep, the 3 most important food groups
  6. Non-free? by rmdyer · · Score: 4, Insightful

    What about non-free material goods? Does that also create a "...predatory social system that keeps people in a state of domination and division."?

    Does RMS even understand physics? It takes "work" to change random states of bits into useful tools and information. Work doesn't come free. Working a material good out of rock, wood, sand, etc, and working bits out of random noise, turns out to be equivalent.

    People who do "work" probably are more deserving of the prizes. The betterment of one's self should always be our higher goal. Be contructive, not destructive. Lend a helping hand to those who are trying, but don't offer any favors to those who are not. In the end, everyone gets their just rewards.

    Just my 2 cents.

  7. Question by bogie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Are future submissions always going to have some sort of character assasination buzzwords attached to them as well?

    For example. "Bill Gates noted closed source zealot and pro-monopolist met with shareholders today."

    Hmm, doesn't seem right does it? Leave the defamation to commenters, we do a plently well on our own thanks.

    --
    If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  8. RMS should be revered by heironymouscoward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It is one thing to put amazing amounts of energy and discipline into one's work, as the Debian developers have done. It is something else to foresee the battle between free and commercial software, as RMS did, and try to plan a course through this battle.
    RMS is pedantic, painfully self-righteous, and needs a shave. But he is one of the greatest thinkers of our time, a genius, and a mind to be treasured and revered.
    As a programmer and the developer of many free applications, RMS is for me a hero, someone who has anticipated many of the problems I would face in protecting the viability of my work.
    He once refused to accept a t-shirt with our team's logo on it, but he's a great man nonetheless.

    --
    Ceci n'est pas une signature
    1. Re:RMS should be revered by Larthallor · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I concur in many respects, but would prefer the term "respected" rather than "revered".

      RMS is a lot like what the Founding Fathers of the USA must have been like twenty or thirty years after things got running. He is worthy of respect in many of his actions and intentions. He clearly had the skills, intelligence, and drive to breath life into his beliefs, many of which the majority of us have at least some level of agreement. But this doesn't mean he's perfect. We can admire Jefferson's brilliance while shaking our heads at his ownership of slaves.

      Another analogy I think is useful (if I can be allowed to pigeon-hole him some more), is Sigmund Freud. Freud is respected in psychology for what he was: a brilliant man who moved things forward a great deal. And, similarly to Freud, we can look at the contributions RMS has made with gratitude without believing he is right about everything. No one today really believes that Freud's theories were totally accurate models of reality. But many of the concepts and methods he introduced still have relevance and utility today.

      Finally, for those role-playing geeks out there, I have one more analogy: Gary Gygax. He deserves respect for what he did for the genre, but will fall well short of any expectations placed upon him by those experiencing the emotion of "reverence".

      It is very tempting to state the RMS, or anyone, is either "good" or "bad", "right" or "wrong". The reality is that he is a complex person with ideas with which not all of us agree. That doesn't mean we can't look up to him for what good he has done, but to proceed beyond this to "reverence" would be a form of hero worship that would only cloud one's ability to evaluate his statements today.

  9. Re:RMS disses Debian? by CountBrass · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You completely miss the RMS's point, and the difference between FREE and OPEN. (This is of course a simplification.)

    RMS's stanbd point is that non-free software is inherently a bad thing; doesn't matter if it's "superior" in terms of functionality or quality - it's inherently a bad thing.

    Open software says Open software will, inherently, evolve into the best software - lowest bugs, best functionality etc etc - but whilst there is better non-Open software it's ok to use until Open catches up.

    That difference in view point is something very few people, it seems, who ramble on the subject and about RMS, understand.

    RMS has always, and I suspect always will be, completely consistent in his view point. The only variable has been peoples (lack) of understanding that RMS/FSF != Open software. Edward

    --
    Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
  10. Free is... what? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Free is free, and anythoing that compromises that is less than perfect.

    The problem with that, of course, is that GPL'd software isn't really free (as in speech). It's just a different set of requirements governing distribution and modification, and it relies just as much on copyright law for protection as any closed source, commercial product.

    If some code were completely free, then anyone could take it, compile it, change it, give away the results in any form they wanted, incorporate into a paid-for product with or without the source, or otherwise do as they wished.

    The GPL is a great way for people with a shared philosophy to gain mutual benefit from their labours. I have absolutely nothing against that, or their right to protect their agreement via the legal system should that become necessary. If they produce software that is better than commercial alternatives, and choose to give it away, good for them. If not, well, we users can always choose to spend our money buying an alternative we prefer.

    But please, calling this "free software" is just as much a misleading propaganda term as calling copyright infringement "intellectual property theft". It's about time a better term was coined.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    1. Re:Free is... what? by Big+Sean+O · · Score: 4, Insightful
      I've been giving the word 'free' a lot of thought.

      Your definition of 'free': "anyone could take it, compile it, change it, give away the results in any form they wanted, incorporate into a paid-for product with or without the source, or otherwise do as they wished." maximizes freedom for yourself. I think personal freedom is necessary in a free society.

      The 'free' that RMS believes in maximizes freedom for all, not just you. Here's how:

      1. Users: Anyone is free to use GPL'd software.
      2. Vendors: Anyone is free to distribute GPL'd software, heck, they can even charge money for it.
      3. System Administrators: They are free to modify GPL'd software for their own internal needs. The only time they have to provide their source code is if/when they choose to distribute the program. That's how the White House's webserver can use a heavily modified version of Linux.
      4. Programmers: This group gets benefits not covered by regular copyright law, but they also have restrictions. Under copyright law, programmers can't use the copyrighted source code. Under the GPL they have access to all of it, but since it's benefitted you, you in turn have to share it with others. They're even free to NOT use the GPL: They can write their own code.


      In essence, the GPL is a legal hack of the copyright system in order for it to behave closer to the perfect world RMS has in mind.

      Daniel Quinn's book Ishmael suggests that modern man has lived a simple agrarian lifestyle for 100,000 years. He states that "Civilization" really got started around 10,000 years ago when somebody got the idea that you can control people by locking up the food. RMS made it his life's work to make sure this doesn't happen in the information age.
      --
      My father is a blogger.
  11. RMS's political rants by einhverfr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I admire RMS but I think he's a little nuts for insisting that for a Linux distribution to be acceptable to him, it must not even include the option of non-free software in the basic install.

    I agree. I think RMS would call me apolitical because my primary reason for being involved in open source is that I think it is a better development model. However, there is a deeply political side of me that has a vision and political agenda behind my support of open source. It is in no way as one-sided or as focused as RMS, but I can see where he is coming from.

    IMO, I think that the real battle of our lifetime is the battle over proprietary vs open systems and information. This goes beyond computing and affects everything from our food supplies to our software. The problems include companies such as Microsoft holding the rights to the filesystems that are the lifeblood of companies and companies such as Monsanto holding the patent rights to foods which could become the lifeblood of countries. It is also about the CTEA and fighting against perpetual copyright of our cultural icons.

    The thing is, though, copyright has its place if it is not overextended. And I am so confident in this that I don't even care that much whether a distro recommends non-free packages. As long as customers start to see the difference. That is important. In fact, it is GOOD IMO, that Mandrake, RedHat, etc. offer commercial software with their distros because it shows the contrast and can help people see why free software is important. On this point, I disagree with RMS.

    --

    LedgerSMB: Open source Accounting/ERP
  12. Re:zealot? by Vicegrip · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What's even more humorous is having people who are zealots themselves about their own beliefs levy that insult at the FSF.

    I don't agree with the FSF on a number of points. I take exception, however, at the unwarranted insults I've seen directed at them. Especially since the majority of the hecklers I've seen here on Slashdot have never contributed a line of open-source code in their lives.

    --
    Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
  13. "Freedom" and "freedom" by Farley+Mullet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The actual interview is already slashdotted, but from the discussion it seems that he reserves his endorsement for the "GNU/Linex" distribution (Linex's site also seems to be down at the moment -- collateral slashdotting?), because it doesn't even provide the option of installing "non-Free" packages. This is just nuts -- it's clear to me why RMS uses the word "Free" instead of "free" at this point: because the meaning of "Free" (and I defy anyone to give a consistent definition of the way that RMS uses the term, aside from "Whatever RMS thinks it should mean at the moment") has shifted so far from what any reasonable person would expect the word "free" to mean.

    RMS: Linex is more Free because it doesn't allow you to install certain programs by default!

    Use:: But since it restricts my ability to do things, doesn't that make it less free?

    RMS: No no no. We're talking about Free, not free here. . .

    (As an aside it's funny to see people denouncing michael for describing RMS as a zealot. For goodness sake FSF-guys, michael is on your side. That kinda attitude doesn't bode well for how this comment will be moderated, I suspect.)

  14. RMS and the Vampires by nagora · · Score: 4, Insightful
    RMS's view of non-free software is that it is like a vampire: it might looks good and be really, really cool and do all sorts of things you'd like to do (fly, never age, meet girls) but in the end it is evil and will suck you dry.

    No ethical compromise is possible with such a thing - some evil is all evil - that's why he won't support even "conveniance" non-free software or those that associate with it.

    I see his point but I still don't know where I, as a programmer, am supposed to earn my mortgage payments. Telling me to become a marketing droid is not a reasonable answer.

    TWW

    --
    "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  15. *ahem* by Faust7 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    You may view your thinking within Lightwave as free, but only as far as Lightwave will allow you to go.

    It's a good thing I know how to use Maya and 3D Studio Max, then.

    So now your used to the Lightwave program, price goes up, what do you do? Go find another proprietary software package or pay up?

    I may switch, I may buy the newest version. Depends on what the exact circumstances are, but get this -- neither option is revolting to me.

    This may be difficult to understand, but I have no desire to code my own graphics or mathematics site of applications. Nor do I wish to spend time manually adding features to what I already use. With respect to such programs, I am an end user; I am willing to learn the most popular software tools in my field -- there are several different non-free programs out there that I can learn and develop a wide range of skills with. And guess what? They're actually good enough for their intended purpose.

    When was the last time you heard someone complaining about Maya's or Mathcad's lack of features? Or them hindering productivity? You don't hear such complaints because the programs, while proprietary and non-free, are (1) fantastic at what they do and (2) if one weren't to someone's taste, there are plenty of other choices. Don't like Mathcad? Try Maple, Mathematica, MATLAB. You'll have to pay, but there's a reason those programs are priced as they are -- they work well, they took effort, and they're the best.

  16. Re:zealot? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Many DO consider him fanatical. He is the antithesis of common sense and practicality.

    He believes in ideals to the point that they become inapplicable to the real world, and so becomes as limiting as the commercial world he so despises. That's the reason some people tend to dislike what he has to say, because of its fundamental contradictory nature. He preaches against limitation and yet imposes it.

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  17. Mutual Defense Clause? by Eric+Savage · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Does anyone have any good links about this? It sounds like a scary crackpot idea, so of course I'm curious about it. If my interpretation of it based on the article is remotely correct it seems hypocritical of RMS/Perens to even consider this, as it would be a major freedom limiter. If I can't sue someone who actually did steal something from me for fear of losing my right to use a large amount of software out there, I don't have much freedom do I?

    --

    This is not the greatest sig in the world, this is just a tribute.
  18. Re:zealot? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Especially since the majority of the hecklers I've seen here on Slashdot have never contributed a line of open-source code in their lives.

    You're right. You must become a programmer first before you get that special "Critical Guy" ID card that lets you interject your opinion about the operating system you use on your own computer. Linux and anything involved is only for programmers, and only they are allowed to discuss and decide its future. All matters are only open to a small cross-section of the community.

    Come on, that's silly.

    --
    "Sufferin' succotash."
  19. Re:zealot? by Dan+Ost · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's interesting you should say that when, after years of following RMS in
    the news, it appears to me that, in the long run, RMS is correct more often than
    his hecklers.

    Seriously, who thinks that OSS would be in a stronger position now if the GPL
    had never been written?

    --

    *sigh* back to work...
  20. Re:Someone's missing the point, but not us... by slux · · Score: 4, Insightful

    But unfortunately, if free-as-in-RMS doesn't come up with the goods, I see no reason to agree with him.
    <br><br>
    Then you see no reason to agree with him at all. You don't truly agree if you're only compelled by the practical benefits. You should look at their arguments and ask yourself whether or not you think that non-free software is truly unethical. If not, you're in the open source camp.

  21. He may not care by phr2 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    If you find those advantages so compelling that you're willing to trade your soul for them, RMS may simply prefer to sadly write you off, than to make concessions of his own soul.

    The free software movement is like a group of people who decided to become vegetarian out of ethical concerns about animal rights. Not everybody thinks like them and they're practical enough to understand that. But suppose a Free Vegetable Movement starts a foundation to make vegetarian utensils, publish vegetarian cookbooks and so forth, and get a lot of followers. If non-vegetarians now start also using the recipes, that's fine with them. There's even a splinter "open vegetable movement" of people who don't care about the animal rights issues but have discovered the benefits of eating more vegetables (such as having fewer heart attacks). The OVM may have mixed meat/vegetable diets but the FVM doesn't want to have anything to do with that.

    What's happening in these threads sounds to me like non-vegetarians somehow claiming the vegetarian foundation is foolishly restricting people's options because it won't link to restaurants that serve meat dishes, and no longer recommends a particular cookbook with good vegetarian recipes, because that cookbook also has meat dishes and there's now finally a comparably good cookbook which is 100% vegetarian. IMO it would be crazy for the veg foundation to do anything else, given its values. All you can decide is that its values are not your values. Asking them to turn against their very principles by also presenting the "meat option" is ridiculous (do you also ask your xtian church to present the "satan option"?). They did a lot of work making their cookbooks and recipes what they are, and the changes you're asking for show that you're trying to impose your values on them, not the other way around.

  22. RMS is a practical man by mec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm not kidding.

    Look at the world of software today and trace how much impact he has had. Emacs, gcc, gdb. The GPL. The idea that people can give away what they want, and other people (or the same people) can charge money for making distros and providing support.

    Entire companies operate now in the intellectual eco-sphere that Stallman invented.

    To be sure, several other people have also had an impact bigger than Stallman's. So what? Out of the millions of people who have spent their careers working with computers, he's easily in the top 0.1% of impact -- of people who made the world more like the way they want it.

    That's practical.

    1. Re:RMS is a practical man by ciaran_o_riordan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      > several other people have also had an impact
      > bigger than Stallman's

      It's also worth noting how unlikely Stallman was.

      Bill Gates has had a bigger influence on the world, but anyone could have predicted him. If he was never born, there would be someone else in his place.

      Would there be another RMS if this RMS was never born?

      His biography is really interesting, and of course it is Free. (www.faifzilla.org)

      Ciaran O'Riordan

  23. What of Interoperability? by frater_corvus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In all seriousness, I think RMS has a good concept. Free software is a great idea. However, implementing free software would require changing the thoughts of every person in the entire world so they see that free software is a good thing. Take the following, for example:

    TRB: One difficult thing for end users is proprietary codecs and plugins. Two examples that seem especially prevalent are Macromedia Flash and Real Networks' RealMedia files. Without these technologies, a lot of interesting content becomes unavailable. What do you think the short-term solution for this problem is?

    RMS: I think we should modify browsers to encourage and help users to send messages of complaint to those sites, to pressure them to change.

    Why? Media-types think flash and real media are a great technology. RMS is suggesting taking a step backward through this suggestion. What purpose could it possibly serve? Unless you can change the mindset of the folk at Real and Macromedia, you're stuck. Comply and remain interoperable or just don't view it.

    By this same argument, folk should quit using Quicktime, WMV and WMA. Does anyone see thing happening anytime soon? I think not. People will go where their technology takes them, be it a Mac, Windows, *nix or *BSD user.

    The key, at this point, isn't to subjugate the masses and foisting Linux on them. It's to make Linux interoperable with the other operating systems first. After Linux has gained, say, 50% of the market, then Linux can make demands. As it stands, if every Linux user were to send a letter of complaint to every site that used Flash, RealMedia, Quicktime or WM*s, people will probably more or less laugh. What purpose does it serve to suggest alternatives when there is no reason for said people to switch?

    Linux is great. But it isn't so great that it will inspire change in the mind of everyone in the world. At least, not yet. ;)

  24. Re:I don't care if he doesn't :-) by phr2 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, that's correct. Animal rights people are happy to learn that vegetarian diets lead to fewer heart attacks, but they'd urge you to stay vegetarian even if it were established that that caused more heart attacks. Of course you're entitled to not take their advice, but asking them to start recommending non-vegetarian diets will take a much deeper and more fundamental argument than "you're not giving people enough options".

  25. You're not very creative by IncohereD · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Take, for instance, IBM. IBM wants to make money selling rack after rack of servers. Now, they need a good OS to run on these servers, or else people won't want them. So they want Linux.

    Now, people buying servers want an OS they know they can get compatible software with, etc, etc (see the whole Oracle approved distro debacle). So they have an incentive to support (i.e. give money to) a popular distro (i.e. RedHat) so RedHat doesn't go tits up and leave them searching for something else.

    And that doesn't even get into bundling proprietary software with the known free software.

    So, basically you can make money selling something that's available for free by selling your brand. Sure, people could buy the systems bare and install software themselves, because it's free, but then IBM can just put support terms in their contract saying stuff like 'you need to have bought x.x version from us, or we laugh in your face', because they can make more money by selling a complete package.

    It's all about branding and package, dude. Step into the new millenium. Just like it doesn't matter if you're a popular artist getting jacked by your record company, if you can sell your cool/sexy/creepy old man image to Pepsi. There is nothing left to sell except your own mark of quality and authenticity. Which can't be taken away from you even if people copy you/your software.

  26. Re:WTF by Pieroxy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Funny, RMS says the opposite...

    Apparently, GNU without Linux can still run on three kernels!

    Remove GNU from Linux and you don't have much left... Sure, you've got yourself a kernel, so what?

  27. Re:I just lost a lot of respect for him. by awol · · Score: 4, Insightful

    but he runs Deb on his laptop because it was "the best at the time." what fucking bullshit. if it's so important to you, switch distros right-fucking-now.

    Look I have more issues with RMS than most, but I think you are going one step too far. It's not like he would have anything from the debian release that is not free on his machine. It's like,... building a house, at the time you built it the company you bought the wood from sold both old growth and plantation wood products. They didn't actively promote old growth wood, but they would get it if a customer demanded that particular wood, so they were the best "ethical" provider available at the time. However you only used plantation wood products in your house so you complied with your ethics. And now, if you were building again, there is this new company that offers no old growth wood at all, so you could use them even more comfortably, indeed you might recommend them at the expense of the former company. The situation with Debian and LinEx seems the same to me so there is no reason to switch distros for him in order to remain consistent with his stated ethical position.

    --
    "The first thing to do when you find yourself in a hole is stop digging."
  28. Re:WTF by blibbleblobble · · Score: 3, Insightful
    "Without the GNU tools you still have an OS"
    localhost> login: johndoe
    password: ******
    ERROR: login was written by RMS

    ls
    ERROR: ls was written by RMS

    pwd
    ERROR: pwd was written by RMS

    ps
    ERROR: ps was written by RMS

    emacs /etc/fstab
    ERROR: no emacs
    ERROR: no filesystem
    ERROR: no shell to be typing this on

    startx
    ERROR: no X
    ERROR: no iceWM
    ERROR: no KDE
  29. RMS, on the rocks ... by fidget · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I was discussing this with a friend this morning, and he suggested that I post it, so here goes...
    I think I figured out RMS' real service: His constancy. Sometimes it's just nice to have a lighthouse on the breakers by which to set a course. You wouldn't actually want to go where he is, but you like to know where you are in relation to it.