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RMS Responds To NPR File-Sharer's Blog

New submitter UtucXul points out that Richard Stallman has penned a lengthy response to NPR intern Emily White for her post on the organization's site about how she failed to pay for a significant amount of recorded music, acquiring it instead through Kazaa, friends, and CDs owned by the radio station at which she was employed. (We previously discussed musician David Lowery's response; quite different from RMS's, as you might expect.) Stallman wrote, "Copying and sharing recordings was not a mistake, let alone wrong, because sharing is good. It's good to share musical recordings with friends and family; it's good for a radio station to share recordings with the staff, and it's good when strangers share through peer-to-peer networks. The wrong is in the repressive laws that try to block or punish sharing. Sharing ought to be legalized; in the mean time, please do not act ashamed of having shared — that would validate those repressive laws that claim that it is wrong. You did make a mistake when you chose Kazaa as the method of sharing. Kazaa mistreated you (and all its users) by requiring you to run a non-free program on your computer. ... However, that was in the past. It's more important to consider what you're doing now, which includes other mistakes. You're not alone — many others make them too, and that adds up to a big problem for society. The root mistake is treating a marketing buzzword, 'the cloud,' as if it meant something concrete. That term refers to so many things (different ways of using the Internet) that it really has no meaning at all. Marketing uses that term to lead people's attention away from the important questions about any given use of the network, such as, 'What companies would I depend on if I did this, and how? What trouble could they cause me, if they wanted to shaft me, or simply thought that a change in policies would gain them more money?'"

3 of 634 comments (clear)

  1. Re:RMS supports file sharing???? by istartedi · · Score: 1, Troll

    No, it's not OK to pirate GPL'd works. You forget. Some pigs are more equal than others.

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    For all intensive purposes, "whom" is no longer a word. That begs the question, "who cares"?
  2. Re:let's hear it slashtards by cheekyjohnson · · Score: 1, Troll

    but, copying your GPL'd program without credit is stealing

    That isn't stealing either. If there are people who say it is, I don't know why you'd generalize and pretend as if everyone thinks this.

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    Filthy, filthy copyrapists!
  3. Wait, hyprocracy? by nurb432 · · Score: 0, Troll

    Not making a moral judgment on copying here, just commenting on RMS's statements...

    So RMS says its ok ( even to the point of being encouraged ) to copy another person's copyrighted material, but don't you dare violate the GPL..

    Sounds contradictory and some what hypocritical to me.

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    ---- Booth was a patriot ----