On 10/09/2007, Todd Allen <toddmallen(a)gmail.com> wrote:
The Germans seem to have solved that question quite
well. We took a page
out of their book on userboxes, maybe we should take the flipside on
nonfree content too. The way you remain free is to steer clear of
nonfree. Period, end of story, no exceptions.
You think the image on the top right of this page is free:
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manchester_United
That's why you don't find,
for example, the nonfree nvidia driver in the Linux kernel. It could be
legally distributed that way, sure, but it's not free. Anyone who wants
it is welcome to download and install their own, but to keep the core
product (the kernel) free, it must not be distributed as part of it.
To be genuinely free, anyone should be able to take a database dump of
Wikipedia, and provided that they comply with the GFDL, put it up on a
commercial website with every last bit of data they got. Wikipedia is
currently nonfree. A lot of -parts- are free, but it only takes a bit of
pollution to make the whole nonfree.
That would involve stripping all wikipedia logos out. Tricky. In
adition en is now pretty good at makeing it clear what is and isn't
free.
--
geni