seth vidal wrote:
On Mon, 2007-11-05 at 14:04 -0500, Christopher Blizzard wrote:
seth vidal wrote:
If that's the case then we should just give up on this quixotic goal of
having a pure-free-software distro and start talking to companies for
how they'd like us to provide their closed-source packages and how to
tie a webstore frontend into yum.
yumgate! woo!
In all seriousness I don't think that there are a lot of instances where
we would be willing to do something like what we've done in this case.
I'm happy with inconsistency, as long we're transparent about it.
In this case it's just because there's no other legal way to do it. We
can't even ship the free versions because of patent concerns.
This is what I'm looking for here. I'd like to be able to say something
that kinda-sorta makes sense for reasons to say no to money from some
vendor to put an ad for their software in the distro.
Hmm. Trying to firm up the message here.
For me this was all about consuming content. The basic problem we're
trying to solve for end users is that there's a lot of content on the
web that requires access to patent-encumbered code. In order to keep
Fedora relevant for the real world, we felt that we needed to make an
exception for end users to legally obtain codecs to view encumbered content.
--Chris
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