On Fri, 2008-02-08 at 15:26 -0500, Bill Nottingham wrote: > Toshio Kuratomi (a.badger@xxxxxxxxx) said: > >> 2. What improvements would we like to see in Codec Buddy and/or codeina? > > > > My number one gripe is that there's no help for people who can get codecs > > where they are not patented. As a minimal step, mentioning that the > > patents don't exist everywhere and that free software implementations do > > exist would make me feel better. However, that is only going to be helpful > > to more advanced users who will read that and know that they can turn to > > google for help. We need to come up with questions for the lawyers that > > determine just how far we can push the envelope. (Can we add the wording I > > mention? Can we point people to a specific google search?) > > Spot has been through this a few times, as far as I recall. I believe > the wording is that we are allowed to mention sites that host software > that 'for whatever reasons' Fedora cannot include. We can not go into > specifics as to what that software is, how that relates to why we can't > include it, etc., which makes linking to it directly from any CodecBuddy > notifications pretty much impossible; that's why we don't have any such > links on the wiki right now. As for the question about the specific Google search, I've asked about that in the past, and it links in to what Bill said. You can see the best example of what we are allowed to say here: https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/ForbiddenItems From the second to last paragraph in the Summary: The Fedora Project FAQ and the more informal, unofficial http://fedorafaq.org provide useful answers on commonly asked questions. However, the unofficial site is not associated with or supported by the Fedora Project. You can find many interesting things using a search engine like Google. OtherRepositories might contain software that has been not been included in the official Fedora repository. The interesting phrase being, "You can find many interesting things using a search engine like Google," with the word 'Google' linking to the search tool itself (http://google.com to be specific.) So, we can tell people that they may find their answers in Google, but we cannot tell them the answers to what ... nor what words to search on ... nor provide an example search that is contributory infringement. Clear as mud? - Karsten -- Karsten Wade, Developer Community Mgr. Dev Fu : http://developer.redhatmagazine.com Fedora : http://quaid.fedorapeople.org gpg key : AD0E0C41
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