I for one am glad that Debian has some standards here and is willing to maintain them. If you happen not to like it and you are pro copyrights and non-free software then you are free to use Ubuntu, Red Hat or another distro that is more open to non-free or coryright software.
It's Debian's social contract that also stops stuff like the Amazon spyware making its way into the Debian repos along with the fact its not run by a corporation which definitely makes if different from Ubuntu and even more so the Apple and Google app stores.
There are web pages dedicated to the underhand, often criminal tactics that have been employed by MS and Apple over the decades yet I know of no such list of nasties for Debian or any other community distro other than the usual whines of disgruntled users which you get with any OS. Some of you may not like Debian but they are certainly not in the same league as MS for nastiness by any stretch of the imagination.
On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 6:27 PM, Pedro Lopez-Cabanillas <pedro.lopez.cabanillas@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Sat, Jan 12, 2013 at 5:22 PM, Len Ovens <len@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
On Sat, January 12, 2013 1:40 am, Pedro Lopez-Cabanillas wrote:
> On Saturday 12 January 2013 10:19:59 Rustom Mody wrote:
>> http://blog.pkh.me/p/13-the-ffmpeg-libav-situation.html seems to sayI knew about this one.
>> that
>> ffmpeg is integrating libav patches and not vice versa
>>
>> [Sorry for asking a political question]
Thanks for this info.
>
> Thanks for exposing this issue. I think that it is important, because it
> illustrates a negative and recurrent pattern from some Linux distros.
> Another
> example:
>
> CDRecord or Wodim?
> http://cdrecord.berlios.de/private/linux-dist.html
How many other ones are there?
One of my favourites: Mozilla Firefox vs. Iceweasel and friends
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mozilla_Corporation_software_rebranded_by_the_Debian_project
I guess you want me to be more --verbose ...
By "pattern" I mean this mindset: "Our App Store (official distro
repositories) is ours to allow and deny what is available and what not, and we
can arbitrarily throw your software out if we want, but unlike Apple we are
not evil."
The consequences are similar: users can't easily access software they want,
even if it is free software that the authors are willing to distribute gratis
and freely. The three given examples are not equal though. The worse case is
cdrecord, replaced by that old and unmaintained wodim fork in almost all
distros. As a consequence, Linux users can't write BluRay discs, and may
suffer problems writing DVD discs as well. The issue with Firefox is more
important than trademarks and logos, because users may be exposed to security
risks fixed by Firefox which may not be available in Iceweasel with the same
speed. The solutions may be comparable as well: jailbreak your device, and
download from Cydia or alternative stores...
Regards,
Pedro
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