Free Software and Torpark
Fabian Keil
freebsd-listen at fabiankeil.de
Tue Mar 27 10:05:12 UTC 2007
H D Moore <torspam at metasploit.com> wrote:
> On Sunday 25 March 2007 14:06, Fabian Keil wrote:
> > ... and the people who currently don't use Torpark because it isn't
> > free software and the people who don't care about Torpark itself but
> > would appreciate it if the term "free software" wouldn't be watered
> > down.
>
> Watered down? C'mon. Do a google search for "free software". At least
> half of the results refer to software that is "free as in beer" vs "free
> as in speech".
According to Google my search request for "free software" "looks similar
to automated requests from a computer virus or spyware application"
and can't be processed right now, so I couldn't verify your claim.
According to the first MSN Search page the ratio is 9 to 1 in favour
of the FSF interpretation, though.
> If you want to show the difference between "free" and
> "Free", capitalize it like everyone else. Just because something isn't
> "Free" doesn't mean you have to pay for it.
I never said you had to pay for Torpark.
> Speaking of freedom, what about a giving a software developer the
> freedom to prevent commercial abuse? Would you prefer to give them the
> "Freedom" to stop working on their software because they don't want it
> ripped off by scumbags?
If by "commercial abuse" you mean "commercial use", they already have
both of these freedoms and I never argued that they shouldn't have them.
> >Torpark's license just doesn't give the user enough rights to
> >call Torpark either free software or open source software
> >without causing confusion, raised eyebrows or being laughed at.
>
> I argue that anyone trying to redefine the english word "free" to only
> mean software licensed according to the FSF guidelines deserves to be
> laughed at.
It's not about redefining anything. Please have a look at
<20070326162931.GE13237 at itd.nrl.navy.mil> if you haven't already.
> This is a stupid argument to start with -- ignoring the license, TorPark
> should be recommended based on the quality of the code and the features
> of the software. If TorPark LLC does something evil at a later date,
> stop recommending them.
I don't know anything about the quality of the code and I never
recommended Torpark or Torpark LLC in the first place (not because
of its code quality or its license, but because I don't know enough
about it).
I would assume though, that license and code quality aren't
completely unrelated and that non-free licenses make it less
likely that the code gets audited by third parties that aren't
paid to do it.
Fabian
-------------- next part --------------
A non-text attachment was scrubbed...
Name: signature.asc
Type: application/pgp-signature
Size: 187 bytes
Desc: not available
URL: <http://lists.torproject.org/pipermail/tor-talk/attachments/20070327/ca9a779c/attachment.pgp>
More information about the tor-talk
mailing list