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by Delmania
3721 days ago
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I suspect those users do care about freedom. The issue is that most people view a computer as just a tool to do work, not a political statement. The concept of software freedom make little sense to most people, and for good reason. The FSF would do well to focus less on the ideology, and more on providing a better user experience for non technical people. The other issue is the concept of "free software". No matter the claims, when the term free is applied to a product (or product class) like software, the immediate implication that the price is free. The "free as in free speech" doesn't work too well because speech is not a product. Also, Windows doesn't exactly stop me from doing questionable activities, like authoring documents that would be considered subversive. Telling people that Windows takes away their right to view and modify the source code will at best give lukewarm response, because most people have other concerns. |
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I meant software freedom in this context; I should have been more clear.
> The FSF would do well to focus less on the ideology, and more on providing a better user experience for non technical people.
There are plenty of organizations that do that. The FSF exists for very specific reasons---ideology is essential.
> The "free as in free speech" doesn't work too well because speech is not a product
I don't follow.
By "free as in free speech" we mean the same thing as when we say "free as in freedom".
> Also, Windows doesn't exactly stop me from doing questionable activities, like authoring documents that would be considered subversive.
You're not setting a very high bar there ;)