| > I suspect those users do care about freedom. 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 ;) |
If it's freedom, why does the GPL need copyright law?