Manoj Srivastava <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes: Not being able to remove the invariant sections when I am trying to extract a subset of the document for use in other places (like I can with subsets of the code) seems to limit my freedom; Please look at the archives of debian-legal for the various valid points that have been made by people in debian.
i'm sure there are valid points and whatnot, but if those points at the end of the day mean /usr/share/emacs or /usr/info is missing stuff that i'd like to see there, then i'm happy (in my own little world, never mind trying to influence all these legal experts ;-) to install under /usr/local a less-broken, not to mention more customized, emacs. No. We have done an evaluation of the GDFL, and it was found wanting. You are belittling the stance taken by Debian; we have a track record of not shrinking from doing the right thing. Marking the GDFL as non-free may well be the right thing as far as our opinion goes, if that is road we do go down on.=20 i'm not belittling, just side-stepping a group-think exercise that has resulted, in practice, in making and acting on policies irrelevent to my own (wrt emacs). if you feel belittled, that is not my intent. Funny. Seems to me that demanding libr=E9 documentation keeps to the spirit of freedom of software; rather than insisting parts of software be immutable and unremovable. fine fine. let me just re-arrange your 1's and 0's and misquote you: Funny [...] that documentation keeps [...] software [...] immutable and unremovable. hmmm, that's not what you Meant? but that's what you Said, all i did was Excerpt some pieces. don't Blame me for exercising my rights! (end parody attempt that could be interpreted as belittling by the thin-skinned. ;-) Please join -legal if you think you have valid arguments on this issue; sniping at debian on unrelated mailing lists is not helpful. nobody is sniping at debian, just ignoring some of its gyrations (and sharing practical advice on how others may do the same). if debian-emacsen is an unrelated mailing list to the topic of debian recategorizing an emacs manaul, then i suppose i will just go back to doing whatever i was before that was indeed emacs-related. thi