2009/3/9 list@akfoerster.de:
I consider this license as an "edge cases". One of very few! So, while it is a fact that the OSI accepted it while the FSF rejected it, it doesn't mean, that they are far apart. There's not only black and white. That also doesn't mean that they are all equal in my view. There are differences between the FSF and the OSI, and I clearly prefer the position of the FSF in most cases. But that doesn't mean that I see the OSI as an opponent. They are surely not "also interested in non-free licenses as well". The FSF just found a bug in this case, which the OSI didn't see.
Indeed. And take the case of the Netscape Public License - the FSF accepted it as 'free software', but the OSI rejected it because it gave too many special rights to Netscape. Does that mean the OSI cares more about the user's freedom than the FSF does?
- d.