On Mon 29 Sep 2003 00:35, Ciaran O'Riordan wrote:
Ok, this debate has gone off the rails. The length and content is unwieldy to most people.
I grow weary of the thread myself, and it has probably long since served its purpose in exploring where Niall's views (despite his repeated presentation of them as absolute truths ;-)) may be at odds with a sensible direction for an FSF list. I have to actually get back to real work - in my view, the best way to overcome proprietary software is to drown it in a deluge of high-quality and (tee hee) innovative free software as soon as possible.
I will make this observation before I shut up (I will not continue this thread off-list):
Oh but we're not hiding it. These discussions merely go on behind closed doors where the enemy(TM) have difficulty getting to it.
Thinking in terms of "the enemy" is not really very useful. Free software is pretty inclusive. Even Microsoft is welcome to play if they abide by the rules. Talking behind closed doors will cause suspicion, and may even make enemies out of the previously indifferent. You can defend against espionage and infiltration attempts by openness and accountability. A spy can't make off with damaging-if-revealed secrets if you have none, and an infiltrator can be bound by accountability to either do the right thing or immediately reveal himself.
He who controls information creates the potential for power. Therefore putting this stuff in public is counter-productive in the current climate.
Not at all counter-productive, if you're out to empower the public rather than seeking to become the next tyrant.