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XBian's Koenkk Replies To the XBian/RaspBMC Flap 63

New submitter juenger1701 writes "Xbian's developer Koenkk has posted a reply to the code stealing accusations mentioned here Friday." In response, Sam Nazarko of Raspbmc has replaced his earlier complaint, "on the agreement that XBian participate with compliance of the GPL." Koenkk makes the case that his project has always complied with the GPL.
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XBian's Koenkk Replies To the XBian/RaspBMC Flap

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  • Youngins. (Score:5, Funny)

    by girlintraining ( 1395911 ) on Sunday September 23, 2012 @01:49AM (#41426195)

    Koenkk makes the case that his project has always complied with the GPL.

    Many moons ago, when the internet was young and fresh, and wild UNIX admins roamed freely, there was a thing called Usenet, and on this thing called Usenet, was a relatively new problem called Spam. And much of this Spam came from a particular ISP. And as Usenet back in those days was a community-run entity, there was much discussion about how to resolve this problem. E-mails sent to the ISP were met with silence, or with "not our problem." And the Spam continued. One day, after there had been a much-heated debate, a vote was held, and it was declared the ISP (AT&T), would be given the ultimate punishment: The Usenet death sentence.

    It was rarely carried out, and even the elders recall only a handful of times when an ISP had earned its place amongst the killfiles of the wild UNIX admins of old. And so the call went out: At midnight, the killfiles would be updated, and AT&T would be purged henceforth from the world of Usenet. And word of this spread, and yet the giant still slumbered, refusing to do anything. And it was seen that the death sentence was good, and so all waited for it to come to pass.

    Suddenly, in the final minutes of the final hour, an e-mail appeared from the beligerant ISP! It read, simply, "We do not have a problem, and we are working as quickly as possible to fix it." And thus was it seen for the first time on the internet how corporations deal with these sorts of problems. And ever since, whensoever a cry went up in an internet community that called for the end of access for a corporation, thus has been the response... by tradition, only uttered in the final minutes, of the final hour.

  • by Genda ( 560240 ) <mariet@go[ ]et ['t.n' in gap]> on Sunday September 23, 2012 @02:35AM (#41426337) Journal

    Yea Brother. In the beginning the Usenet was a sweet and lovely thing. Yes there were occasional flamewars, but since it was tied to real email addresses acolytes couldn't be a colossal rectal orifices without ultimately suffering holy sanctions. The thing started out representing thought spaces for work, creation, then play, then strange things began to creep into the Usenet. Alt.sex spawned Alt.sex.small. furry. animals.bin... all sort and kinds ontological sewage backed up into the Usenet converting it from a gather place of ideas into an unwholesome sewer pipe. Spam was the primary engine of its decay, ultimately dumping filth into every good and legitimate channel as well as every off color threads. Spam has been the force behind the slaughter of many useful resources. I hope there is a special place in third level of hell for spammers, somewhere between politicians and use car salesmen.

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