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GNU is Not Unix Open Source Ubuntu Linux

The Free Software Foundation's Statement On Canonical's Updated Licensing Terms 75

New submitter donaldrobertson writes: After two years of negotiations, Canonical has updated the intellectual property rights policy for Ubuntu Linux to address a disagreement over how the software is licensed. The FSF announcement reads in part: "In July 2013, the FSF, after receiving numerous complaints from the free software community, brought serious problems with the policy to Canonical's attention. Since then, on behalf of the FSF, the GNU Project, and a coalition of other concerned free software activists, we have engaged in many conversations with Canonical's management and legal team proposing and analyzing significant revisions of the overall text. We have worked closely throughout this process with the Software Freedom Conservancy, who provides their expert analysis in a statement published today." Richard Stallman thinks there are still other issues to address saying: "While the FSF acknowledges that the first update emerging from that process solves the most pressing issue with the policy ... the policy remains problematic in ways that prevent us from endorsing it as a model for others."
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The Free Software Foundation's Statement On Canonical's Updated Licensing Terms

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  • While I am not 100% in agreement with Stallman all the time (EG I am vehemently against toe cheese), where the hell did the quote from him in the TFS originate? It is not in TFA.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Due to the stupid decisions of Canonical, we have decided to migrate our 3095 Ubuntu boxes to Debian. The future of Ubuntu looks unclear with the clusterfuck that is going on with both the corporation and its community.

    • by godrik ( 1287354 )

      What are the stupid decisions from Canonical you talk about? (This is an actual question, I stopped following ubuntu when they broke gnuplot and latex while I was writting my PhD dissertation.)

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      I have to be honest here and admit I can not actually see a good reason to have even had Ubuntu as your server OS at a scale that large at all. Servers is not really what they seemed to ever really be interested in - or that market so to speak. They have always wanted to be a viable desktop alternative and have constantly pushed their funding and efforts in that direction or, well, in the direction where it was in the hands of users and not really so important in the hands of admins. That is how I have perc

      • Yeah, I think you are missing a bit.

        For one, Ubuntu has actually become quite popular on the server at scale, because they have put resources into Ubuntu Server as a product---they just don't necessarily advertise it in ways that get splashy coverage on /. or Ars or such which do tend to be more about consumer-level tech products. But they have indeed put effort into it; they even have their own management tool called Landscape.

        Secondly, their release cadence works a bit better than Debian for many server

        • by KGIII ( 973947 )

          That makes more sense. I figured I had to be missing something. I have not really tracked Ubuntu enough I suppose. I do use a derivative though with LinuxMint. I'd not recommend Mint for server use though it would work.

It's a naive, domestic operating system without any breeding, but I think you'll be amused by its presumption.

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