--===============0619003889== Content-Type: multipart/signed; micalg=pgp-sha1; protocol="application/pgp-signature"; boundary="=-c4VdDIWnTI90Yfi65Tuf"
--=-c4VdDIWnTI90Yfi65Tuf Content-Type: text/plain Content-Transfer-Encoding: quoted-printable
Am Dienstag, den 27.06.2006, 18:30 +0200 schrieb Alfred M. Szmidt:
If you cannot excersise your freedoms due to a technical `restriction' (e.g. ROM soldered to the PCB), then what is the point of having partial freedom?
That's exactly the point. If I can't have "full freedom" for technical reasons (and I assume the restriction was done for technical reasons, and not to deliberately take away my freedom), then I want to have at least as much freedom as possible. Partial freedom, IMHO, is still better than no freedom at all.
Well, how is your freedom to study the toaster restricted?
I could of course refuse to buy any toaster with proprietary software in it. But as soon as you replace "toaster" by "washing machine", I would get in serious fights with my wife ;-)
:-)